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ISTANBUL: Putin's Karabakh stance may hurt Turk-Armenian deal

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  • ISTANBUL: Putin's Karabakh stance may hurt Turk-Armenian deal

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    Jan 15 2010


    Putin's Karabakh stance may hurt Turk-Armenian deal

    Friday, January 15, 2010
    Ã`mit ENGÄ°NSOY
    ANKARA - Hürriyet Daily News



    Prime Minister ErdoÄ?an and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an's recent visit to the Russian
    capital, Moscow, is largely seen as successful in terms of bilateral
    energy deals. Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin's public remarks on
    the territorial dispute of Nagorno-Karabakh effectively means a hurdle
    for the Turkish-Armenian normalization efforts, analysts say.

    Putin told ErdoÄ?an during Wednesday's talks that Turkey should not
    link the Nagorno-Karabakh problem between Armenia and Azerbaijan to
    the normalization of its bilateral relations with Armenia.

    "Both the Nagorno-Karabakh problem and the Turkish-Armenian problem
    are very complicated by nature. I do not think it is right to tie them
    into one package," Putin told a news conference after his talks with
    the Turkish prime minister.

    "It is unwise from both tactical and strategic points of view to
    package these problems," he said.

    Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers signed a set of agreements on
    Oct. 10 under which Ankara and Yerevan should set up normal diplomatic
    relations and reopen their land border, effectively putting an end to
    a century of hostile relations.

    But there are signs that the reconciliation process is now facing an
    uphill battle. The Turkey-Armenia accord needs to be ratified by
    parliaments of the two neighbors before being implemented, but there
    is no indication of when both nations may bring the deal to their
    parliaments.

    The issue that lies at the root of the problem is the unresolved
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Turkey's
    close friend and ally.

    No end in sight for Karabakh

    Turkey first wants to see progress toward the solution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict before opening its border with Armenia. And
    the Armenians are hinting no sign of this.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mostly Armenian-populated enclave inside
    Azerbaijan, and parts of Azerbaijan proper has been under Armenian
    occupation since a war in the early 1990s. As a result of this war,
    Turkey has refused to set up normal diplomatic relations with Yerevan
    and has been keeping the land border with Armenia closed since 1993.

    Like Putin, U.S. President Barack Obama's administration has also been
    urging Turkey to unconditionally put into effect the deal with
    Yerevan.

    Putin's remarks make it clear that Russia has no intention to press
    the Karabakh Armenians and Yerevan for an urgent reconciliation on the
    enclave's future. And without strong Russian or U.S. pressure, the
    Armenians will see little reason to compromise on this matter.

    As a result, the Turkish parliament, for its part, will see little
    reason to ratify the normalization deal with Yerevan, which
    effectively could mean the collapse or suspension of the
    reconciliation process.

    "In fact, a real reconciliation involving Turkey and Azerbaijan on the
    one side and Armenia on the other is one of the last things Putin's
    Russia would want to see, because such a deal may pave the way for the
    construction of new pipelines carrying Eurasian oil and natural gas to
    the West, bypassing Russian territory," said a former senior Turkish
    diplomat.

    "Russia is very jealous about its present monopoly in transporting
    Eurasia's energy resources to the West, and doesn't want to see new
    and U.S.-backed rivals in an area which it still continues to view as
    its backyard," said the former diplomat. "So, the status quo is in
    Russia's benefit."

    US front

    The potential collapse of the Ankara-Yerevan deal would mean more
    problems for Turkey in its relationship with the United States, and
    this plays into the hands of Armenian-American groups.

    Despite the possibility of normalized ties between Ankara and Yerevan,
    Armenian-Americans' top priority is to obtain Washington's recognition
    of World War I-era killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as
    `genocide."

    "In the face of Turkey's ongoing campaign of denial, we must redouble
    our efforts to secure U.S. reaffirmation of the Armenian genocide and
    urge the swift passage of the Armenian genocide resolutions in
    Congress," said Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian
    Assembly of America, a major Armenian-American group, last weekend.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will meet with representatives
    of major American Armenian groups next month. "The Republic of Armenia
    through its president, has taken bold steps, yet the Republic of
    Turkey continues its counterproductive actions with respect to
    normalizing relations with Armenia," said Ardouny. "As such, this
    meeting [with Clinton] offers an important opportunity to discuss the
    U.S. administration's efforts to hold Turkey accountable," he said.

    Turkey has strongly warned that any formal U.S. genocide recognition
    would lead to a major and lasting deterioration of bilateral ties.
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