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No Interim Agreement Between Baku And Yerevan Available: Hurriyet

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  • No Interim Agreement Between Baku And Yerevan Available: Hurriyet

    NO INTERIM AGREEMENT BETWEEN BAKU AND YEREVAN AVAILABLE: HURRIYET

    news.am
    March 10 2010
    Armenia

    "Two separate developments took place last Thursday at approximately
    the same time which, at first sight, seemed totally unrelated. Indeed,
    the fact that the Turkish Parliament's ratification of the
    intergovernmental agreement on the Nabucco project was followed
    by the adoption of the resolution based on the Armenians' claims
    of genocide by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the United States
    House of Representatives was a pure coincidence," Turkish Hurriyet
    daily reports.

    "Both developments that took place in two capitals, thousands of
    miles away from each other, were monitored with the highest interest
    in several capitals, like Vienna, Budapest, Rome, Baku and Moscow.

    Because Turkish-Armenian relations and the issue of the recognition
    of the 1915 killings of Armenians at the hands of the Ottomans as
    genocide play an important role in the fate of the Nabucco project,
    at least in the short term," the source says.

    "If the Nabucco project, designed to bring Caspian as well as Middle
    Eastern natural gas to Europe via Turkey and the Balkans is realized
    sooner rather than later, it will reduce European dependence on Russia,
    striking a blow against Russia's dominant position in the European
    market. Yet if the South Stream project, which will carry Russian gas
    under the Black Sea to Europe, is realized before the Nabucco project,
    then Moscow could take a deep breath," the source reads.

    "Turkey's ratification of the Nabucco agreement is expected to be
    followed by Romania very soon, and thus, the ratification process of
    the agreement will be completed. One of the next major steps is the
    transit agreement between Turkey and Azerbaijan, which in the short
    run will be the major supplier. Yet this is where the &'Armenian'
    issue makes its entrance to the process. It is no secret that
    Baku is extremely anxious about the prospect of normalization of
    relations between Turkey and Armenia before there is a solution to
    Nagorno-Karabakh, which is under Armenian occupation. Even an interim
    agreement between Baku and Yerevan on Armenian withdrawal from Azeri
    territories surrounding the Karabakh region does not seem in sight.

    And Turkey does not want to pass the normalization protocols through
    the Parliament unless there is some kind of progress on the Karabakh
    issue," the daily informs.

    "Baku has so far refrained from fully committing itself to the Nabucco
    project. It wants to be sure that Turkey will not open its borders to
    Armenia before there is progress on Nagorno-Karabakh. So the current
    imbroglio is delaying the transit deal between Turkey and Azerbaijan
    and thus slowing down the Nabucco project. But how long can Ankara
    and Baku afford to wait before finalizing a deal?" the daily wonders.
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