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  • Armenia: Presidential Visit To Russia Sparks Speculation On Turkish-

    ARMENIA: PRESIDENTIAL VISIT TO RUSSIA SPARKS SPECULATION ON TURKISH-ARMENIAN RELATIONS
    Haroutiun Khachatrian

    EurasiaNet
    June 27 2008
    NY

    The venue for Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan's first official visit
    abroad -- Moscow -- came as no surprise. But, in a potential sign of
    a fresh Armenian foreign policy initiative, it was Turkey that stole
    the show.

    Sargsyan's June 23-25 trip was designed to emphasize the importance
    of Armenia's "strategic partnership' with Russia. There were the
    usual touches -- meetings with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev,
    Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, and the chairs of both chambers of
    parliament. He also placed a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier,
    and met with political experts and journalists.

    And there were the usual expressions of mutual support. In a June
    24 statement, Medvedev described the partnership between Moscow and
    Yerevan as critical to the entire South Caucasus. The two countries
    have declared that they will coordinate their foreign policy to further
    that relationship. "We are confident that close cooperation between
    Russia and Armenia is a pledge for the stable ... development of the
    whole region," Medvedev said.

    Medvedev also reiterated Russia's support for a solution to the
    conflict with Azerbaijan over the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region
    via existing negotiating mechanisms.

    But the three-day visit was not without surprises -- at least for
    Armenians. On June 23, Sargsyan, who has requested that the "Sarkisian"
    spelling of his last name be dropped, announced that he wants to
    normalize relations with Turkey as quickly as possible. As a means to
    that end, he has pledged to invite Turkish President Abdullah Gul to
    Yerevan to watch the September 6 World Cup qualifying match between
    Turkey and Armenia. The Armenian capital will be hosting the game.

    Sargsyan's assertion that he would not object to a panel of
    Armenian-Turkish experts examining the massive 1915 killing of ethnic
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks was cause for further discussion among
    Armenians. A condition, however, was put on the creation of such a
    panel -- the reopening of Turkey's border with Armenia. "Otherwise,
    [the panel] may become a good way of abusing and prolonging the issue
    for [many] years," PanArmenian.net reported Sargsyan as saying.

    The issue has long been a stumbling block for any attempt at
    normalizing relations with Ankara. Former President Robert Kocharian
    had maintained that the event -- termed genocide within Armenia --
    was not subject to debate.

    One Yerevan expert, though, argues that Sargsyan's move was more
    aimed at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
    (PACE) than at Turkey itself. "I believe Sargsyan was just trying
    to get a beneficial vote, including by the Turkish delegates, for
    the PACE resolution about Armenia expected in Strasbourg two days
    later," commented Alexsander Iskandarian, director of the Caucasus
    Institute. The June 25 resolution gave the Armenian government until
    January 2009 to meet earlier demands for overtures to the opposition
    in the wake of March 1 crackdown on protestors led by ex-President
    Levon Ter-Petrosian. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Armenia's ruling coalition appears potentially split on the notion
    of an Armenian-Turkish genocide investigation. In a June 25 story,
    the daily newspaper Aravot quoted Vahan Hovahannisian, leader of the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutiun's parliamentary
    faction, as saying that his party would organize a protest if Gul
    arrives in Yerevan in September.

    By comparison, problems with Russia appeared to receive far less
    official scrutiny.

    No progress was made in determining the price of Russian gas for
    Armenia the coming year. Nor was mention made of Russia's prospective
    role in an Armenian project to refine Iranian crude oil. Apart
    from a pledge to restore Armenia's railway link with Russia, land
    transportation -- an issue since the main Georgian-Russian border
    point closed in 2006 -- also escaped attention.

    While most Armenian politicians dodged debate about Armenia's ties
    with Russia, pro-opposition media were quick to express skepticism
    about the event.

    Referring to unnamed "sources close to the Kremlin," the daily Haykakan
    Zhamanak claimed on June 25 that Medvedev had criticized Sargsyan's
    efforts to strengthen Armenia's ties with the European Union and the
    North Atlantic Treaty Organization as well as his alleged failure to
    guarantee political stability within the country. The newspaper argued
    that the lack of a response from Medvedev to an open invitation from
    Sargsyan to visit Armenia hints that the Kremlin may not be as pleased
    with Yerevan as the official bonhomie may suggest.

    Officials could not be reached for comment. But analyst Iskandarian
    believes that, on the whole, the summit's primary purpose was
    achieved: Sargsyan and Medvedev have now "calibrated their watches,"
    he said. "Both have reached their goals."
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