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ANKARA: Armenian Irredentism: The Real Obstacle To Turkish-Armenian

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Irredentism: The Real Obstacle To Turkish-Armenian

    ARMENIAN IRREDENTISM: THE REAL OBSTACLE TO TURKISH-ARMENIAN RAPPROCHEMENT (1)
    Mehmet Kalyoncu

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/news-208472-109 -centerarmenian-irredentism-brthe-real-obstacle-to -turkish-armenian-rapprochement-1bribyibr-mehmet-k alyoncu-center.html
    April 26 2010
    Turkey

    Yerevan's unilateral decision, as Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
    Davutoglu describes it, to put the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement on
    hold should have had a cold shower effect on those who had long been
    fed up with the overcooked so-called Armenian genocide debate.

    On April 22, Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan signed a decree
    suspending the ratification of the "Protocol on Establishing Diplomatic
    Relations between the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Turkey"
    and "Protocol on Opening the Border between the Republic of Armenia
    and the Republic of Turkey."

    In his televised address to his fellow Armenians, Sarksyan said,
    "Our political objective for normalizing relations between Armenia
    and Turkey remains valid, and we shall consider moving forward when
    we are convinced that there is the proper environment in Turkey and
    the leadership in Ankara is ready to reengage in the normalization
    process." Referring to Ankara's demand for Armenia to end its
    occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan before
    Parliament ratifies the protocols, the Armenian president charged
    Ankara with causing the breakup in the normalization process by making
    the end of Armenian occupation a precondition to the ratification.

    While Ankara repeatedly reiterated its wish to continue the
    normalization of relations with Yerevan, on April 24 Armenian
    demonstrators burned Turkish flags as well as posters of Turkish
    President Abdullah Gul, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
    Davutoglu during the so-called Armenian genocide commemoration
    ceremonies attended by President Sarksyan and other Armenian officials.

    Like the Armenian officials, some inside and outside Turkey have
    criticized Ankara for pushing the end of Armenian occupation in
    Nagorno-Karabakh as a precondition to the ratification of the
    protocols. Some even argued that there was no relationship between
    the occupation and the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations
    and that Azerbaijan stood as an obstacle to normalization.

    As a matter of fact, the real obstacle to Turkish-Armenian
    rapprochement is Armenia's irredentist attitude toward its neighbors.

    As such, Armenia's irredentism not only constitutes a national security
    threat to Turkey, but also is the major obstacle to any step toward
    sustainable security and stability in the South Caucasus. So long as
    Yerevan does not irreversibly change this attitude, it is unlikely
    to achieve any sustainable relationship between Turkey and Armenia.

    Armenia is an irredentist country. That is, it is a country with
    aspirations on a part of another country's land, over which it claims
    to have the political right to control. Article 11 of the Armenian
    Declaration of Independence reads, "The Republic of Armenia stands
    in support of the task of achieving international recognition of the
    1915 Genocide in Ottoman Turkey and Western Armenia," referring to
    contemporary eastern Turkey as Western Armenia. Article 12 reads,
    "This declaration serves as the basis for the development of the
    constitution of the Republic of Armenia and, until such time as the
    new constitution is approved, as the basis for the introduction of
    amendments to the current constitution; and for the operation of state
    authorities and the development of new legislation for the republic."

    So obviously, the crux of the Armenian Constitution and of
    the guideline for the state authorities is Yerevan's unrelenting
    aspirations to seize eastern Turkey as well as other possible monetary
    and political reparations.

    Yerevan has proven its characteristic as such by invading and occupying
    20 percent of a neighboring country -- Azerbaijan.

    Consequently, another neighboring country, Turkey, which has long
    been the main target of Yerevan's irredentist aspirations, closed
    its common border with Armenia. Although Turkey and Azerbaijan do
    have deep cultural, ethnic, social, economic and political ties
    and as such Turkey's closure of the border may seem and has long
    been portrayed as an emotional response to Armenia's invasion of
    Azerbaijan's territories, Turkey's response to the invasion is purely
    a rational one.
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