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Editorial: Turkey, Armenia: Signs Of Thaw?

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  • Editorial: Turkey, Armenia: Signs Of Thaw?

    EDITORIAL: TURKEY, ARMENIA: SIGNS OF THAW?

    Arab News
    Sept 5 2008
    Saudi Arabia

    THE divisions between neighbors Turkey and Armenia are deep and
    bitter. Their common border is closed. They have no diplomatic
    relations. It is, therefore, all the more significant that Turkish
    President Abdullah Gul has accepted an invitation from his Armenian
    opposite number to go to Armenia tomorrow to watch the Turkish and
    Armenian football teams compete in a World Cup qualifier match.

    While football-mad Turks will doubtless be interested in the outcome
    of the game -- in which Turkey has to be favorite -- its diplomats will
    be looking carefully at what feelers the Armenians are putting out and
    whether they are seeking to normalize relations and have Ankara lift
    the trade embargo, imposed as a result of Yerevan's post-independence
    dispute with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Nationalist opinion in Turkey has been outraged that Gul accepted the
    Armenian invitation. There was still the outside chance last night that
    his visit might not take place. But those who deplore the move are
    wrong because improved relations, even at a modest diplomatic level,
    could address some of the issues that most Turks find so vexing.

    In particular, the Armenian insistence on branding as genocide, the
    widespread killing between 1915 and 1917 of Armenian Turks as a result
    of a Russian Bolshevik-inspired insurrection, rankles with every modern
    Turk. Turks do not deny that many lives were lost but point out that
    the slain also included Turks caught up in the rebellion. Oddly what
    Turks do no point out is that there are reliable third party reports
    attesting much of the killing in Eastern Ottoman Turkey was done by
    Kurds, who had long been bitter rivals of the local Armenians.

    Armenians are not easily going to abandon claims that have almost
    become part of their national identity. But at the same time, since
    independence Armenia has proved an economic basket case, not helped
    by internal political rivalries and Russian interference, such as
    occasionally cutting off power supplies.

    A hundred years ago, Armenians, along with Greeks and Jews enjoyed
    a respected place in Ottoman society. Although some ethnic Turks
    resented the commercial success of their minorities, they could and
    did work together successfully. Since the economic reforms 25 years
    ago, Turks have proved that they too can be dynamic and successful
    at business and commerce. It, therefore, makes no sense to have a
    closed border with a neighbor with whom they could trade.

    Nothing is going to undo the tragedies that took place among all
    communities in its eastern provinces as Ottoman Turkey fought for
    survival against Allied invaders. But the way this history is viewed
    can be changed. Armenians need no longer major on Turkish guilt while
    Turks should no longer have to bridle at allegations of genocide. The
    accusations of history are sterile. The modern world is where both
    countries are living and that demands healthy diplomatic and trade
    relations. If tomorrow's football match were to be the start of an
    inevitably long and difficult rapprochement, then Turks, Armenians
    and the wider region would all ultimately benefit.
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