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ISTANBUL: American Report: Turkish Relations With Armenia Should Be

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  • ISTANBUL: American Report: Turkish Relations With Armenia Should Be

    AMERICAN REPORT: TURKISH RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA SHOULD BE EXPANDED
    by Mehmet Ali Birand

    Hurriyet Daily News
    March 2 2012
    Turkey

    Just as the French Constitutional Council rejected the "denial law,"
    an exceptionally important 45,000-word report was issued in Washington
    on Turkish-Armenian relations.

    Prepared by Columbia University's Institute for the Study of Human
    Rights Director David L. Phillips and printed by Harvard University,
    the report - "Diplomatic History: The Turkey-Armenia Protocols" -
    was presented and discussed at special sessions of both the U.S.

    Department of State and the U.S. Congress.

    The report is based on exclusive interviews with those Turkish,
    American, Swiss and Armenian diplomats who personally contributed
    to the writing of the protocols. It searches for answers to both
    the questions of: "Why did the protocols fail?" and "What should be
    done now?"

    Gul started, Erdogan blocked

    The process started with Turkish President Abdullah Gul's participation
    at the football match held between the national teams of Turkey and
    Armenia in Yerevan on Sept. 6, 2008. Seven meetings had been held
    since May 21, 2008 with the mediation of Switzerland, and drafts
    were signed on Feb. 7, 2009. But the process failed after Armenian
    President Serzh Sargsyan's suspension of the protocols on April 22,
    2011. The following assessments have been made:

    - Presidents Gul and Sargsyan are to be applauded as heroes of the
    process. It is stated that they demonstrated statesmanship, vision
    and huge courage.

    - On the contrary, on the topic of causing the failure of the
    protocols, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is held
    responsible and criticized. Critics draw attention to the fact that in
    the speech he delivered at the Azerbaijani Parliament on May 13, 2009,
    he stipulated that a pre-condition of the recovery of Turkish-Armenian
    relations was the solving of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. This was
    not in the protocols, so it stopped the process.

    Aliyev did not take it seriously

    - The person criticized most in the report is Azerbaijani President
    Ilham Aliyev. It is stated that he did not take the protocol talks
    seriously, and when it was officially announced he gave an exaggerated
    reaction. As well as threatening to stop the sale of natural gas
    to Turkey, he also raised the gas price to a great extent. He also
    brought the "South Stream" onto the agenda, in order to obstruct the
    Turkey-backed Nabucco Project.

    - Armenia's mistakes are also listed in the report. It is suggested
    that the announcement of the protocols just two days before the
    anniversary of the "genocide" provoked all Armenian nationalists. No
    information was provided to the public and no transparency was shown.

    - The report also criticized the Obama administration for not being
    able to manage the developments properly, saying that the U.S.

    embassies in Ankara and Yerevan were not able to establish a
    satisfactory dialogue.

    What should be done now?

    The report states that the protocols cannot be revived as they are,
    but some measures that are present in the protocols can be activated
    to moderate the relationship:

    - Flights between Van and Yerevan should be opened.

    - The Ani Bridge should be repaired and tourist buses from Armenia
    should be allowed to travel there.

    - Electricity sales should be allowed and fiber optic cables should
    be extended to Yerevan's Industry Free Zone.

    - Joint commissions should be formed to determine the method of
    research into international archives, and the selection of historic
    monuments to be repaired.

    - Places should be allocated in Yerevan's Genocide Museum for those
    Turks who helped Armenians in 1915.

    This report is not binding. Its content will be evaluated in the U.S.

    Department of State's decisions and in debates in the U.S. Congress.

    Some of the proposals may be transformed into policies. These proposals
    could also light the way to the steps Ankara may want to take, as
    the 100th anniversary in 2015 approaches.

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