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  • No Incentive For Turkey, Armenia To Normalize Relations

    NO INCENTIVE FOR TURKEY, ARMENIA TO NORMALIZE RELATIONS

    Al Monitor
    May 3 2013

    By: Cengiz Candar for Al-Monitor Turkey Pulse Posted on May 3.

    Hopes that Turkey could ever solve its almost intractable Kurdish issue
    have never been as high as they were in the first quarter of 2013. If
    this peace process can continue with all its ups and downs but without
    rupture, it could that suggest that another perennial issue as old
    as the Kurdish issue, the Armenian question, can also be tackled.

    Of course, there is a fundamental difference. The Kurdish issue
    directly concerns 15 million people living in Turkey as Turkish
    citizens and more than 30 million other Kurds living in the region
    and majority populations of tens of millions living in those countries.

    The Armenian question is about the perishing of a national community
    on the land they have been living for time immemorial. Today, the
    question is more about its deep psychological scars rather than its
    physical aspects.

    For the Armenians, a large part of historical Armenia, what they call
    Western Armenia, covers an substantial portion of today's eastern
    Turkey. It is not unusual for countries and lands to change names but
    for the Armenians and Turkey, the issue is more than losing land but
    the almost total annihilation of a nation on the land where they used
    to live.

    We are talking about the events of 1915, which the Armenians first
    labeled "~TMetz Yeghern," that is, "Great Disaster," until the UN
    adopted the 1948 Convention on Genocide. Turkish historiography called
    it "tehcir," that is, "relocation or deportation."

    "Tehcir" is defined as "relocation dictated by war conditions" and
    sounds even more innocent than the English word "deportation." To
    avoid remembering it as a black page of history, a normal Turkish
    citizen wasn't even told about the "deportation of the Armenians."

    When the Armenians came out with 1915 genocide accusations, Turkey
    tried to protect its national pride by using "deportation" instead of
    "genocide."

    The word genocide entered Turkey's political lexicon when in the 1970s
    through the 1980s, an Armenian terror organization called ASALA began
    hunting down and assassinating Turkish diplomats in all corners of
    the world. That is why the word had unpleasant connotations from the
    outset and to recognize 1915 as genocide was perceived as submitting
    to terrorism.

    The more Turkey democratized, globalized and opened up to outside
    world, the more these perceptions began to change. Of course, the
    end of the Cold War had a major effect. All of sudden, instead of
    the Soviet Union, Turkey found Georgia, its ethnic relative, oil- and
    gas-rich Azerbaijan and Armenia as its neighbors in southern Caucasia.

    While for many years the Armenian issue based on the claims of genocide
    was shouldered by Armenian Diaspora in many corners of the world,
    but notably in the US, France, Lebanon and Argentine. Suddenly a
    state representing the Armenian identity emerged next door to Turkey.

    For the last half century, in Turkey the word diaspora, even without
    its Armenian modifier, meant "Armenians who claim genocide with
    anti-Turkish sentiments." The country of Armenia came to represent
    the political dimensions of the issue.

    In the meanwhile, we have to remember that the assassination in
    2007 of Turkey's most influential and best known democratic figure,
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, constituted a breaking point in
    Turkey's Armenian issue that heralded the emergence on the political
    stage of the "Turkish Armenian" identity, even though they are but a
    60,000-strong minority living only in Istanbul, down from 1.5 million
    in 1915.

    Since that time, an increasing number of Turks and Kurds of Turkey,
    in solidarity with Armenians, began to discuss the Armenian issue
    and to observe April 24 as Genocide Remembrance Day, first in the
    center of Istanbul and then, this year, in many provincial capitals,
    led by Diyarbakir.

    Turkey faces a complex structure of Armenia-Diaspora-Turkey's
    Armenians. For the late Hrant Dink, normalization of relations between
    Turkey and Armenia was a life mission. A year and half after his
    assassination we came very close to his ideals.

