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ANKARA: US Urges Progress On Armenia-Turkey Deal

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  • ANKARA: US Urges Progress On Armenia-Turkey Deal

    US URGES PROGRESS ON ARMENIA-TURKEY DEAL

    Hurriyet
    Feb 5 2010
    Turkey

    A senior U.S. diplomat has urged Armenia and Turkey to waste no more
    time in moving forward on stalled efforts to establish ties and open
    their border after decades of hostility.

    "I very much hope that both Armenia and Turkey will move forward. I
    don't think delay is in anybody's interests," U.S. Deputy Secretary
    of State James Steinberg said Friday during a visit to the Caucasus
    region.

    Steinberg met with Armenian President Serge Sarkisian on Thursday and
    was expected to meet Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Turkish
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu at a weekend security conference in
    Munich, Germany. Davutoglu, who was in Germany on Friday to attend
    the 46th Security Conference, had a closed-door meeting with Aliyev
    at Munich's Kempinski Hotel.

    Speaking to reporters in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, Steinberg
    said he had "extremely productive and substantive discussions" with
    Sarkisian in Armenia and that he would speak with Davutoglu about
    how to move swiftly forward.

    "There's a very strong commitment on behalf of the United States to
    work with Armenia and Turkey to see the ratification of the protocols,"
    he said.

    Diplomatic protocols

    Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols in October to establish
    diplomatic ties and reopen their shared border, in a historic step
    toward ending decades of hostility stemming from World War I-era
    killings of Armenians during the late days of the Ottoman Empire.

    The protocols must now be ratified by both countries' parliaments,
    but the process has stalled as the two sides have traded accusations
    of trying to modify the landmark deal.

    Ankara has accused Yerevan of trying to set new conditions after
    Armenia's constitutional court said the protocols could not contradict
    Yerevan's official position that the Armenian mass killings constituted
    "genocide" - a label Turkey fiercely rejects.

    Armenia, for its part, is furious over Ankara's insistence that
    normalizing Turkish-Armenian ties depends on progress between Armenia
    and Turkish ally Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
    Azerbaijan after ethnic Armenian forces occupied Karabakh in a war
    that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

    -----

    Compiled from AFP and AA stories by the Daily News staff.
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