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  • Yerevan - Ankara, The Big Chill

    YEREVAN - ANKARA, THE BIG CHILL

    Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso, Italy
    Feb 5 2014

    Mikayel Zolyan | Yerevan
    5 February 2014

    Seven years after Hrant Dink's tragic death in Istanbul, his dream
    of an Armenian-Turkish reconciliation seems as distant as ever

    On January 19 thousands of people marched in the streets of Istanbul,
    holding signs in Turkish and Armenian, in commemoration of the 7th
    anniversary of the tragic death of the journalist Hrant Dink. It may
    be a sign of changing times in Turkey that thousands of people took
    to the streets in memory of an ethnic Armenian journalist. However,
    the dream that was so dear to Hrant Dink, the reconciliation between
    Armenia and Turkey, seems today almost as remote as it had been before
    his murder.

    Currently, says Artak Ayunts, a conflict resolution expert from
    Yerevan, on the official level the relations between the two countries
    are at the lowest point since 2007. Signs are abundant that Armenia
    and Turkey are drifting even further apart than they were (if that is
    possible). Even though the Armenian-Turkish protocols signed in 2009
    have not been formally discarded, neither side has ratified them and it
    is impossible to imagine that they will be ratified in the foreseeable
    future. Neither the much publicized visit of Turkish foreign minister
    to Yerevan, when he took part in the Black Sea Economic Cooperation
    meeting on December 12 2013, nor the communication between Davutoglu
    and Nalbandyan at OSCE meeting in Kiev several days earlier, have
    lead to any significant outcomes.

    After the meeting between Davutoglu and Nalbandyan in Yerevan,
    instead of holding a joint press conference, Davutogly gave a press
    conference to Turkish journalists, while Armenian Ministry of Foreign
    Affairs issued a statement. Apart from general thoughts, neither side
    expressed any new ideas. Some attention was drawn to Davutoglu's
    remarks, quoted by Turkish newspapers: he acknowledged that what
    happened to Armenians in 1915 was "completely wrong" and "inhumane".

    However, this hardly can be interpreted as willingness to go beyond
    Ankara's traditional position, since Davutoglu immediately added that
    Armenia in its turn should be ready to acknowledge the suffering
    that Turks have been through during these events. In other words,
    Davutoglu was largely reproducing the traditional Turkish view,
    according to which what happened in 1915 was not a genocide organized
    by the Turkish state, but rather series of ethnic clashes, of which
    both Armenians and Turks suffered.

    End of the football diplomacy in Armenia

    Armenia has emerged disillusioned from the so called "football
    diplomacy". Signing protocols had been a bold step for Armenia's
    president Serzh Sargsyan, who received a lot of criticism for
    it. One of the ruling coalition parties, Dashnaktsutyun, even left
    the coalition because of the protocols. The reaction of the Diaspora
    was furious, and arguably Sargsyan's government has never been able
    to recover its standing among Diaspora communities (of course, the
    Armenian-Turkish deal was not the only cause for this, allegations
    of corruption and election fraud also played their part).

    There are signs of hardening of the Armenian position, such as the
    suggestion by one of the members of the cabinet that the Republic
    of Armenia should be renamed into Republic of Eastern Armenia (which
    implies a territorial claim to Turkey). Though the suggestion was not
    taken seriously and was criticized even by some members of the ruling
    party, it is a clear sign of how unhappy the Armenian government is
    with the current state of Armenia-Turkey relations.

    Attitudes of the Armenian society, which had begun to change
    during the times of football diplomacy, are also hardening. The
    way a relatively minor incident was covered in Armenian media
    showed that the Armenian public is also disappointed in the idea
    of Armenian-Turkish rapprochement. Hasan Oktay, a Turkish political
    analyst, who has often visited Armenia, and, as it turned out, has
    nationalist political views, posted on his Facebook profile photos
    of himself holding the Turkish nationalist "grey wolves" salute
    in Yerevan's central square. This does not seem like a major cause
    for scandal, but Oktay's Facebook profile also featured his photos
    posing with Armenia's prime-minister, Tigran Sargsyan, and even with
    the Catholicos of all Armenians, Garegin I. Newspapers and social
    networks harshly criticized the prime-minister and the Catholicos,
    for meeting a Turkish radical nationalist.

    Turkey and the 2015 anniversary

    As for Turkey, here the Armenian issue is hardly one of the priorities
    for politicians, while the civil war in Syria and the corruption
    scandal continue to occupy the headlines of the newspapers. However,
    one thing forces the Turkish government to draw attention to the
    Armenian issue: next year, in 2015, it will be the 100th anniversary
    of the extermination of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. The 100th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide is a date of major symbolic
    significance, and the Armenian Diaspora communities are getting ready
    for a forceful campaign aimed at genocide recognition.

    The Turkish government may use two possible strategies of countering
    the negative effects of the genocide anniversary, says historian
    Tigran Zakaryan. One is to continue to do what Turkey has done for
    decades, responding to Armenian Diaspora's awareness campaign with
    its own lobbying and counter-propaganda. Another possible strategy
    is acknowledging certain facts of violence against the Armenians,
    and even expressing regret for certain episodes, in order to show
    that Turkey has come to terms with its past, without however accepting
    that the killings of 1915 constituted a genocide.

    Probably, says Zakaryan, Turkish policies will combine elements of
    both strategies. However, apart from the external challenge presented
    by Armenian Diaspora, the Turkish government will also have to deal
    with the increasingly skeptic attitude of various groups within the
    Turkish society toward the officially accepted narrative of history.

    In any case, the issue of genocide recognition is likely to cause a
    lot of headache for the Turkish government until April 2015.

    http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/All-news/Yerevan-Ankara-the-big-chill-147606


    From: Baghdasarian
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