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ANKARA: Ankara Defies US Pressure On Normalization Process With Arme

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  • ANKARA: Ankara Defies US Pressure On Normalization Process With Arme

    ANKARA DEFIES US PRESSURE ON NORMALIZATION PROCESS WITH ARMENIA

    Today's Zaman
    Feb 9 2010
    Turkey

    Already annoyed by an Armenian court ruling which it says threatens
    agreements to normalize relations with Yerevan, Ankara is highly
    uncomfortable with a planned vote in a US congressional committee
    next month on a resolution to label the World War I-era killings
    of Armenians in the late Ottoman Empire as "genocide," because it
    regards the timing of such move as an indication of pressure being
    imposed on Turkey.

    Howard Berman (D-Cali.), the Democratic chairman of the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee, said on Friday he intended to call a committee vote
    on the non-binding resolution on March 4. The resolution would call
    on President Barack Obama to ensure that US policy formally refers
    to the events as "genocide" and to use that term when he delivers
    his annual message on the issue in April -- something Obama avoided
    doing last year.

    The panel approved a similar bill in 2007 but it was never put to a
    full House vote amid fears among both Democrats and Republicans that
    it would alienate Turkey.

    The US move came at a time when a top Turkish diplomat was already
    scheduled to visit Washington in the coming weeks to express Turkey's
    concerns over the Armenian Constitutional Court's ruling. Now, the US
    committee's planned vote also be on agenda of the upcoming talks in
    Washington between US officials and Ambassador Feridun Sinirlioglu,
    an undersecretary of the Turkish Foreign Ministry, which will take
    place weeks before April 24, the "genocide" commemoration day.

    After months of Swiss mediation and US encouragement, Turkey and
    Armenia signed two protocols in October 2009 to establish diplomatic
    ties and reopen their shared border. However, the process hit rocky
    ground after the Armenian court upheld the legality of the protocols
    but underlined that they could not contradict Yerevan's official
    position that the alleged Armenian genocide must be internationally
    recognized.

    Turkey accused Yerevan of trying to rewrite and set conditions on the
    deals. Armenia's president and foreign minister have warned that the
    rapprochement is under threat of collapse.

    The move in Washington added insult to injury as Ankara believes
    that US pressure on such sensitive processes will backfire and will
    in the end help neither Turkey nor Armenia.

    While in Munich on Saturday to attend an international security
    conference, Davutoglu held bilateral talks with US Deputy Secretary
    of State James Steinberg, who arrived in Munich from Yerevan, where
    last week he met with Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan and Foreign
    Minister Edward Nalbandyan.

    In addition to Steinberg, Davutoglu also held talks on the issue
    with US National Security Advisor James Jones and Richard Holbrooke,
    the US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan.

    Davutoglu conveyed his concerns to all three US officials over both
    the planned vote in the US House committee and the ruling by the
    Armenian Constitutional Court.

    Ankara has been explaining to Washington that the normalization
    process with Armenia did not start due to US pressure. Imposing
    pressure on Turkey has never yielded positive outcomes throughout
    history, Turkish officials have also told US officials, diplomatic
    sources told Today's Zaman.

    While explaining its beliefs, Ankara gave as an example the Turkish
    Parliament's refusal of a government motion on March 1, 2003, to
    allow US troops to open up a northern front against Iraq from Turkey,
    thus leading to the reference to a "March 1 syndrome" when talking
    about the bilateral relationship of the two NATO allies. Parliament's
    decision at the time came despite strong US pressure, showing that
    this pressure actually backfired, Ankara told Washington.

    Turkey accepts that many Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks but
    denies that up to 1.5 million died and that it amounts to genocide,
    saying many Muslims also died as Armenians revolted in an attempt to
    create an Armenian state in eastern Anatolia in collaboration with
    Russian forces. Turkish officials have warned that any new attempt in
    US Congress to brand the killings as genocide could damage US-Turkish
    ties.

    Turkish governmental officials, speaking with Today's Zaman, expressed
    their conviction that Ankara believes the timing of three particular
    incidents in recent weeks is not coincident at all; respectively
    referring to the reasoning of the Armenian constitutional court's
    decision on Jan. 12, Armenia's irreconcilable attitude concerning the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute during talks hosted by Russian President
    Dmitry Medvedev in Sochi, Russia, on Jan. 25; and finally Friday's
    announcement concerning the planned vote in the US House Committee.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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