Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Azerbaijan Concerned By Turkey-Armenia Thaw

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Azerbaijan Concerned By Turkey-Armenia Thaw

    AZERBAIJAN CONCERNED BY TURKEY-ARMENIA THAW

    Hurriyet
    April 3 2009
    Turkey

    ANKARA - A bid to open the border between Turkey and Armenia faces
    strong opposition in Azerbaijan, with the country's foreign minister
    saying Turkey would act against Azerbaijan's interests if it normalizes
    relations with Armenia before a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict

    Azerbaijan expressed concern late Thursday at the prospect of the
    border being opened between its old foe Armenia and Turkey, where
    U.S. President Barack Obama is set to visit next week.

    Azerbaijani politicians and pundits believe that an open border with
    Turkey would ease Armenia's regional isolation and encourage it to
    maintain the status quo on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    With growing signs of a thaw in relations between Turkey and Armenia
    after a century of hostility, the chances of Ankara opening the
    frontier it closed in 1993 have improved sharply. The Wall Street
    Journal reported the potential deal on Thursday, and said it could
    be unveiled as soon as April 16, when Turkey's foreign minister is
    expected to fly to the Armenian capital.

    The Turkish and Armenian governments have agreed on terms to open
    formal talks in three areas: opening and fixing borders, restoring
    diplomatic relations and setting up commissions to look at disputes,
    including the reported killings of hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    at the hands of the Ottomans in 1915.

    Azerbaijan's interests

    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said Thursday that
    Turkey would be acting against his country's national interests
    if it normalizes relations with Armenia before the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict is resolved. "If the border is opened before Armenian troops'
    withdrawal from the occupied territories of Azerbaijan, it will run
    counter to Azerbaijan's national interests. We have conveyed this
    opinion to the Turkish leadership," Mammadyarov told journalists
    during a visit to Georgia.

    Turkey closed its 268-kilometer border with Armenia in 1993 to protest
    Armenia's occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave in Azerbaijan,
    following a bloody war. That conflict remains unresolved. But an
    accord would be seen in Western capitals as a major potential success
    that could help open up and stabilize the Caucasus, a region that is
    studded with unresolved conflicts and hostile borders, and saw war
    between Russia and Georgia in August.

    Normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia would "create a new
    and positive dynamic" in relations across the region, "as well as
    in developing the economic and transport links we have been pursuing
    ever since the collapse of the former Soviet Union," said U.S. Deputy
    Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Matthew
    J. Bryza, the State Department's point man in the Caucasus.

    But if the United States proceeds with the genocide resolution
    introduced in Congress and dealing with the 1915 events, "I cannot
    imagine any Turkish government opening the Armenian border," said
    Ozgur Unluhisarcıklı, director of the Ankara office of the think
    tank German Marshall Fund of the United States. Unluhisarcıklı
    said he believes Turkey and Armenia will not be ready to sign a deal
    before April 24, and that Turkey will instead "signal" its commitment
    to reopen the borders in hopes that will be enough for Washington.

    "Any durable reconciliation has got to be built upon Turkey's
    acceptance of its past, and that is acknowledging the Armenian
    genocide," said Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian
    National Committee, a U.S.-based lobbying group.

    The extent of Armenia's isolation was demonstrated by the
    Georgia-Russia war last August, which involved the Georgian
    government's armed attack on South Ossetia and also showed the
    limitations of American and European Union influence in the
    region. When Russia cut off Georgia's main east-west railway by
    blowing up a bridge, it also cut off the dominant supply route to
    Armenia, a close Russian ally. Additionally, the conflict showed the
    vulnerability of pipelines that have been carrying oil and natural
    gas from Azerbaijan to Western markets via Georgia since 2006 and were
    targeted unsuccessfully during the Georgia war. The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline carries 1 million barrels of crude oil per day to Turkey's
    Mediterranean coast.

    Conference in Baku

    A conference on the bilateral relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan
    will be held with the participation of parliamentarians from both
    countries in Baku from April 13 to 15, said Sabir Rustamkhanli, the
    chairman of the Citizen Solidarity Party. Rustamkhanli added that
    the chairman of the Motherland Party, Fazail Agamali, is in Turkey
    to resolve organizational issues around the conference.

    The Nagorno-Karabakh issue

    Politically and geographically, Nagorno-Karabakh is far from the
    European Union and the United States. As is true of most disputed
    areas, some find the situation of this contested former territory
    of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic to be a murky one and it
    is difficult to determine which side Ä~^ Armenian or Azerbaijani Ä~^
    to fully support.

    Materialistically, fossil-fuel-rich Azerbaijan is the greater
    prize. There is also a degree of understandable sympathy for the tragic
    past of the Armenian people and some have expressed apprehension over
    the human-rights situation in Azerbaijan and, to a lesser extent,
    Armenia.

    In 1988, Armenia occupied 20 percent of Nagorno-Karabakh and
    seven surrounding regions. In late December 1991, Azerbaijan
    lost Nagorno-Karabakh, except for Shusha and Khojali; by 1993,
    the Armenian Armed Forces occupied those regions as well. In 1994,
    the two countries signed a cease-fire agreement that ended active
    hostilities. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, including Russia,
    France and the U.S., are currently holding peaceful, but so far
    fruitless negotiations between the rival states.
Working...
X