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  • Dashnaks Slam U.S. Praise Of Armenian Ruling On Turkey

    DASHNAKS SLAM U.S. PRAISE OF ARMENIAN RULING ON TURKEY

    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/19 39419.html
    25.01.2010

    Armenia -- An Armenian Revolutionary Federation flag flying against
    the backdrop of the Constitutional Court building in Yerevan on
    January 12 2010.

    The opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun)
    denounced on Monday the U.S. State Department for welcoming an Armenian
    Constitutional Court ruling on Turkey that has sparked a diplomatic
    dispute between Yerevan and Ankara.

    Dashnaktsutyun leaders claimed that by effectively siding with
    Armenia in the row, the United States is pressurizing its leadership
    to unconditionally implement the controversial Turkish-Armenian
    agreements which their party considers a sellout to Turkey.

    While upholding the constitutionality of the two "protocols,"
    the Constitutional Court ruled on January 12 that they place no
    obligations on Armenia with regard to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    and can not inhibit its pursuit of greater international recognition
    of the Armenian genocide.

    Dashnaktsutyun welcomed this interpretation of the U.S.-backed
    protocols, saying that the Armenian parliament should ratify them
    with corresponding "reservations." Its top representatives said in
    particular that the court effectively invalidated a protocol clause
    that commits Armenia to explicitly recognizing the existing border
    with Turkey.

    The Turkish government has likewise claimed that the ruling runs
    counter to the letter and spirit of the deal and jeopardizes its
    implementation by Turkey. Armenia's leadership has brushed aside
    these claims, accusing Ankara of seeking "artificial pretexts" for
    delaying its parliamentary ratification.

    U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon told RFE/RL
    on Friday that Washington regards the judgment as a "positive step
    forward in the ratification process of the normalization protocols"
    that "does not appear to limit or qualify them in any way." Armenian
    pro-government politicians and media were quick to welcome the U.S.

    reaction as a crucial endorsement of Yerevan's position in the
    dispute. Dashnaktsutyun strongly disagree with that.

    "It was a statement made a bit prematurely, and I don't think that
    it is only aimed at somehow benefiting Armenia," Artsvik Minasian,
    a senior Dashnaktsutyun member, told RFE/RL, commenting on Gordon's
    remarks. "What is more, I think that was a form of pressure on
    Armenia aimed at making sure that we don't ratify the protocols with
    reservations," he said.

    Giro Manoyan, the party's chief foreign policy spokesman, also accused
    Washington of pressurizing Yerevan. "When a representative of a foreign
    state tries to teach us some lessons I don't think that is acceptable,"
    he told RFE/RL.

    According to Minasian, Dashnaktsutyun has drafted legal amendments that
    would empower Armenia's parliament to ratify international treaties
    and agreements signed by the executive branch with conditions or
    reservations. He said they will be presented this week to 13 other
    mostly small opposition groups aligned in a Dashnaktsutyun-led
    coalition staunchly opposed to the protocols.

    Leaders of those parties met at the Dashnaktsutyun headquarters in
    Yerevan over the weekend to discuss their further actions. One of
    them, Armen Martirosian of the Zharangutyun party, was skeptical
    about the Dashnaktsutyun bill. Martirosian predicted on Monday that
    the parliament majority loyal to President Serzh Sarkisian will
    unconditionally endorse the protocols should they be put to the vote.

    A deputy chairman of Sarkisian's Republican Party of Armenia, which
    has a clear majority in the National Assembly, confirmed that. "If
    we add reservations to the protocols, the Turks will never ratify
    them," Razmik Zohrabian told RFE/RL. "We should therefore avoid any
    reservations."

    Zohrabian also hailed the U.S. reaction to the Armenian court ruling,
    saying that it shows just how "vulnerable and superficial" the Turkish
    diplomacy can be.
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