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US, Switzerland Deny Turkey Guarantees Over Historical Commission

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  • US, Switzerland Deny Turkey Guarantees Over Historical Commission

    US, SWITZERLAND DENY TURKEY GUARANTEES OVER HISTORICAL COMMISSION

    Asbarez
    Feb 8th, 2010

    Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian and Turkish counterpart
    Ahmet Davutoglu sign protocols for establishing normal relations
    between their two countries in Zurich on October 10, 2009.

    ANKARA (Combined Sources)-The US and Switzerland have refrained
    from giving assurances to Turkey that limitations will not be placed
    on the "mission and methodology" of a historic commission to probe
    the veracity of the Armenian Genocide, the Turkish Hurriyet Daily
    reported Monday.

    The creation of the so-called fact-finding body is outlined in
    fence-mending protocols signed between Ankara and Yerevan in October
    of last year.

    Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu traveled to Bern
    last Friday to seek Swiss support on Ankara's position that a ruling
    by the Armenian Constitutional Court on the protocols threatens to
    derail normalization efforts with Armenia. He will seek the same
    assurance from U.S. officials during a visit to Washington this month.

    Armenia's Constitutional Court on January 12 upheld the legality of
    the protocols, but stipulated that the protocols could have no bearing
    on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict or contradict Yerevan's efforts to
    garner international recognition and condemnation for the Armenian
    Genocide as outlined by Armenia's Declaration of Independence.

    Despite assurances from Armenia that the Constitutional Court ruling
    would not affect the protocols process, Turkey's foreign ministry
    began drafting a document late last month that delineates the Turkish
    position on what it calls the "incompatibilities" of Armenia's
    Constitutional Court ruling and requires written legal guarantees
    from Yerevan that it will not include the court's reservations in
    the documents.

    Ankara was hoping to get the US and Switzerland to join this process.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu relayed Turkey's concerns
    firsthand to European, American and Armenian officials during telephone
    conversations and on the sidelines of international conferences and
    reportedly discussed the matter with US Secretary of State Hillary
    Clinton during a meeting in London in late January.

    Ankara also plans to apply to the OSCE Minsk Group and European Union.

    But the general mood in Washington and other Western capitals is that
    Turkey's reaction to the court ruling as "exaggerated" and it will be
    responsible for the possible failure of normalization efforts. Both
    Washington and Bern have said the court's decision presents no legal
    obstacle to the implementation of the protocols.
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