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  • Urging Turkey To Move Forward

    URGING TURKEY TO MOVE FORWARD

    http://reporter.am/index.cfm?objectid=C4D 34B87-17B7-11DF-923A0003FF3452C2
    Friday February 12, 2010

    The protocols on the normalization of relations between Armenia and
    Turkey, announced on August 31, 2009, and signed on October 10,
    were supposed to lead to the end of the 16-year Turkish blockade
    of Armenia. But under the protocols, they must be ratified by the
    parliaments of the two sides before they are implemented. The Turkish
    side is choosing to continue its blockade by holding up ratification.

    If the administration of Armenia's President Serge Sargsyan could
    sign the protocols, it was because Turkey had agreed to exclude its
    main demand or precondition for opening the border with Armenia: the
    resolution of the Karabakh conflict to Azerbaijan's satisfaction. But
    the Turkish government still insists on that precondition. It says
    that the Turkish parliament is unlikely to ratify the protocols until
    the Karabakh conflict is resolved. The Turkish prime minister claims
    that the parliament makes its own, independent judgment.

    In an important speech this week before Chatham House in London,
    President Sargsyan sought to lay the groundwork for the next stage of
    the very public negotiations between Armenia and Turkey. He called on
    Turkey to proceed with the ratification of the protocols but warned
    that Armenia would "discontinue" the process if Turkey shows that
    its goal is to "protract" the process.

    "Senior Turkish officials repeatedly assert that their parliament is
    politically independent and its decision is impossible to predict,"
    Mr. Sargsyan said. Moreover, they seek the support of opposition
    parties as well. But, he noted, his administration has been willing to
    lose "a key ally in the ruling coalition" - the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation, which strongly opposes the terms of the protocols -
    but has "persevered."

    "I am confident that President Gul and Prime Minister Erdogan will,
    subject to the demonstration of political will, find sufficient support
    within their party, which holds the majority of seats in the Turkish
    parliament," Mr. Sargsyan said.

    He noted that Armenia's Constitutional Court had acted promptly
    to review the protocols and had ruled unanimously that they were
    consistent with Armenia's Constitution. He announced that he would
    immediately submit the protocols to the National Assembly for
    ratification. He added: "As the political leader of the political
    majority of the Armenian parliament, I reiterate that I rule out
    any possibility of the Armenian Parliament failing to ratify the
    protocols in case Turkey ratifies the protocols without preconditions,
    as agreed."

    Thus Armenia is moving toward ratification, but will "discontinue"
    the process if Turkey continues to drag its feet and show that
    its intention is simply to create the pretense that a process of
    normalization is underway.

    President Sargsyan's speech before an influential London audience was
    a laudable step toward the resolution, one way or the other, of the
    fate of the protocols. It was laudable because he chose a high-profile
    forum and because he urged Turkey to act, while remaining firm in his
    key positions: (1) that the resolution of the Karabakh conflict cannot
    be a precondition for the normalization of relations; (2) that Turkey
    must ratify before Armenia ratifies; and (3) that unless there is
    prompt action, Armenia will withdraw unilaterally from the protocols.

    We trust that his administration and its friends will echo this message
    repeatedly in various other forums in the coming days. Before long,
    if Turkey continues to "protract" the process, it may be too late to
    simply talk about discontinuing it.
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