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ANKARA: No Major Shift Expected In Armenia's Policy After Polls

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  • ANKARA: No Major Shift Expected In Armenia's Policy After Polls

    NO MAJOR SHIFT EXPECTED IN ARMENIA'S POLICY AFTER POLLS
    EmÝne Kart Ankara

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 15 2007

    Analysts and observers have held little hope for a dramatic shift in
    foreign policy of Turkey's estranged neighbor Armenia following the
    weekend's parliamentary elections in which pro-presidential parties
    won a large majority -- and with Yerevan being expected to continue
    to put worldwide recognition of an alleged Armenian genocide at heart
    of its foreign policy decision-making mechanism.

    The winner of the election -- viewed as a dress rehearsal for
    the presidential vote due to be held at the beginning of 2008 --
    was Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan, who heads the Republican Party,
    which will control around 40 percent of the 131 seats in parliament.

    Sarksyan, a 52-year-old former welder, is from Nagorno-Karabakh,
    as is current President Robert Kocharian, a notorious hard-liner.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is a territory inside Azerbaijan that has been
    controlled by Armenian and local ethnic Armenian forces since a
    six-year war that ended in 1994. Tensions remain high between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan, ex-Soviet republics in the Caucasus. Sarksyan was at
    Kocharian's side in the separatist administration during the war. For
    nearly 15 years he has held senior posts in Armenia's government
    including defense minister and national security minister.

    Back in December 2006, in an article that appeared in The Wall Street
    Journal, then-Defense Minister Sarksyan called on the European Union
    to become "increasingly involved in finding a way to a breakthrough
    for relations between Turkey and Armenia."

    Armenia, for its part, considers remembering the Armenian "genocide"
    important, Sarksyan wrote then. But Armenia does not tie "the
    establishment of diplomatic relations to recognition of the genocide,"
    he suggested at the time.

    This very last sentence hinting that Armenia might not be insistent
    on recognition of an alleged genocide of Anatolian Armenians at the
    hands of the Ottoman Empire during the World War I for reestablishing
    diplomatic relations with Ankara could be considered as the sole light
    of hope regarding the new Armenian government's policy toward Turkey,
    Utku Kundakcý of the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation's
    (TESEV) Foreign Policy Program, told Today's Zaman.

    Noting that this hope could only be related to the tone and wording
    of Sarksyan's remarks, Kundakcý, however, cautioned that one should
    not hold high expectations.

    Ankara has recognized Yerevan since the former Soviet republic gained
    independence in 1991, but nevertheless refuses to set up diplomatic
    ties because of Armenian efforts to secure international condemnation
    of the controversial World War I era killings of Anatolian Armenians
    as genocide. Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were
    slaughtered in orchestrated killings during the last years of the
    Ottoman Empire. Turkey categorically rejects the claims, saying that
    300,000 Armenians along with at least as many Turks died in civil
    strife which emerged when the Armenians took up arms for independence
    in eastern Anatolia and sided with the Russian troops which were
    invading Ottoman lands.

    In 1993 Turkey also shut its border with Armenia in a show of
    solidarity with its close ally Azerbaijan, which was at war with
    Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, dealing a heavy economic
    blow to the impoverished nation. Ankara wants Armenia to abandon its
    campaign for the recognition of the killings as genocide and make
    progress in its dispute with Baku before formal diplomatic relations
    can be established.

    For his part, Kaan Soyak, the co-chairman of the Turkish-Armenian
    Business Council, noted that participation in the elections stood at
    55-57 percent, thus low participation in elections have been widely
    interpreted as a confirmation of the ongoing status quo.

    Nevertheless, he still argued that Turkey should take the initiative
    of unilaterally opening the border with Armenia in order to invalidate
    hard-liner policies in the neighboring country.

    Yet, Sedat Laciner, head of the Ankara-based International Strategic
    Research Organization (ISRO/USAK), drew attention to the fact that
    now those who favor hard-liner policies have been in power and any
    concession given by Turkey would be used as a tool by those again
    against Turkey.

    "If Turkey makes any concessions such as unilaterally opening
    borders, then it will be giving a wrong message to both the ruling
    anti-Turkey camp and those in opposition who favor a more rationalist
    and softer relationship with Turkey. Then you would be encouraging
    those hard-liners to keep up with their unacceptable policies, while
    you'll be harming the moderate camp. Its costs would be heavy."

    --Boundary_(ID_PiYPeLEQolQKoDvr+2kxd w)--
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