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ANKARA: Azerbaijan And Turkey - Shoulder To Shoulder!

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  • ANKARA: Azerbaijan And Turkey - Shoulder To Shoulder!

    AZERBAIJAN AND TURKEY - SHOULDER TO SHOULDER!
    Dr. Elnur Aslanov

    Hurriyet
    April 18 2010
    Turkey

    Eminent Turkish journalist Mehmet Ali Birand wrote recently that
    Azerbaijan is on the sidelines of the processes in which Turkey is
    an active player.

    Ankara's diplomacy in the past year has shown that Armenia is taking
    an irrational stance. Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent regions
    are still under occupation. On the negotiating table are the Madrid
    principles, which have been accepted by Azerbaijan and rejected
    by Armenia.

    In early April, the chief of Azerbaijan's presidential administration
    came to Istanbul to meet journalists, including Mr. Birand, who had
    just gotten back from Yerevan. The meeting seemed to cover all the
    pressing issues in Azerbaijani-Turkish relations and the prospects
    for Armenian-Turkish reconciliation.

    Azerbaijan has been negotiating with Armenia for 22 years and during
    that time we have often had to hope for friendly support. We have
    grown in strength politically and economically and shown ourselves
    to be a regional player. Throughout these years, we have relied on
    Turkey's fraternal support when facing geopolitical and geo-economic
    problems and Turkey has never betrayed us.

    We can see the same attitude now, when Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan clearly says that there cannot be any change in
    Armenian-Turkish relations without achievements in the resolution of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. In turn, Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev always expresses clear and open support for Turkey over the
    so-called Armenian "genocide."

    The Azerbaijani public, parliament and state officials have
    strongly condemned the recent decision of the U.S. House Foreign
    Affairs Committee. The people spoke out against injustice and the
    transformation of history into a means of political pressure. The
    Azerbaijani people have always been at Turkey's side in all important
    issues.

    When condemning the actions of the U.S. Congress, we remember
    that the U.S. legislature still has the anti-Azerbaijani Amendment
    907, adopted in 1992, on the books. Under this amendment, Armenia,
    which is occupying 20 percent of Azerbaijani land, and unrecognized
    Nagorno-Karabakh, receive tens of millions of dollars from the United
    States every year, while Azerbaijan is subjected to unjust pressure.

    This is a classic case of a double standard.

    As a co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, the United States could have
    made more effort to establish peace in the region.

    Justice is a relative concept in present-day international relations.

    Fifteen years ago, the U.N. Security Council, of which Turkey is
    currently a member, adopted four resolutions on the liberation of
    Azerbaijani land occupied by Armenia, but these requirements remain
    unmet.

    And now, when Armenia is not giving up its aggressive policy or
    withdrawing from the occupied Azerbaijani land, why should we change
    our attitude toward it? Does anyone really think that if an aggressor
    is patted on the head, it will stop being aggressive? Has Armenia
    given up its claims to Turkish land or changed its attitude toward
    the recognition of the "genocide"? If anyone still considers Armenia
    a partner with whom historical consensus can be achieved, historical
    practice shows them to be wrong.

    Unfortunately, Mr. Birand is still under the wrong impression about
    the one summit to which Azerbaijan was not invited. We believe
    that the nuclear summit is a starting point in the resolution of
    important regional issues. The participation of the Turkish side and
    its stated position on discussions about the Karabakh conflict gave
    the Azerbaijani side confidence that its interests would be defended
    by Turkey. There is a well-known saying, "An uninvited guest should
    not be served."

    The opinion that Azerbaijan is on the sidelines of discussions about
    the destiny of its land seems ridiculous. It is impossible since
    Karabakh is our pain and loss. The government of Prime Minister
    Erdogan, which pursues an active policy to establish peace and
    stability in the region, feels the same pain. I would like to hope
    that you, Mr. Birand, feel at least the same grief about the loss of
    this land.

    Today, the Azerbaijani diaspora in the United States is fighting
    alongside Turkish diaspora organizations against the aggressive
    intentions of the Dashnaks, who are seeking the adoption of a
    resolution on the so-called Armenian "genocide" in the U.S. Congress.

    Azerbaijanis and Turks throughout Europe are sparing no effort to
    avert Armenian attempts to falsify history. For example, thanks to
    the efforts of the Azerbaijani diaspora in the Crimea, the Izum city
    council revoked a decision to recognize the Armenian "genocide" before
    2010. It was the president of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, who initiated
    the first Forum of Azerbaijani and Turkish Diaspora Organizations of
    the World in Baku in March 2007.

    Today, Azerbaijanis take pride in their independent statehood and
    are happy that present-day Turkey is a strong country and a powerful
    regional player. Turkey is a strong player in world politics today and
    this encourages Azerbaijan. No one should ever doubt that Azerbaijan
    and Turkey will always stand shoulder to shoulder!

    * Dr. Elnur Aslanov is the chief of the Political Analyses and
    Information Support Department in the Office of the President of the
    Republic of Azerbaijan.
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