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Turkey And Armenia In Tentative Talks

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  • Turkey And Armenia In Tentative Talks

    TURKEY AND ARMENIA IN TENTATIVE TALKS
    By Delphine Strauss in Ankara

    FT
    November 25 2008 03:14

    Turkey and Armenia's foreign ministers met on Monday in Istanbul under
    growing pressure to resolve one of the most intractable disputes in
    the fraught politics of the Caucasus.

    Both countries are working to mend relations after decades of mutual
    suspicion. They have no formal diplomatic relations, and Turkey
    closed its border with Armenia in 1993, supporting Azerbaijan over
    the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabakh.

    EDITOR'S CHOICE Film takes Ataturk off his pedestal - Nov-11Armenia
    and Azerbaijan seek peace accord - Nov-03Depreciation could raise
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    over IMF help - Oct-27Hardline nationalists go on trial in Turkey -
    Oct-20In September, Abdullah Gul became the first Turkish president
    to visit Armenia, attending a football match between the national
    teams. A return visit by Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan for the
    next match, in October 2009, now looks on the cards.

    Since the burst of "football diplomacy", grand gestures have given
    way to low-key contacts - Ali Babacan and his Armenian counterpart,
    Edward Nalbandian, met for dinner on Monday on the sidelines of a
    regional economic forum.

    But two developments have made it more urgent to resolve a situation
    that causes Armenia severe economic pain, and makes it hard fo r
    Turkey to win full acceptance in the international community.

    Firstly, the summer's conflict in Georgia drove Turkey to seek a
    bigger diplomatic role in the Caucasus, where energy transit routes
    now look more vulnerable, and for a time left Armenia able to trade
    only across its border with Russia. Secondly, Turkish diplomats fear
    Barack Obama will act on campaign promises and recognise the 1915
    massacres of Armenians under Ottoman rule as genocide - or fail to
    veto a Congress resolution on the issue.

    Ankara contends thousands of Turks also died and that deaths were
    due to war, hunger and displacement, not systematic planning. But
    the threat of a major upset in US relations makes it imperative to
    build warmer relations with Yerevan.

    Mr Nalbandian called on Monday for Turkey to open its border,
    telling reporters Armenia was ready to normalise relations "without
    preconditions". However, the obstacles to progress remain formidable.

    Turkey cannot afford to make a move that would alienate Azerbaijan at
    a crucial stage in negotiations over energy supplies. It may make a
    smaller gesture - Turkish Airlines, the national carrier whose routes
    are usually approved by the foreign ministry, on Monday confirmed it
    was considering starting charter flights to Yerevan.

    For its part, Yerevan has become more open to Turkey's proposal of
    addressing the genocide issue through a historical commission but a
    western diplomat said pressure from the Armenian diaspora, often more
    hardline than national politicians, had scotched the latest initiative.

    Given the difficulties, Turkey's foreign ministry was keen to play
    down the meeting's symbolism. "It's not a grandiose affair," said
    spokesman Burak Ozugergin. "Historic was our two-nil victory over
    the Armenian national team ... Now it's time to do business."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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