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With Friends Like These . . . Armenia Doesn'T Need Enemies

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  • With Friends Like These . . . Armenia Doesn'T Need Enemies

    WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE . . .

    Wall Street Journal
    March 18 2010


    . . . Armenia doesn't need enemies.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan this week told the BBC he
    could deport 100,000 undocumented Armenian immigrants. The cue for his
    threat was the recent U.S. and Swedish "nonbinding resolutions" saying
    the mass expulsions and serial murders of Armenians by Ottoman forces
    95 years ago ought to be called a genocide. Not content to have done
    more damage to Turkish-Armenian relations than anything Ankara has done
    recently, the U.S. House of Representatives has not ruled out taking
    up the declaration by the Foreign Affairs committee in a full vote.

    Mr. Erdogan's diatribe was most likely a bluff. Ankara tends to
    inflate its numbers of illegal Armenian workers, either to display its
    goodwill toward that country's nationals, or to threaten them--whatever
    seems most opportune at the time. But that's not to say that the
    increasingly heavy-handed Turkish premier can't make life difficult
    in other ways for however many Armenians live and work in his country,
    whether they're within the law or not.

    For now, bluster is begetting bluster. The feel-good meddling from
    Stockholm and Washington, and Mr. Erdogan's bombastic reaction, has
    drawn equally unhelpful rhetoric from Yerevan, where officials are
    branding his threat a potential abuse of human rights, and saying
    his words smack of the Ottomans' World War I-era atrocities against
    Armenians. The two countries in October struck a landmark deal to
    normalize relations and open their common border, though the pact has
    yet to be ratified. Given the recent tumult courtesy of American and
    Swedish lawmakers, that doesn't seem likely to happen anytime soon.

    Meanwhile, Moscow is reportedly eyeing the U.S.-Turkish and
    Turkish-Armenian spats and wondering how it can benefit. Hooray for
    Congressional exercises in statecraft.

    It remains to be seen how the American declaration will affect
    Turkey's heretofore stalwart support in Afghanistan, not to mention
    its reluctance to back sterner action against Iran's nuclear program.

    But in the meantime, other lawmakers eager to set other countries'
    nearly 100-year-old records straight might reflect on the hazards of
    empty-gesture diplomacy.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100014 24052748704743404575127691898212242.html?mod=googl enews_wsj
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