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Armenia, Turkey inch toward rapprochement

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  • Armenia, Turkey inch toward rapprochement

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Sept 5 2008


    ARMENIA, TURKEY INCH TOWARD RAPPROCHEMENT

    By Emil Danielyan
    Friday, September 5, 2008


    Months of confidential diplomatic contacts and exchanges of unusually
    cordial statements have left Armenia and Turkey on the verge of an
    historic rapprochement that would have far-reaching ramifications for
    regional security. This weekend President Abdullah Gul will become the
    first leader of modern-day Turkey to set foot in Armenia, in what
    could be a prelude to the normalization of extremely strained
    relations between the two neighboring states.

    Gul was officially invited by his Armenian counterpart, Serzh
    Sarkisian, last June to visit Yerevan to watch the first-ever match
    between Armenia's and Turkey's national soccer teams on September
    6. The invitation underlined Sarkisian's positive response to a
    Turkish offer of `dialogue' that came just days after he took over as
    Armenia's new president in early April. Gul was one of the first
    foreign leaders to congratulate Sarkisian on his hotly disputed
    victory in the February 19 presidential election. Turkey's Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan sent
    similar congratulatory messages to their newly appointed Armenian
    counterparts.

    According to the Armenian government, Erdogan spoke of unspecified
    `certain steps' that could be taken to improve Turkish-Armenian
    relations. Senior diplomats from the two countries met secretly in
    Switzerland in early July to discuss those steps. Turkish officials
    leaked news of the talks to the domestic media following Sarkisian's
    April 9 op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, in which he made a case for
    a `fresh start' in bilateral ties. The Armenian president has since
    repeatedly expressed hope that Gul will make an historic trip to
    Yerevan. His government decided on August 14 to waive Armenia's visa
    regime with Turkey from September 1 to 6 to make it easier for Turkish
    soccer fans to flock to the Armenian capital for the World Cup
    qualifying match.

    For its part, Armenia's main opposition alliance led by former
    President Levon Ter-Petrosian postponed a planned September 5 rally to
    enable the national police to concentrate on ensuring security in and
    around Yerevan's Hrazdan stadium (Haykakan Zhamanak, August 30). In
    contrast, Sarkisian's overtures to Ankara were openly criticized by
    his predecessor Robert Kocharian and the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (ARF, or the Dashnak Party), a nationalist party
    represented in Armenia's governing coalition. ARF leaders reaffirmed
    last week they plan to stage street protests during Gul's arrival in
    Yerevan.

    Predictably, the United States, which has long been pushing for
    Turkish-Armenian dialogue, welcomed Sarkisian's invitation, with
    Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza saying that Gul's
    arrival in the Armenian capital could be a `real ground-breaking
    moment' (RFE/RL Armenia Report, July 18). Citing diplomatic sources in
    Ankara, the Turkish newspaper Vatan reported on August 30 that Gul had
    decided to accept the invitation. The report came as a team of Turkish
    security officials was due in Yerevan to discuss with their Armenian
    colleagues the tight security measures that would be taken in the
    event of the trip.

    Gul reportedly insisted on August 30 that he had still not decided
    whether to visit Armenia. Erdogan, however, implied the same day that
    the visit would take place and that the Turkish leader would be
    accompanied by Babacan (Hurriyet, September 1). The Turkish Foreign
    Minister told journalists in Istanbul on August 31 that a Turkish
    government delegation would fly to Yerevan this week to discuss
    preparations for Gul's trip. He said it would also discuss with
    Armenian officials the idea, which was recently floated by Erdogan, of
    forming an alliance of the three South Caucasus states as well as
    Turkey and Russia. Ankara is ready to include Armenia in the proposed
    Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform despite having no
    diplomatic relations with Yerevan.

    Successive Turkish governments have made the establishment of
    diplomatic relations and the reopening of the Turkish-Armenian border,
    which Ankara closed in 1993, conditional on a resolution of the
    Karabakh conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan. They have also demanded a
    halt to the decades-long Armenian campaign for international
    recognition of the 1915-1918 mass killings and deportations of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide. Both Turkish
    preconditions have been and will be non-starters for the authorities
    in Yerevan, who want an unconditional normalization of bilateral
    relations, a position essentially backed by the United States and the
    European Union.

    Whether the current Turkish leadership is ready to drop these
    preconditions remains unclear. Sarkisian held out hope for a policy
    change in Ankara in an interview with the Turkish daily Radikal on
    August 28. The two governments, he said, `have reached the
    decision-making phase' in their dialogue. `Those will not be easy
    decisions,' he said without elaboration. `Those decisions will not be
    approved by the entire public in Armenia and Turkey; but I am sure the
    majority of the public will support positive decisions.'

    According to Turkish Daily News, Turkish policy toward Armenia was the
    subject of a heated discussion during a July meeting in Ankara of
    Turkey's ambassadors abroad. The paper wrote on July 25 that some of
    them had called for a rapid normalization of Turkish-Armenian
    relations, complaining that they were finding it increasingly
    difficult to justify the preconditions on the international stage and
    to keep more foreign nations from recognizing the genocide of the
    Armenians. But other, more hawkish diplomats urged the Erdogan
    government to stay the course and continue to isolate Armenia.
    `Turkish policy on Armenia and Armenian claims of genocide will depend
    on which of the groups in the [Turkish foreign] ministry will be
    successful in convincing the government,' concluded Turkish Daily
    News. `The ruling Justice and Development Party would rather opt for
    the group in favor of reconciliation.'
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