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ANKARA: Sarksyan: Normalization Not Linked To Genocide Debates

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  • ANKARA: Sarksyan: Normalization Not Linked To Genocide Debates

    SARKSYAN: NORMALIZATION NOT LINKED TO GENOCIDE DEBATES

    Today's Zaman
    March 24 2010
    Turkey

    According to Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan, a US House committee's
    adoption of a resolution recognizing the killings of Anatolian
    Armenians under Ottoman rule during World War I as genocide should
    not be accorded any relevance in regard to the ongoing process of
    normalization between Ankara and Yerevan.

    Earlier this month the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs approved
    a nonbinding resolution condemning the 1915 killings. It was followed
    by the Swedish parliament's vote recognizing the early-20th-century
    killings of Anatolian Armenians as genocide.

    In both cases Turkey responded angrily, withdrawing its ambassadors
    to Washington and Stockholm while also suggesting that these votes
    would have a damaging impact on the normalization process between
    Armenia and Turkey.

    President Sarksyan's remarks on the issue came in Damascus as he
    arrived in the Syrian capital on Monday for a official three-day visit.

    In an interview with the Syrian Al-Watan newspaper, Sarksyan was
    asked what influence the passage of the Armenian genocide resolution
    by the US committee could have on the process of normalization of
    Armenian-Turkish relations, Public Radio of Armenia reported on Tuesday
    on its Web page. "The resolution considered at the US committee is an
    internal affair for that country which we are not interfering with. We
    did not make the recognition of the Armenian genocide a precondition
    for the establishment of Armenian-Turkish relations, since we support
    the improvement of relations with Turkey without any preconditions,"
    Sarksyan was quoted as saying in response.

    "I do not think the attempts to tie the process to the recognition
    of the Armenian genocide by other countries are proper. One thing
    is obvious to me -- the longer it takes to normalize our relations,
    the more countries will adopt such resolutions," Sarksyan also warned.

    A senior Turkish diplomat underlined earlier this month that the
    US resolution, which Ankara expects will not reach the House floor,
    and the normalization process "must" definitely be dealt with as two
    separate processes that are independent from each other.

    "The normalization process has by no means died. Ever since the
    protocols were signed between Turkey and Armenia, the normalization
    process has continued along its natural course," the same diplomat,
    speaking on the condition of anonymity, told Today's Zaman at the
    time, while noting that third-party interventions such as that by the
    US vote have a strong potential to have a deleterious impact on this
    natural process.

    In Damascus, meanwhile, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, voiced his
    country's willingness to "play a role in building common ground for
    relations between Armenia and Turkey."

    The remarks by Assad, who has warm relations with Turkey's Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and whose country last year established
    a high-level strategic cooperation council with Turkey aiming at
    deepening bilateral cooperation, came at a joint press conference
    following his talks with the visiting Sarksyan on Monday.

    While reiterating that it is necessary to overcome all differences
    between Armenia and Turkey, resorting to dialogue to continue the
    process of confidence building, Assad hailed Sarksyan's decision
    to develop relations with Turkey as "courageous and based on a
    far-sighted vision."
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