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ISTANBUL: Davutoglu to rush to Baku, Tehran after Washington talks

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  • ISTANBUL: Davutoglu to rush to Baku, Tehran after Washington talks

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 17 2010


    DavutoÄ?lu to rush to Baku, Tehran after Washington talks


    In an apparent sign of Ankara's foreign policy priorities, Foreign
    Minister Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu will pay visits to neighboring Azerbaijan and
    Iran next week, following intense talks with US officials in
    Washington on the normalization process between Armenia and Turkey and
    on Iran's controversial nuclear program. DavutoÄ?lu, who accompanied
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an to a nuclear security summit in
    the US capital on Monday and Tuesday, stayed in Washington after
    ErdoÄ?an's departure and had talks with senior US officials.

    Speaking at a press conference at the Turkish Embassy in Washington on
    Thursday, DavutoÄ?lu recalled a meeting held between ErdoÄ?an and US
    President Barack Obama on the sidelines of the nuclear summit and said
    issues concerning Iran, developments in the Caucasus and the process
    of normalization with Armenia were on the agenda of the meeting.
    DavutoÄ?lu's press conference was held after his meeting with US
    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The meeting marked their third
    since the beginning of the week.

    `We are convinced that a window of opportunity for a diplomatic
    resolution still exists. We will continue doing our best on this
    issue,' DavutoÄ?lu was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news agency. He
    underlined that during their meetings with US officials they clearly
    reiterated Turkey's position favoring diplomatic means instead of
    imposing sanctions on the neighboring country to deal with the dispute
    surrounding its nuclear program.

    `We plan to share with Iran particularly our impressions of the
    meetings we had with the US administration by going to Iran in the
    shortest time possible,' DavutoÄ?lu said, adding that he would visit
    Tehran next week.

    `We want neither military conflict in our region nor the slowing down
    of our region's economic dynamism via new sanctions,' he said, while
    also stressing Turkey's firm opposition to any country possessing
    nuclear weapons.

    On Friday, DavutoÄ?lu was scheduled to arrive in Brasà - lia to have talks
    with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Brazil and Turkey
    -- which both hold nonpermanent seats on the UN Security Council and
    are reluctant to back a Washington push to impose sanctions as a way
    out of the diplomatic standoff over Tehran's nuclear ambitions -- are
    studying an alternative proposal to deal with Iran's controversial
    nuclear program.

    `Aliyev's absence loss of opportunity'
    During his visit to Baku on Monday, he will have a detailed exchange
    of views with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev concerning the
    Turkish side's meetings in Washington this week, DavutoÄ?lu said,
    apparently referring to ErdoÄ?an's meeting with Armenian President
    Serzh Sarksyan and his meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
    Nalbandian in particular.

    `We will also have consultations [with Aliyev] concerning the steps we
    will take from now on,' he added.

    Reiterating Turkey's uneasiness with the fact that Azerbaijan was not
    invited to the nuclear summit even though Armenia was extended an
    invitation, DavutoÄ?lu said Turkey did its best to convince US
    officials to invite Azerbaijan to the summit. He, nonetheless, also
    noted that the US side informed the Turkish side of its `objective
    reasoning' for not inviting Azerbaijan.

    `But of course, the presence of Armenia, Turkey and the co-chairs of
    the Minsk process [at the summit] was a very important opportunity,'
    he said, referring to French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Russian
    President Dmitry Medvedev's participation in the summit.

    The Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe (OSCE), the three co-chairs of which are France, Russia and the
    US, has striven to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, a
    territorial conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    `In my opinion, if Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev had been here,
    the positive meetings we have held so far could have resulted in even
    more progress; a very important opportunity has been missed. I'm
    saying this with sincerity and from the heart,' DavutoÄ?lu said.

    Recalling that Ambassador Feridun SinirlioÄ?lu, the Foreign Ministry
    undersecretary, last week paid consecutive visits first to Yerevan and
    then to Baku as ErdoÄ?an's special envoy, DavutoÄ?lu said Turkey
    listened to Aliyev's fundamental stance and concerns about the issue.
    He didn't elaborate on whether he meant the issue of the absence of an
    invitation to the summit or the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

    DavutoÄ?lu highlighted that he would travel to Azerbaijan soon after
    wrapping up his visit to Brazil `not even spending time with [my]
    family,' and added, `That's to say, we won't let even one day pass.'

    Following talks with Sarksyan earlier this week, ErdoÄ?an said
    maintaining regional peace is among the fundamental elements of
    Armenia and Turkey's efforts for the normalization of their relations;
    thus, the resolution of the territorial dispute between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan is naturally linked to this process.

    ErdoÄ?an's remarks came when reminded of Sarksyan's comments on the
    issue, which were made after their meeting. In remarks delivered at a
    gathering of the Armenian community, Sarksyan made clear that his
    country would not accept Turkey's imposition of the resolution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute as a precondition to the normalization of
    relations.



    17 April 2010, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN ANKARA
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