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U.S. To Again Press For Turkish-Armenian Rapprochement

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  • U.S. To Again Press For Turkish-Armenian Rapprochement

    U.S. TO AGAIN PRESS FOR TURKISH-ARMENIAN RAPPROCHEMENT
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Oct 24 2007

    The United States hopes to defuse the latest surge in Turkish-Armenian
    tensions and will make a fresh attempt to help normalize Turkey's
    strained relationship with Armenia, a senior U.S. official said
    on Wednesday.

    Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza said the controversy
    surrounding the possible passage of a U.S. Congressional resolution
    recognizing as genocide the mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman
    Turkey underscores the need for the two neighboring states to have
    diplomatic relations and an open border.

    "This incident has demonstrated in America, Armenia and Turkey how
    important it is that there be a serious initiative to fully normalize
    Armenian-Turkish relations," he told RFE/RL in Yerevan.

    Bryza, who was visiting the Armenian capital in his capacity as the
    U.S. co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, said he will travel to Ankara on
    Thursday to discuss the matter with Turkish leaders on the margins of a
    Black Sea economic forum. "One of my own main goals is to explore the
    possibility of rejuvenating efforts to bring the countries together,"
    he said.

    "The resolution will either pass or won't pass. Either way, there
    is still going to be this problem out there that he is behind the
    whole controversy over the resolution. We have to get the two sides
    together," he added.

    Official Ankara has reacted furiously to the draft resolution's
    approval by a key House of Representatives committee earlier this
    month, warning that its passage by the full chamber would not only
    damage U.S.-Turkish ties but have negative consequences for Armenia.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan indicated on October 16
    that his government would be even more unwilling to unconditionally
    normalize ties with Yerevan.

    "Those who expect openings from Turkey will be left alone with their
    problems," Erdogan said. "They will have to pay the cost of their
    hostility towards an important country like Turkey."

    "I don't understand what the Turks are saying," Armenian Prime Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian told the Associated Press news agency in Washington
    on Tuesday. "We have no relations now. We cannot harm something that
    is non existent."

    While reaffirming Yerevan's support for the House bill, Sarkisian
    stressed that his country does not view genocide recognition as a
    precondition for improving relations with Turkey.

    Successive Turkish governments have made the reopening of the
    Turkish-Armenian border and establishment of diplomatic relations
    conditional on a settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and a
    halt to the decades-long campaign for international recognition of
    the Armenian genocide. The U.S. has for years tried unsuccessfully
    get them to drop those preconditions. It has also urged Armenia to
    explicitly rule out territorial claims to Turkey.

    In Bryza's words, many officials in Ankara now recognize the need to
    reconsider Turkey's policy towards Armenia. "It is outrageous that the
    [Turkish-Armenian] border is closed," the official said. "I think
    that there are a lot of people in the upper reaches of the Turkish
    government who recognize that an open border would change the strategic
    map here in a very positive way. I hope that we can convince everybody
    in the region, including in Azerbaijan, that that's indeed the case."
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