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  • Washington Getting More Involved in Reconciliation Process

    EURASIA INSIGHT
    ARMENIA AND TURKEY: WASHINGTON GETTING MORE INVOLVED IN RECONCILIATION PROCESS
    Joshua Kucera 2/19/10


    The United States is stepping up its role in brokering reconciliation
    between Armenia and Turkey, aiming to reinvigorate the stalled
    process. The impending debate over a US Congressional resolution to
    formally recognize the Armenian genocide, however, is shaping up as a
    wild card in the delicate process.

    Last October, at a ceremony in Switzerland, Armenia and Turkey signed
    protocols to pave the way for the establishment of diplomatic
    relations and the reopening of the border between the two countries.
    [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Since then, the two sides have argued over the ratification of the
    protocols by the two countries' respective parliaments. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton played an unprecedented role in the
    signing of the protocols, personally mediating between the two parties
    to help resolve a last-minute dispute. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    On February 4, Clinton's deputy, James Steinberg, went to Yerevan to
    meet with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan. The reconciliation
    process topped his agenda of discussion points. The next day,
    Steinberg met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Turkish
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu at a security conference in Munich to
    discuss the same issue. "I very much hope that both Armenia and Turkey
    will move forward. I don't think delay is in anybody's interests,"
    Steinberg said in Yerevan.

    Some political observers believe that heavy US involvement is needed
    to break the current logjam. "The US role has been indispensable in
    this process. If the United States doesn't continually encourage the
    parties, the likelihood of ratification is greatly diminished," said
    David Phillips, former chair of the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation
    Commission and director of the Program on Conflict Prevention and
    Peacebuilding at American University. Phillips added that the United
    States had to go with "a full-court press that needs to engage both
    Hillary Clinton and President [Barack] Obama, if we're going to be
    able to seal the deal."

    A complicating factor will be the upcoming debate over the perennial
    Congressional resolution on the Armenian genocide. Resolutions
    recognizing the genocide are regularly brought up by legislators from
    heavily Armenian-American districts, though the resolutions have
    always failed, usually because of concerns that passage would alienate
    Turkey, a close US ally. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    The newest version of the resolution was introduced last year, but no
    action has yet been taken on it. In early February, Rep. Howard
    Berman, the chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs,
    announced that he will bring the resolution up for debate on March 4.

    The move appears to be an attempt to spur Turkey to action on the
    protocols. The belief among some in Washington is that Turkey will
    want to appear helpful - and thus will ratify the protocols - in order
    to convince members of Congress that Ankara is a valuable ally, said
    Emil Sanamyan, the Washington-based editor of the newspaper Armenian
    Reporter.

    "Since it [the resolution] was introduced there was no progress at
    all, because I think the Obama administration asked the Congressional
    leadership, Nancy Pelosi and Howard Berman, not to touch the
    resolution while there was progress being made [on the protocols].
    Now, clearly, progress is not being made, the process is stalled and
    lo and behold, the chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee schedules
    a vote on it for early March," Sanamyan said. "It's not so much
    pressure from Armenian-American groups, but was made with a nod from
    the State Department to use the resolution as leverage to get Turkey
    to make progress on this process."

    The State Department, which has traditionally opposed Armenian
    genocide resolutions because of the potential to offend Turkey, has
    been unusually reticent to criticize the resolution this time around,
    said Elizabeth Chouldjian, spokeswoman for the Armenian National
    Committee of America, an Armenian-American lobbying group. State
    Department officials have not been lobbying members of Congress
    against the resolution, as they have in the past, and when senior
    State Department officials have been asked recently about the
    resolution they have dodged the question, Chouldjian said.

    "Under the Bush administration, that would have been the opportunity
    for them to oppose the legislation," Chouldjian continued. "But here,
    you have a dodging, working around the question, certainly not
    opposing it."

    If the State Department thinks the genocide resolution vote will make
    Turkey more likely to ratify the reconciliation protocols, it is
    miscalculating, said Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish Research
    Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Because the
    protocols are controversial now in Turkey, there is no domestic
    political will to ratify them, something State Department Turkey
    experts are well aware of, he said.

    In addition, the United States has a diminishing amount of leverage
    over Turkey, as Ankara increasingly is orienting its foreign policy
    away from the West and toward the Middle East, Cagaptay said. "So
    there's not a lot the United States can do to make the Turks move
    forward on this," he said.

    A State Department spokesman, when queried about the genocide
    resolution, said the department does not comment on pending
    legislation before Congress. The White House did not respond to
    requests for comment by press time.

    Passage of the resolution would almost certainly dash any hope that
    Turkey would ratify the protocols. "The Turkish-US relationship...
    will suffer a tremendous blow in the wake of any vote in Congress
    which would attempt to mischaracterize the historical facts of the
    First World War, and the events of 1915," said one Turkish official,
    speaking to EurasiaNet on condition of anonymity. "The ratification of
    the protocols will be permanently derailed."

    Pro-Turkish lobbying groups are using the delicate situation
    surrounding the ratification of the protocols to convince members of
    Congress to oppose the genocide resolution, said G'`-'nay Evinch,
    president of the Assembly of Turkish-American Associations. "A
    resolution will cause everything to move into paralysis," he said.
    "It's time to push both sides toward ratification of the protocols.
    And that can be done with positive reinforcement, rather than
    negative."

    But that is just a pretext, said Phillips, the American University
    expert. "The Turks knew full well that the protocols wouldn't deter
    Armenians from seeking genocide recognition, so this confluence of
    factors was predictable from the beginning," he said. "After gauging
    the domestic political backlash, it appears that Ankara is looking for
    an excuse to walk away from their commitments."

    Some members of Congress who have previously supported the genocide
    resolution are not supporting it now, citing the ongoing protocols
    process, Sanamyan said. In addition, the United States is also likely
    to soon start moving toward imposing new sanctions on Iran for
    Tehran's intransigence on its nuclear program, and Turkey's
    cooperation would be indispensable in that effort. And that debate in
    Congress is likely to take place at the same time as the genocide
    resolution debate.


    Editor's Note: Joshua Kucera is a Washington, DC,-based freelance
    writer who specializes in security issues in Central Asia, the
    Caucasus and the Middle East.
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