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  • Suspended accords highlight deep fissures in Turkey-Armenia relation

    Ethiopian Review
    April 25 2010


    Suspended accords highlight deep fissures in Turkey-Armenia relations

    Ethiopian Review | April 24th, 2010 at 9:40 pm

    Washington's efforts to bury a century of hostility between the
    neighbours were dealt a hefty blow this week when Armenia suspended
    ratification of the US-brokered peace accords which were signed in
    October 2009 to establish diplomatic relations and open their shared
    border.

    With both sides seemingly unwilling to move on from nearly 100 years
    of deep mistrust, neither the government of Christian Armenia nor that
    of Muslim Turkey chose to ratify the agreement on Thursday amid claims
    of manipulation of the texts and the insertion of new unapproved
    conditions.

    Despite the obvious benefits of the agreement ` including huge
    economic gains for poor, landlocked Armenia and a boost to Turkey's EU
    credentials ` both Armenia and Turkey have instead chosen to postpone
    further negotiations, with the on-going feud over the World War I mass
    killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks and the disputed region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh at the heart of the dispute.

    The decision to suspend the peace accords came just two days before
    the 95th anniversary of the killings on April 24th, again highlighting
    the importance of the 1915-1917 massacres of Armenians in the history
    of hostile relations between the two countries.

    Armenian massacre at the heart of continuing animosity

    Armenia claims that the Ottoman Turks deported and executed 1.5
    million of their kin during World War I and has been fighting for the
    massacre to be officially labelled genocide, a term the Turks reject.
    Armenian officials claim the peace accords were suspended because they
    betray Armenia's efforts to have the massacres internationally
    recognized as genocide.

    Turkey says that 300,000 to 500,000 Armenians and at least as many
    Turks perished in fighting between the two peoples as the Ottoman
    Empire crumbled.

    `Armenia has clearly stated that it wants Turkey to recognise the
    massacres as genocide as part of the rapprochement process,' Dr.
    Stefan Meister, an expert on the South Caucasus at the German Council
    on Foreign Affairs, told Deutsche Welle.

    `Turkey won't do this but has said that it wants a historical
    commission to investigate the massacres to find out what really
    happened. Armenia says that everyone knows the massacres are
    historical fact and is concerned that a commission will bring the
    nature of the event into question.'

    `The genocide in the Armenians is a well documented historical event,'
    Prof. Dr. Mihran Dabag from the Institute for Diaspora and Genocide
    Research at the University of Bochum, told Deutsche Welle.

    `Where there has been freedom to research, the researchers have
    unmistakably proved the authenticity of the genocide policy in the
    years1915/16. There has also been reassuring developments in this
    research from Turkish intellectuals and Turkish historians. Still,
    this is no substitute for official Turkish policy.'

    US President Barack Obama pledged in his election campaign that he
    would work toward getting the massacre recognised as genocide and
    Armenians are hoping that Obama will use a statement he intends to
    make on the anniversary to fulfil his promise.

    However, with Turkey an increasingly important and geopolitically
    strategic NATO partner, it is unlikely that the US president will do
    this for fear of alienating Ankara.

    The peace process is also unlikely to continue until a resolution to
    Armenia's conflict with Turkish ally and energy trading partner
    Azerbaijan over the breakaway Nagorny-Karabakh region is found.

    Breakaway region pits Armenia against Turkey

    Ankara and Yerevan have been at odds over Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan
    ever since 1993 when Turkey closed its border with Armenia in
    solidarity with Azerbaijan over the war in Nagorno-Karabakh, when
    ethnic Armenians backed by Armenia threw off Azeri rule after the
    collapse of the Soviet Union.

    Nagorno-Karabakh has been under control of Armenian troops and ethnic
    Armenian forces since a 1994 cease-fire ended six years of war.

    The border will remain closed, Turkey says, until ethnic Armenian
    forces pull back from Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said this week that ratification
    of the peace accords would depend on Armenia reaching terms with
    Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, a statement that caused uproar in
    Armenia.

    `Armenia rejects Turkey's conditions over Nagorny-Karabakh as part of
    the rapprochement,' said Meister. `They see the region as part of the
    former Armenian state and with almost 70 percent of Nagorny-Karabakh
    inhabited by ethnic Armenians; they want to protect their people
    there. Turkey wants the Armenians to leave and to help protect the
    very few Azerbaijanis who are still there. Rapprochement can only
    happen if the Armenians leave.'

    `The Armenians and Azerbaijanis signed a memorandum in Moscow in 2008
    saying they would not go to war but they soon said afterwards that a
    war could still happen,' he added. 'The best solution would be a
    federal system where Nagorny-Karabakh has its own sovereignty within
    Azerbaijan but that is also unlikely to happen.'

    Rapprochement in the interests of the US

    Azerbaijan is a valued oil and gas exporter and one of the West's key
    hopes for gas for the planned Nabucco pipeline. It is said to be angry
    at Washington over US support for the potential deal between Armenia
    and Turkey to mend ties and reopen their border. Azerbaijan fears the
    deal will weaken its hand in talks over the rebel territory. The US,
    meanwhile, finds itself in a difficult situation where achieving its
    own goals relies on keeping all those involved on side.

    `The region is very important to the US due to its proximity to Iraq,
    Iran and Afghanistan but also because of the Caspian Sea and its
    natural resources,' said Meister.

    `Rapprochement is in Washington's interests. If Turkey opens up the
    border with Armenia then this gives the US another route into the
    region and could allow gas and oil to flow without Russian
    interference. But there is a large Armenian and Azerbaijani Diaspora
    in the US and both are pressuring Washington for their own ends which,
    along with Turkey's needs, makes it very difficult for Obama.'

    (Source: Deutsche Welle)

    http://www.ethiopianreview.com/news/79127
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