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Protocols' Failure To Damage US-Turkish Ties, Says Analyst

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  • Protocols' Failure To Damage US-Turkish Ties, Says Analyst

    PROTOCOLS' FAILURE TO DAMAGE US-TURKISH TIES, SAYS ANALYST

    Asbarez
    Feb 4th, 2010

    David Phillips, a U.S. scholar who chaired the former Turkish-Armenian
    Reconciliation Commission, presents the Armenian translation of his
    book in Yerevan. YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-If the Turkish Armenian Protocols
    fall apart, it will have a "serious adverse effect on US-Turkish
    relations," according to a renowned U.S. scholar who was actively
    involved in the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission (TARC).

    In an interview with RFE/RL on Thursday, David Phillips stressed that
    the administration of President Barack Obama understands that stronger
    U.S. pressure on turkey is essential for salvaging the fence-mending
    agreements between Armenia and Turkey.

    Phillips also criticized Ankara's linkage between the implementation
    of those agreements and a Nagorno-Karabakh settlement. He dismissed
    Turkish claims that a recent ruling by the Armenian Constitutional
    Court ran counter to key provisions of the Turkish-Armenian "protocols"
    signed in October.

    Phillips, who coordinated the work of the U.S.-sponsored TARC in
    2001-2004, further said that Armenia should not rush to walk away
    from the deal. But he stressed that its ratification by the Turkish
    parliament cannot be "an open-ended process."

    "If these protocols fall apart and there is a diplomatic train wreck,
    it will have a serious adverse effect on U.S.-Turkish relations,"
    he said. "And this comes at a time when the U.S. is seeking Turkey's
    cooperation on Iran, when Turkey is playing an increasingly important
    role in Afghanistan and during the wrap-up to redeployment from Iraq.

    "The Obama administration knows full well that these protocols should
    go forward because it is in the interests of Turkey and Armenia. It
    is also in America's interests to keep the process moving forward so
    that U.S.-Turkish cooperation is in effect."

    Analysts believe Washington will step up pressure on Ankara ahead of
    the April 24 annual commemoration of the Armenian Genocide. Obama
    avoided properly characterizing the annihilation of 1.5 million
    Armenians as Genocide in his April 24 statement in 2009, implicitly
    citing the need not to undermine the ongoing Turkish-Armenian
    rapprochement.

    U.S. Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg discussed the issue
    with President Serzh Sarkisian and Foreign Minisiter Edward Nalbandian
    during a one-day visit to Yerevan on Thursday.

    Phillips, who currently runs a conflict resolution program at the
    American University in Washington, declined to speculate on just how
    strong that pressure will be. "But I do believe that unless the Obama
    administration presses the Turks at the highest level, the likelihood
    of the protocols being ratified in Ankara will decrease," he said.

    Phillips described Steinberg's visit as a "a clear indication that the
    Obama administration understands the importance of this matter and the
    need to raise the profile of its involvement." "And its efforts to use
    its leverage should intensify in the near future," he said. "The U.S.

    needs to be actively engaged in this process if it is going to work."

    U.S. officials have already made clear that they disagree with Ankara's
    highly negative reaction to the Armenian court ruling. While upholding
    the legality of the protocols, the Constitutional Court ruled last
    month that they cannot stop Yerevan seeking a broader international
    recognition of the Armenian genocide.

    Turkish leaders claim that the court thereby prejudged the findings
    of a Turkish-Armenian "subcommission" of history experts which the two
    governments have agreed to set up. The Armenian side insists, however,
    that the panel would not be tasked with examining the history of the
    Genocide. It says the Turks are deliberately exploiting the ruling
    to justify their reluctance to ratify the protocols.

    "There is nothing in the [relevant protocol] annex that says that the
    subcommission is going to be considering the veracity of the Armenian
    genocide," agreed Phillips. "If those questions are being raised,
    they are being raised as a way of deflecting the focus of discussions
    and creating conditions whereby Armenia is blamed for any breakdown
    of the process."

    "If the Turks ever thought that signing the protocols would bring an
    end to international recognition efforts, they were wrong," he said.

    "They should have known that from the beginning and I'm quite sure
    that they do know that."

    Commenting on Turkish leaders' repeated statements making protocol
    ratification conditional on the signing of a Karabakh agreement
    acceptable to Azerbaijan, Phillips said, "The protocols are very
    clear. There is no mention in the protocols themselves or in any of
    the annexes about Nagorno-Karabakh."

    President Serzh Sarkisian has publicly threatened to annul the
    agreements unless Ankara drops the Karabakh linkage "within a
    reasonable time frame." Some of his aides have spoken of late March
    as an unofficial deadline for their unconditional implementation.

    In Phillips's view, walking away from the deal at this juncture would
    be a "mistake." But he acknowledged that the Armenian government
    cannot wait for Turkish ratification for much longer.

    "I know that for domestic political reasons, this can't be an
    open-ended process, and April 24, as the anniversary of the Armenian
    genocide, has been put forward as a deadline," he said. "Whether or
    not April 24 is a deadline is something for the Armenian government
    to decide. But there clearly needs to be an end point."

    In the meantime, suggested Phillips, Sarkisian should formally submit
    the protocols to Armenia's parliament "without necessarily calling for
    a vote." "Then the onus of responsibility for a potential diplomatic
    breakdown would rest with Ankara," he reasoned.

    Phillips spoke to RFE/RL in Yerevan where he arrived earlier on
    Thursday to present the newly published Armenian translation of his
    2005 book, "Unsilencing the Past," that gives a detailed account
    of TARC's largely confidential activities. The panel of Turkish and
    Armenian retired diplomats and prominent public figures was set up
    in 2001 at the U.S. State Department's initiative and with the tacit
    approval of the authorities in Ankara and Yerevan.

    TARC repeatedly called for the unconditional establishment
    of diplomatic relations between the two states and opening of
    their border before being disbanded in 2004. It is also infamous
    for commissioning a study on the Genocide from the New York-based
    International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ). In a report
    released in February 2003, ICTJ concluded that the Armenian Genocide
    "include all of the elements of the crime of genocide" as defined by
    a 1948 United Nations convention.

    But the report also said, to the dismay of Armenia and its worldwide
    Diaspora, that the Armenians cannot use the convention for demanding
    material or other compensation from Turkey. Former U.S. President
    George W. Bush repeatedly cited the ICTJ study in his April 24
    statements.

    Phillips hailed the study as a potential blueprint for Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation. "The full benefit of that finding has yet to be fully
    understood and materialized," he said.

    Phillips also credited TARC with laying the groundwork for the
    unprecedented thaw in Turkish-Armenian relations that began shortly
    after Sarkisian took office in April 2008. "The rapprochement that's
    underway today would never have occurred in this time frame if TARC
    hadn't existed," he said. "All of TARC's recommendations are now
    being put into effect."
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