    When the qualifying rounds of the 2010 World Football Cup put Turkey
    and Armenia in the same group, a possibility of "football diplomacy"
    reminiscent of the "'ping-pong diplomacy of the USA and China
    appeared. The [resident of Turkey, Abdullah Gul, went to Yerevan
    to watch the Armenian-Turkey game on Sept. 6, 2008. After the game,
    the foundations of warm relations were laid in a reception given by
    Armenian President Serge Sarkissian in the stadium grounds before Gul
    left for the airport to return to Turkey. A year later, Sarkissian was
    the guest of Abdullah Gul at the return Turkey-Armenia match in Bursa.

    Thousands of Turks descended on Armenian capital, Yerevan, benefiting
    from the improvement in the atmosphere between the two countries.

    The warm climate between the two countries led to signing of the
    Turkey- Armenian Protocols by two foreign ministers, Ahmet Davutoglu
    and Edward Nalbandian, on Oct. 11, 2009, in Zurich in the presence of
    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov and EU foreign affairs and security official Javier Solana.

    These historical protocols stipulated: Exchange of ambassadors between
    two countries to establish diplomatic ties, Opening of the closed
    land border between Turkey and Armenia.

    To normalize and develop relations, the parties undertook to refrain
    from mentioning two preconditions: To develop their relations, Turkey
    and Armenia will not demand steps in the Nagorno Karabakh issue,
    For the same purpose, Armenia will not demand Turkey's recognition of
    "~Tgenocide" as a precondition.

    There was opposition to normalization of Turkey-Armenian relations
    both in and out of both countries. Azerbaijan felt that Turkey had
    eliminated its bargaining cards against Armenia. Although the US
    appeared to be satisfied with the development, it was nevertheless
    asking Turkey and Armenia what would the Russian gains be from
    Turkey-Armenian rapprochement.

    Before long, the preconditions reappeared and eventually became the
    prerequisites of normalization. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in
    a speech at the Azerbaijan parliament in Baku to alleviate the concerns
    of Azeris declared that there won't be Turkey-Armenia normalization
    if there is no progress at Karabakh.

    Observers saw Erdogan's upending with a single blow of what Gul was
    trying to build as the Prime Ministers preference for the option of
    Turkey becoming an energy hub given the oil and natural gas wealth
    of Azerbaijan instead of normalizing with Armenia and pleasing the
    US and the West.

    Those in Turkey opposing warming up to Armenia, came up with the
    observation that Armenia under strong Russia influence had no intention
    of taking any steps neither in genocide or Karabakh questions anytime
    in near future and used that argument to prove that Turkey was not
    to blame for the in normalization.

    Turkish officials saw that the Minsk Group set up within Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe [OSCE] had not moved at all.

    In the group that included USA, Russia and France Turkish officials
    found out that the US did not have much leverage over Karabakh and
    the real leverage was in Russian hands. They also noted Russia had no
    incentive to find a quick solution to Karabakh and to empower Turkey
    in the Caucasia.

    If Turkey cannot get Russia to move on Armenia question even when
    Erdogan-Putin relations are at their best, it is not likely to get
    anything more at a time when they are in opposing camps over Syria.

    In Turkey there will be two elections in 2013, for one the president
    and the other for local administrations and general elections in 2014.

    No Turkish politician in the right mind can be expected to take any
    steps of rapprochement with Armenia at the cost of upsetting Azerbaijan
    and mobilizing the Azeri lobby in Turkey and Turkish nationalists.

    Because of all these considerations, while many other issues are being
    tackled, you don't see any haste, any action to put normalization
    with Armenia to the top of the agenda.

    But 2015 will be the 100th anniversary of the genocide, and Armenian
    mobilization in the international arena in 2015 will be a potential
    irritant for Turkey. But, then, Turkey's own domestic developments
    and bringing in the Diaspora to share April 24 observances, also
    means that genocide will no longer be something Turkey owes to Armenia.

    In other words, the need for closure of the Genocide File is no longer
    an incentive or sine qua non for normalization of Turkey-Armenia
    relations.

    No Turkey-Armenian normalization is detected in the horizon. And there
    won't be unless there are mutually enticing and strong incentives.

    Cengiz Candar is a contributing writer for Al-Monitor's Turkey Pulse.

    A journalist since 1976, he is the author of seven books in the Turkish
    language, mainly on Middle East issues, including the best-seller
    Mesopotamia Express: A Journey in History.

    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/05/turkey-armenia-incentive-normalization.html

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