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Yerevan perspective: No sign of improved Turkish-Armenian relations

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  • Yerevan perspective: No sign of improved Turkish-Armenian relations

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Feb 1 2007

    YEREVAN'S PERSPECTIVE: NO SIGNS OF IMPROVED TURKISH-ARMENIAN
    RELATIONS
    Emil Danielyan 2/01/07



    Ankara appears to be sticking to long-standing preconditions for
    normalizing Turkey's historically strained relationship with Armenia,
    despite domestic appeals that followed the assassination of a
    renowned Turkish-Armenian journalist.

    Senior Turkish and Armenian diplomats held rare talks in Istanbul in
    late January amid hopes for a rapprochement between the two
    neighboring states. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
    Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Arman Kirakossian's talks with
    Turkish officials reportedly failed to make any progress, though.

    "Differences in the parties' positions on the discussed issues
    remain," Vladimir Karapetian, a spokesman for the Armenian Foreign
    Ministry, said in a January 26 statement about the meeting. He
    indicated that Turkey continues to oppose an unconditional
    establishment of diplomatic relations and the opening of its border
    with Armenia.

    Prior to the bilateral meeting, Kirakossian attended the high-profile
    funeral of Hrant Dink, the ethnic Armenian editor of the bilingual
    Agos weekly whose January 19 killing sparked outrage both inside
    Turkey and far beyond its borders. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 as a gesture of support
    for Azerbaijan, its closest Turkic ally, which remains locked in a
    bitter dispute with Armenia over the breakaway region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
    Successive Turkish governments have conditioned the lifting of the
    economic blockade on the withdrawal of Armenian forces from
    Azerbaijani districts bordering Karabakh, and an end to the Armenian
    campaign for international recognition of the events of 1915 as
    genocide. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Turkish leaders haven't changed their position despite pressure from
    the United States and the European Union. Many officials in
    Washington and Brussels believe that a Turkish-Armenian rapprochement
    would significantly boost stability in the volatile South Caucasus.
    In late January, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul effectively
    ruled out any policy shift, saying that Armenia should first "review
    its negative feelings against us, and should not make unjust
    demands."

    The Armenian drive for genocide recognition, meanwhile, appears to be
    gaining momentum. Influential Armenian lobby groups in the United
    States are pressing for the US House of Representatives to adopt a
    genocide recognition resolution. One of them, the Armenian National
    Committee of America, characterized Dink's January 19 shooting as a
    "wake-up call to the United States and the entire international
    community to unite together in ending forever the Turkish
    government's denial of the Armenian Genocide." A group of US
    lawmakers introduced a new recognition bill on January 30.

    On the grassroots level, Turkish-Armenian dialogue may be easier to
    foster in the aftermath of Dink's fatal shooting. The universal
    condemnation of the crime provided a rare moment of emotional unity
    between many Turks and Armenians. The latter were astounded by
    television pictures of thousands of ordinary Turks marching in the
    funeral procession for the slain editor and carrying banners that
    read, "We are all Armenians!" The images defied the negative Armenian
    stereotypes about Turks, prompting hopes to rise among many
    Armenians, in Armenia proper and living abroad, that the images
    reflected Turkey's greater willingness to confront contentious
    questions of the past.

    Yektan Turkyilmaz, a US-based Turkish scholar, said Turkish society
    will now be "at least slightly more sympathetic" to the Armenians,
    but cautioned against excessive expectations. Some Turkey-watchers in
    Armenia, meanwhile, remain skeptical, saying that the vast majority
    of Turks continue to trust their leaders' assertion that Ottoman
    Armenians died in much smaller numbers and as a result of internal
    strife, rather than from a premeditated government effort. "I don't
    think Turkish public opinion has changed since that murder," said
    Ruben Safrastian, director of the Yerevan-based Institute of Oriental
    Studies.

    The final years of the Ottoman Empire, until recently a taboo
    subject, are being increasingly discussed in Turkey, with a growing
    number of local scholars and intellectuals openly questioning the
    official version of events. Some of them, including Dink and Nobel
    laureate Orhan Pamuk, have been prosecuted under a controversial
    article of the Turkish criminal code that makes it a crime to "insult
    Turkishness." [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    According to Turkyilmaz, other dissenters are increasingly worried
    about becoming the next target of ultranationalist militants. "The
    anxiety and horror that the killing of Mr. Dink has caused among
    Turkish intellectuals is very deep," he said. "But the struggle will
    continue as we want to see our country become freer, more democratic
    and more peaceful. Turkey has a very deeply-rooted tradition of
    opposition, and I believe that it will eventually prevail."


    Editor's Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.
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