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Russia Tells Turkey To Drop Karabakh Linkage

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  • Russia Tells Turkey To Drop Karabakh Linkage

    RUSSIA TELLS TURKEY TO DROP KARABAKH LINKAGE
    By Alex DerAlexanian

    Asbarez
    Jan 13th, 2010

    MOSCOW (RFE/RL)-Turkey should not link the normalization of its
    relations with Armenia to further progress in international efforts
    to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Russian Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday.

    Putin also reaffirmed Moscow's support for Turkey's dramatic
    rapprochement with Armenia, his country's main regional ally, after
    talks with his visiting Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    "We receive with great optimism Turkish proposals on the
    normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations," he told a joint news
    conference. "We very much hope all elements of shortest approaches
    [to the normalization] will be used in the negotiating process and
    Armenia's leadership is also on this positive path."

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was among foreign dignitaries
    that attended the signing in Zurich last October of two protocols
    envisaging the establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia
    and Turkey and the opening of their border. Erdogan has repeatedly
    stated since then that Turkey's parliament will not ratify the
    protocols without a resolution of the Karabakh dispute acceptable to
    Azerbaijan. Armenia responded to those statements by threatening to
    walk away from the deal.

    In remarks that will be welcomed by Yerevan, Putin made clear that
    Moscow believes the two issues should not be "tied in one package."

    "It is difficult to solve each of these problems separately, and
    if one tackles them in a single package, then prospects for their
    settlement will automatically become very remote," he said. "Packaging
    these problems is not quite right from the practical and strategic
    standpoints."

    The Karabakh conflict was expected to be on the agenda of Erdogan's
    talks with Putin and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. Speaking at a
    Moscow diplomatic academy earlier in the day, Erdogan implicitly urged
    the Russians to do more to broker a Karabakh settlement. He said they
    can become "the most important actor" in the Karabakh peace process.

    The Turkish premier's high-profile visit focused on growing
    Russian-Turkish energy cooperation. Medvedev described Moscow's
    current rapport with Ankara as "strategic partnership."
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