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  • ANKARA: Baku Support For US 'Genocide' Measure Questioned

    BAKU SUPPORT FOR US 'GENOCIDE' MEASURE QUESTIONED
    Fulya Ozerkan

    Hurriyet
    March 8 2010
    Turkey

    A supporter of the Armenian 'genocide' resolution waits for the House
    panel vote results. The Committee on Foreign Affairs endorsed the
    resolution 23 to 22.

    Although solidarity with Azerbaijan has led Turkey to tie the approval
    of the Armenian protocols to progress on Karabakh, there are questions
    as to whether Baku sufficiently opposed a recent Armenian "genocide"
    resolution in the U.S. Congress.

    A key partner in U.S.- and EU-backed energy projects in the Caspian
    Sea, Azerbaijan is a close ally of Turkey and has been locked in a
    frozen conflict with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, an Azerbaijani
    territory that has been occupied by Armenia since 1993.

    "The Azerbaijani calls for boycott campaigns in April-May 2009
    were designed and conducted in a highly professional way. They have
    also been developing their public diplomacy toward Washington and
    Brussels on issues related to the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh,"
    Burcu Gultekin Punsmann, senior foreign policy analyst at the Turkish
    think-tank TEPAV, told the Hurriyet Daily News in an interview.

    "Interestingly, however, pro-Azerbaijani advocacy groups kept silent
    before the process that led to the March 4 vote in the U.S.," she said.

    A U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee headed by deputy Howard Berman
    narrowly passed a non-binding resolution on Thursday labeling the
    World War I-era killings of Ottoman Armenians as "genocide." With
    the passage of the bill, the door is now open to a full House vote.

    Reacting against the resolution, Turkey said the vote not only risked
    slowing down the normalization efforts with Armenia, but also risked
    bringing them to a complete halt.

    'Not realistic to expect more'

    One expert said Azerbaijan had been silent on the issue despite
    Turkey's anger at the resolution. "Azerbaijan failed to make its voice
    heard strongly in opposing the genocide resolution," said Kamer Kasım,
    Caucasus expert at Turkish think tank USAK.

    "The Turkish-Armenian protocols led to a serious disappointment in
    Azerbaijan and the likelihood of the opening of the sealed border
    between Ankara and Yerevan created question marks in Baku despite
    assurances from the Turkish government that the border would not be
    opened unless a solution is found to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem,"
    he said.

    Turkish and Azerbaijani interests overlap in their opposition to the
    Armenian lobby in the U.S., Kasım said, but wondered whether the
    Azerbaijani lobby in the U.S. had made much of an effort to display
    solidarity with Ankara in attempting to block the resolution, other
    than a written condemnation.

    "But it would not be realistic to expect much more than that from
    Baku," he said.

    One day after the vote, Azerbaijan slammed the resolution, saying the
    move could damage U.S. interests in the Caspian country. Baku has
    backed Turkey's rejection of the "genocide" label and accused the
    international community of remaining indifferent to the atrocities
    committed by Armenian forces during the Karabakh conflict.

    It also called on Turkey not to move ahead with normalization efforts
    with Armenia until the Karabakh dispute is resolved.

    Turkey and Armenia first announced a road map to normalization last
    April before signing two protocols in October 2009 that called for
    the establishment of diplomatic relations yet the process has become
    mired with both countries blaming each other for the slowdown.

    'Fast learning process'

    Azerbaijani reactions in the wake of the Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation process showed that Azerbaijani society, both
    domestically and in the diaspora, had reached a good organizational
    capacity and developed efficient advocacy methods, according to
    Punsmann. "The learning process has been quite fast."

    Despite this, Azerbaijani opposition to the subsequent genocide
    resolutions was only tepid, according to the analysts.

    "We couldn't feel any tangible support for Turkey from Azerbaijan in
    the period up until 2005," veteran Turkish diplomat Faruk Logoglu,
    a former ambassador to Washington and Baku, told the Daily News.

    In commenting on the present situation, Logoglu, said: "It is clear
    that the protocols have not created a positive effect. There is an
    Azerbaijani lobby in the U.S. but I have no idea to what extent they
    are influential."

    'Genocide issue not purely Turkish-Armenian problem'

    According to Punsmann, Azerbaijan has suffered from Turkish-Armenian
    disputes as much as Turkey has suffered from Armenian-Azerbaijani
    conflict.

    "Even if one could have expected some solidarity from Azerbaijani
    society at large, the idea that the genocide issue is purely a
    Turkish-Armenian issue doesn't seem irrelevant. Turkey's policy in the
    South Caucasus suffers from the consequences of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict, merely a bilateral Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict. I would
    argue that Azerbaijan has also been affected, especially during the
    war over Nagorno-Karabakh, by the consequence of the century-old
    historical dispute between Turkey and Armenia," she said.

    "Interestingly, in the Armenian language, the term 'Turk' applies
    to both Azeris and citizens of the Turkish Republic. Therefore the
    start of a normalization process between Turkey and Armenia has the
    potential to positively affect the conflict-settlement process between
    Armenians and Azerbaijanis," she said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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