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ANKARA: Turkish-Armenian Maneuvering Continues

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  • ANKARA: Turkish-Armenian Maneuvering Continues

    TURKISH-ARMENIAN MANEUVERING CONTINUES

    Hurriyet
    April 8 2010
    Turkey

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in a surprise development this
    week, sent Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu to
    Yerevan as his private envoy, bearing a letter addressed to Armenian
    President Serge Sarkisian.

    Erdogan asked for a meeting with Sarkisian next week in Washington,
    where both leaders will attend the summit on nuclear disarmament
    hosted by the Obama administration.

    In the meantime, there were indications as this piece was being written
    that the Armenian parliament could ratify the Zurich protocols, which
    were signed a year ago by the foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia,
    and which foresee the normalization of ties between the two countries.

    The ratification and subsequent implementation of the protocols
    had stalled due to the different interpretations and conditions the
    sides imposed on them later. On the Turkish side, it became instantly
    apparent that the "Azeri dimension" had been underestimated all along.

    As voices of protest raised in Azerbaijan found receptive ears in
    Turkey, Prime Minister Erdogan was forced to travel to Baku and assure
    his Azerbaijani interlocutors that there would be no ratification
    until the Karabakh talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan have started
    moving in a positive direction.

    This immediately angered Yerevan, which said - correctly - that there
    is no reference to the Karabakh issue in the protocols, and that this
    therefore could not be made a precondition for the implementation of
    these protocols.

    On the Armenian side, the country's constitutional court said in a
    ruling that the protocols could not violate the nation's founding
    document, which makes it incumbent on Armenian governments to work
    to get international recognition for the genocide Armenians say they
    suffered at the hands of Ottoman Turks in 1915.

    This in turn angered Ankara, where the government said the protocols
    foresee the establishment of an independent commission of historians
    to look into the events of 1915. The Turkish side argued that the
    Armenian court had prejudged the work of this commission.

    Some in Ankara also said the court had created some ambiguity on the
    question of whether Armenia actually accepts Turkey's territorial
    integrity, and the present border between the two countries.

    Despite the qualifications it brought to the protocols, the Armenian
    constitutional court nevertheless deemed them to be in compliance
    with the country's constitution, creating a contradictory situation,
    since it was not clear whether the court had endorsed the protocols
    with preconditions or without them.

    It should, in fact, have been apparent at the start that these problems
    would inevitably appear, requiring both governments to act boldly,
    and against political odds, in order to ensure that the protocols
    are ratified and implemented.

    Also overlooked was the fact that nationalist sentiment and mutual
    animosity run deep between the two peoples, which is, after all,
    the basic reason why we are where we are today. The serious problems
    that the Armenian diaspora is in a position to cause were also
    underestimated.

    Given this backdrop, one wonders what Prime Minister Erdogan's motive
    was in sending a high-level envoy to President Sarkisian at this point
    in time. One also wonders why the Armenian parliament has started to
    debate the protocols in question, with a view to possibly ratifying
    them, given that it recently adopted a bill enabling Armenia to
    withdraw its signature from the protocols.

    It is not hard to see that the sides are playing a kind of
    diplomatic checkers game here, since a chess game requires little more
    sophistication. The basic effort seems to be not to appear the spoiler
    in front of the international community in terms of the attempts to
    normalize ties, and to try to shift the blame to the other side.

    It was telling, for example, that it was announced that Ambassador
    Sinirlioglu was going to Yerevan while Prime Minister Erdogan was in
    Paris - where he also met French President Nicolas Sarkozy - and just
    prior to traveling to Washington for next week's nuclear summit.

    Erdogan is also expected to have a bilateral meeting with President
    Obama while there, now that the chill in ties - which emerged after
    the Foreign Relations Committee of the House of Representatives
    adopted an Armenian "genocide" resolution - is ostensibly over.

    The U.S. and France are the two countries that have caused the most
    headache for Turkey in terms of Armenian "genocide" resolutions. This
    move by Erdogan also comes, of course, just before President Obama's
    commemorative April 24 message on the events of 1915.

    One would not be too cynical in assuming that there is a connection
    between all of these, nor to conclude that Ankara is trying to allay
    the impression that it is the one that is blocking developments
    with Armenia.

    But Prime Minister Erdogan has a serious credibility problem because
    of the promise he made to Azerbaijan. He told reporters in Paris this
    week that Turkey remains committed to its signature on the Zurich
    protocols. But he did not indicate how Ankara would proceed, given the
    Karabakh condition it placed on the ratification and implementation
    of the protocols.

    This appears to leave him with few options. He is either going to
    have to take steps that will be construed in Turkey as "selling out"
    Azerbaijan, or remain true his promise to Baku, which will merely
    create the impression that he is fooling the international community.

    Neither is it clear what kind of "electricity" will be generated from
    Erdogan's meeting with President Sarkisian next week, given his ability
    to be highly abrasive, as evidenced by his continued salvoes at Israel.

    It must also be mentioned here that the U.S. and the EU do not accept
    the link Erdogan has established between normalization of ties with
    Armenia and the Karabakh issue. Russia has also said this link is
    artificial.

    The same applies to Turkey's interpretation of the Armenian
    constitutional court's ruling. The general international attitude here
    is to accept the court's ruling that the protocols are in compliance
    with the constitution at face value.

    Given this overall situation, one can also assume that the motive
    of the Armenian parliament in debating the Zurich protocols is a
    calculated move to apply pressure on Turkey. Given that Armenian
    nationalists in the diaspora and at home are totally against these
    protocols, it seems the intention here is to put pressure on Turkey.

    It is not hard to see that the government in Yerevan takes it for
    granted that the Turkish Parliament will not ratify the protocols
    before there is serious movement on the Karabakh issue. But no one
    expects serious movement on that issue anytime soon, so the political
    risk appears less for Yerevan if it ratifies the protocols. Thus, the
    aim on the Armenian side appears to be to try and shift the stigma of
    "intransigence" onto Turkey.

    But these are calculations that will not lead the sides anywhere in
    terms of normalizing their ties. As we have said on numerous occasions,
    this normalization can only come about through brave and committed
    leadership on both sides. Unfortunately, we do not see this at the
    present time.
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