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Daily Star: Armenia's Bold Step A Model For Region

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  • Daily Star: Armenia's Bold Step A Model For Region

    ARMENIA'S BOLD STEP A MODEL FOR REGION

    Daily Star
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_i d=1&article_id=111730&categ_id=17
    Feb 13 2010
    Lebanon

    In a move that deserves praise and support, Armenian President Serzh
    Sarksyan moved forward again on Friday to normalize relations with
    Turkey. Sarksyan submitted to the Armenian Parliament two protocols
    which spring from the deal he signed with Turkish President Abdullah
    Gul last October; the two protocols would open bilateral diplomatic
    relations and open the countries' shared border.

    Sarksyan will need all the help he can get for this initiative. He is
    going against the prevailing tide in his own country and among much
    of the Armenian diaspora, as we have seen demonstrated here. In a
    bow to this resistance, Sarksyan's government added codicils to the
    accords which should make it easier for Yerevan to walk away from
    the deal if Turkey dawdles.

    This surprising and welcome break from the past should be seen only
    through the perspective of the Armenian genocide; we do not for a
    moment deny its horrors, but the massacre has become a mascot for
    many other phenomena plaguing Armenia, a cudgel that can be readily
    brandished to cast blame or distract attention from a spectrum of
    problems: high unemployment, a stagnant economy and a lack of foreign
    investment.

    Nevertheless, the Armenian president has taken a bold and necessary
    step. It is time to move forward; instead of living in the past
    and playing the game of blame and victimhood, this region needs
    understanding and reconciliation.

    For its part, Armenia has a well of untapped potential, whether
    as a passageway for a natural-gas pipeline or in its historically
    talented populace - Armenians can boast a wealth of chess champions,
    world-class musicians and accomplished engineers. And yet the country
    lacks stability; it still has a smoldering conflict with neighboring
    Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Certainly, Turkey also stands to benefit from the agreement; yes, we
    could also say the Turks are trudging into this deal only to complete
    part of their homework for their largely receding hopes for European
    Union membership.

    That, however, is a story for another day. The Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation should be acknowledged as an example of the way forward,
    of a better alternative to the seething tensions that have bedeviled
    this region for almost all of living memory. We need more leaders
    willing to stick their necks out to end tensions and conflicts. Amid
    the vortex of myriad wars and major shifts in geopolitics and the
    world economy, the recipe for a nation's success in recent decades
    remains valid: stop making war and get to work.

    Sarksyan's brave move might not succeed - the deal still has to be
    approved by both countries' legislatures - but no matter how this
    episode ends, the president deserves recognition for helping escape
    the cell of the past and moving toward peace and reconciliation.
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