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Armenia And Turkey Probe Normalization Of Relations

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  • Armenia And Turkey Probe Normalization Of Relations

    ARMENIA AND TURKEY PROBE NORMALIZATION OF RELATIONS
    Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet
    Sept 8 2008
    NY

    Turkey handily won its September 6 World Cup qualifying match against
    Armenia. But for many the 2-0 final score was not as important as
    the game's diplomatic outcome. The match appears to have catalyzed
    an effort to normalize bilateral relations.

    In a diplomatic first in the troubled history of Armenian-Turkish
    relations, a Turkish head of state appeared in Yerevan. President
    Abdullah Gul spent approximately six hours on Armenian soil on
    September 6, much of it in the company of his Armenian counterpart
    Serzh Sargsyan. The two watched the qualifying match from behind
    bullet-proof glass. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    >From Sargsyan's point of view, the game was a success, even if the
    result was disappointing for Armenian football fans. Sargsyan said
    Gul had extended an invitation to make a reciprocal visit to Turkey,
    a gesture that the Armenian president termed "a good start."

    Gul sounded an even more optimistic note upon his return to
    Ankara. "Everything will move forward and normalize if this
    climate continues," the state-run Anatolia news agency quoted Gul as
    saying. "I believe my visit has destroyed a psychological barrier in
    the Caucasus."

    The Turkish daily Hurriyet reported September 8 that Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ali Babacan and his Armenian counterpart Eduard Nalbandian
    during a follow-up meeting agreed on steps that could pave the
    way for the normalization of bilateral ties. The two foreign
    ministers reportedly discussed the opening of Turkey's closed
    border with Armenia, along with the establishment of full diplomatic
    relations. The two sides also attempted to find common ground on a
    political settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Gul's office
    revealed that he will go to Azerbaijan on September 10 to discuss
    the changing diplomatic situation with Azerbaijani leaders.

    The apparent diplomatic goodwill of Armenian and Turkish leaders
    was not so evident on the streets of Yerevan, or inside Hrazdan
    Stadium. After arriving in Armenia, Gul traveled around the capital in
    an armored vehicle. Eight Turkish snipers reportedly worked jointly
    with an Armenian detail to provide additional security, and 5,000
    police stood guard at the stadium during the match.

    Protesters from the nationalist Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    staked out the route from the airport to the presidential palace. Boos
    and chants of "Recognition" - a reference to the demand that Ankara
    recognize Ottoman Turkey's 1915 slaughter of ethnic Armenians as
    genocide - met President Gul upon his arrival at President Sargsyan's
    residence.

    Police trying to clear out the mostly 20-something protestors had to
    contend with reminders from that past. "When we backed off [before],
    that's how Western Armenia [modern-day eastern Turkey] became theirs,"
    declared senior Armenian Revolutionary Federation member and former
    presidential candidate Vahan Hovhannisian when police moved in to
    remove the demonstrators from one downtown street.

    Despite the prevalence of street banners evoking the events of 1915,
    not all Yerevan residents welcomed the protest and its message.

    "Now is the time for solving everything in a more civilized manner,"
    said Lusine Gevorgian, a 37-year-old hairdresser. "If the Turkish
    president accepted the invitation, we should receive him as a guest. It
    is another thing that we all wanted our team to win."

    But Armenia's past was ever-present, with one sports commentator
    using it to try to explain the national team's on-the-field loss to
    Turkey. "Our soccer players did not play well and I think that first
    of all it was because of the great responsibility [placed on them],"
    commentator Slava Sarkisian [no relation to President Sargsyan]
    said on Armenian Public Television during the game. "They carried
    the brunt of a hundred-year history on their shoulders."

    Jan Poulson, the Armenian national team head coach, attributed the
    loss to the more mundane issue of skill. "I don't think that politics
    and history played a role here," Poulson told EurasiaNet. "We played
    against a very strong opponent and did everything we could. We should
    have been a little more realistic." According to the latest FIFA
    (FÃ~C©dÃ~C©ra tion Internationale de Football Association) ratings,
    Turkey is ranked 10th in the world; Armenia holds 98th place.

    Despite the loss, some analysts see long-term gains for Armenia.

    "Gul's visit to Armenia by itself is a very positive step for the
    normal development of future relations between the two countries,"
    commented independent political analyst Richard Giragosian. "The
    first step has been taken. The next step should be the opening of the
    Armenia-Turkey border and establishment of diplomatic ties. The issue
    of genocide recognition will be the most difficult issue above all."

    But Ruben Safrastian, director of the Institute of Oriental Studies
    at the Armenian National Academy of Sciences, cautions that it is
    still too early to make predictions. "An important achievement is
    that negotiations will continue," Safrastian said. "The Turkish side
    appears to be trying to change its attitude towards Armenia and [its
    reaction] is also conditioned on geopolitical changes happening in
    the region. By this step, Turkey is trying to solidify its role in
    the South Caucasus."

    The need for Ankara to settle its relations with Armenia before the
    European Union can accept Turkey's bid for membership likely also
    played a role in Gul's decision to travel to Armenia, Safrastian
    added. In a September 5 statement, the European Union termed the visit
    an "important first step" toward "a full normalization of relations
    between these two countries."

    One Yerevan spectator could only echo that evaluation: "It would
    have been good if our team had won, or at least scored one goal, but
    one must accept that there are no losers in this match," commented
    57-year-old Armen Mkrtchian. "Peace has won."

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the ArmeniaNow.com
    weekly in Yerevan.

    --Boundary_(ID_KWTKIa+w5HktSzoeG6R6XA)--
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