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ANKARA: Turkey Cool To Armenia's Decision To Halt Ratification Of Pr

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Cool To Armenia's Decision To Halt Ratification Of Pr

    TURKEY COOL TO ARMENIA'S DECISION TO HALT RATIFICATION OF PROTOCOLS

    Hurriyet Daily News
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=turk ey-cool-to-armenia8217s-move-seeks-ways-to-capital ize-it-2010-04-22
    April 22 2010
    Turkey

    Yerevan's call to halt ratification of an accord on normalizing ties
    has Turkey evaluating the possible legal and political repercussions,
    and prompted the country's leader to reiterate his commitment to the
    normalization process.

    "It is up to them to decide how they want to move with the ratification
    process," Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters
    in Ankara on Thursday. "I have expressed our loyalty to the protocols
    on numerous occasions. We will press ahead with the process on the
    principle that treaties are binding."

    The prime minister's remarks came as Armenia's ruling coalition
    announced earlier Thursday that it was halting ratification of
    the peace accord on account of Turkey's refusal to ratify the text
    "without preconditions and in a reasonable timeframe."

    Soon after the coalition parties' statement, Armenian President Serge
    Sarkisian confirmed his country's freezing of the ratification of
    the protocols with neighboring Turkey.

    The coalition, which holds the majority in the Armenian parliament,
    described as "unacceptable" recent statements by Erdogan linking the
    process of ratifying the protocols to the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan, according to a report by Agence
    France-Presse. The declaration was made by the ruling Republican,
    Prosperous Armenia and Country of Law parties.

    In Tallinn, a spokesman for the Turkish Foreign Ministry said the
    government had not yet received any official statement about the
    accords.

    "What we are doing now is evaluating the content of this statement,"
    ministry spokesman Burak Ozugergin told the Hurriyet Daily News &
    Economic Review in the Estonian capital, where Foreign Minister Ahmet
    Davutoglu was attending a NATO meeting. Ozugergin added that Turkey
    is also discussing what steps it could take in the upcoming period.

    Following the Armenian statement, Davutoglu called Erdogan to inform
    him about the developments. In Ankara, Erdogan said his country's
    stance concerning the ratification of the protocols is clear. "How
    the ratification process could move forward and how a comprehensive
    peace objective can be achieved in the region has been explained to
    the parties concerned."

    Turkey and Armenia signed a deal in October to establish diplomatic
    ties and open their border in a step toward ending decades of
    hostility over Armenian allegations that Ottoman Turks committed
    genocide against Armenians, a claim that Turkey rejects.

    The deal, comprised of two protocols, needs parliamentary ratification
    to take effect. The reconciliation process has since stalled, with
    both sides questioning each other's commitment to peace.

    Three points

    Early analyses made by Turkish diplomats on the ruling Armenian
    coalition's decision are based on the timing of the announcement as
    well as its legal and political dimensions.

    The statement came just two days before April 24, the day Armenians
    mark the events of 1915, which they consider genocide. On the same
    day, a number of countries, including the United States, issue annual
    statements to commemorate the Armenian deaths.

    "The timing of the statement is important. They are trying to force
    Obama to be straighter in his statement," a senior Turkish diplomat
    told the Daily News. Last year, U.S. President Barack Obama did not
    use the word "genocide" in his April 24 statement, but described the
    1915 incidents as "one of the great atrocities of the 20th century."

    Following a meeting with Obama last week in Washington, Erdogan said
    he was sure that the U.S. president would not use the word "genocide"
    in his statement this year.

    A group of experts at the Turkish Foreign Ministry have already begun
    to look into the meaning of the statement and how it could affect
    Turkey's legal position.

    Political consequences will be felt in the ongoing normalization
    process, but the move could also be a tactical one to mobilize
    opposition parties to force the government in Turkey to withdraw the
    protocols from Parliament.

    'Right decision'

    A senior official from the Dashnaktsutyun party, which left the
    ruling coalition over its opposition to the normalization efforts,
    hailed the move, saying, "the Sarkisian administration finally made
    the right decision."

    "Armenia will never yield to Erdogan's preconditions, and never
    back down on the Karabakh issue or the international recognition of
    genocide," Vahan Hovanesian told the Daily News in Yerevan.

    David Shahnazarian from the Armenian National Congress also criticized
    what he called Turkey's "never-ending" pre-conditions. "Under the
    influence of Azerbaijan, Turkey cannot make progress on the protocols."

    Ruben Safrastian, the director of the Institute of Oriental Studies
    at the Republic of Armenia's National Academy of Sciences, said the
    protocols had already come to a halt and put the responsibility for
    that on Turkey. "We have missed the historic opportunity between Turkey
    and Armenia. We must initiate a new process urgently, otherwise the
    Turkey-Armenia relationship will head to an irreversible period,"
    Safrastian told the Daily News.

    Davutoglu was scheduled to meet Thursday with U.S. Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton in Tallinn on the sidelines of the NATO foreign
    ministers' meeting. A senior diplomat confirmed that Davutoglu
    was planning to raise this issue during the meeting. "It is equally
    important to see how Americans interpret this statement," the diplomat
    said. "That will help us complete our own analyses."
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