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U.S. Pressing For Turkish-Armenian Rapprochement

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  • U.S. Pressing For Turkish-Armenian Rapprochement

    U.S. PRESSING FOR TURKISH-ARMENIAN RAPPROCHEMENT
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 7 2007

    The United States is pressing Turkey to use a rare opportunity
    to normalize relations with Armenia that arose after the shock
    assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, a senior
    U.S. official indicated on Wednesday.

    "The issue of trying to use the tragedy of Hrant Dink's murder to
    improve relations with Armenia is a major focus of our relationship
    with Turkey right now," Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew
    Bryza told RFE/RL.

    Bryza said U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who met
    her Turkish counterpart in Washington on Tuesday, is personally
    "encouraging" a Turkish-Armenian "reconciliation process" that would
    address the mass killings and deportations of Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire. He said the issue will also be high on the agenda of his
    visit to Turkey that begins on Thursday.

    Official Yerevan appears to be pessimistic about the success of those
    efforts, however. In an article published by "The Los Angeles Times" on
    Wednesday, Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian complained that Ankara is
    refusing drop its preconditions for establishing diplomatic relations
    with Yerevan and opening the Turkish-Armenian border.

    "Ankara has let a rare moment pass," Oskanian wrote. "Three weeks after
    the assassination of acclaimed Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,
    it appears the Turkish authorities have grasped neither the message
    of Hrant's life nor the significance of his death."

    "We all hoped that the gravity of this slaying and the breadth of the
    reaction would have compelled Turkey's leaders to seize the moment and
    make a radical shift in the policies that sustain today's dead-end
    situation," continued Oskanian. "However, after those initial hints
    at conciliation, the message out of Ankara has already changed.

    "Last week, according to the Turkish media, Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan said there can be no rapprochement with Armenians
    because Armenians still insist on talking about the genocide."

    Dink's January 19 shooting, widely attributed to his outspoken views
    on the Armenian tragedy, was universally condemned in and outside
    Turkey. Tens of thousands of Turks took to the streets of Istanbul
    for the funeral procession for the slain editor of the bilingual
    "Agos" weekly, one of the biggest public events in the country's
    recent history. The massive outpouring of grief and anger led many
    Turkish commentators to urge a softening of the long-standing Turkish
    policy towards Armenia.

    However, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul made it clear late last month
    that his government will not reconsider that policy unless Armenia and
    its worldwide Diaspora stop campaigning for international recognition
    of the Armenian genocide. A high-ranking Turkish Foreign Ministry
    official reportedly reaffirmed this line at a meeting with Oskanian's
    deputy Arman Kirakosian, who flew Istanbul to attend Dink's funeral.

    Still, Bryza insisted that the opportunity to improve Turkish-Armenian
    ties in the wake of Dink's murder "most definitely is not lost." "We
    want a real discussion so no one can deny what happened [in Ottoman
    Turkey,] while at the same time improving bilateral relations between
    Armenia and Turkey," he said in a phone interview. "All of that should
    happen without preconditions by anybody."

    Ankara specifically wants Yerevan to accept Erdogan's calls for the
    creation of a Turkish-Armenian commission of historians that would
    look into the tragic events of 1915-1918. Armenian leaders regard the
    idea as a Turkish ploy designed to scuttle the increasingly successful
    genocide recognition campaign.

    Oskanian asserted in his article that genocide recognition is "no
    longer a historical issue in Turkey, it's a political one." "The
    [Turkish] prime minister is right," he said. "Armenians do insist
    on talking about the genocide. It's a history-changing event that
    ought not, indeed cannot, be forgotten. However, we also advocate a
    rapprochement. And one is not a precondition for the other."

    "If Turkey can't seize the moment, it should not be surprised when
    others do," he added, referring to a U.S. congressional resolution that
    recognizes the slaughter of more than one million Ottoman Armenians
    as genocide.

    The draft resolution, co-sponsored by more than 140 legislators,
    was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives last week. It
    calls on President George W. Bush to "accurately characterize the
    systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as
    genocide." Bush has declined to use the politically sensitive term
    in his annual messages to the influential Armenian-American community.

    Bryza stressed that this should not be construed as a policy of
    genocide denial. "We do not deny the mass killings and forced exile
    of up to 1.5 million Armenians," he said. "There is no denial of
    that. All we say is that how we refer to those horrible events should
    be determined not by a political decision, but by very thoughtful
    people who have a candid and maybe painful exploration of their
    shared past."

    "We can't block it," Bryza said, referring to the genocide
    resolution. "All we can do is to have a discussion with the
    congressional leadership and explain our position. We are going to
    do everything we can to make our case."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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