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Turkish PM Visits Azerbaijan To Try To Cut Through Impasse With Arme

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  • Turkish PM Visits Azerbaijan To Try To Cut Through Impasse With Arme

    TURKISH PM VISITS AZERBAIJAN TO TRY TO CUT THROUGH IMPASSE WITH ARMENIA

    Deutsche Welle
    http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4245906 ,00.html
    May 12 2009
    Germany

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is visiting Azerbaijan
    with hopes of bringing some movement into his ally's ongoing conflict
    with Armenia. But all of the parties concerned have major conflicts
    of interest.

    The main goal for Erdogan in his talks with Azerbaijani President
    Ilham Aliyev is to reassure Baku that Turkey's current policy of
    rapprochement with Armenia willd not harm relations between the
    two allies.

    Turkey has always supported Azerbaijan in the conflict over
    Nagorny-Karabakh, a majority Armenian area of Azerbaijan that's
    under Armenian control. At the same time, Turkey hopes improving its
    relations with Armenia will bolster its chances for EU membership.

    Experts say Ankara is stuck between a rock and a hard place.

    "Turkey is pursuing a policy of unproblematic relations with its
    neighbors and would like to open its border with Armenia, something
    supported by the Armenian public," Uwe Hallbach - a Caucasus expert
    for the German Institute for International and Security Affairs in
    Berlin - told DW-WORLD.DE. "But the Nagorny-Karabakh conflict is a
    major sticking point."

    Jan Senkyr, the representative of Germany's Konrad Adenauer Foundation
    in Turkey, concurs.

    "Aside from the policy of getting on with its neighbors, Turkey would
    like more influence in the Caucasus, would benefit economically from
    opening the border with Armenia and would better its image with both
    the US and the EU," Senkyr told DW-WORLD.DE.

    Solidarity and animosity

    Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:
    Nagorny-Karabakh has been the object of conflict for two decades
    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 after Armenian troops
    entered Nagorny-Karabakh. That act was an expression of solidarity
    with Azerbaijan, with which Turkey shares a number of linguistic,
    cultural and historical commonalities.

    And Baku expects Turkey's continuing unconditional support on the
    issue.

    "Azerbaijan thinks it's Turkey's duty to keep the border closed until
    the Nagorny-Karabakh conflict is resolved," Hallbach said. "That's why
    Baku views the thaw between Turkey and Armenia with such mistrust. It
    would be a great boon if that issue were uncoupled from other
    questions."

    For Armenians, Hallbach said, the importance of Nagorny-Karabakh
    outweighs even the resentment about what many consider the genocide
    of Armenians by Turkey in World War I. However, most Armenians would
    likely support a de-escalation of the Nagorny-Karabakh conflict,
    if Azerbaijan were willing to make concessions of its own.

    Baku, which views the region as an unequivocal part of its sovereign
    territory, has not thus far proven amenable to compromise.

    "Turkey has to walk a diplomatic tight-rope," Senkyr said. "That's
    why Erdogan has gone to Baku - to smooth things over."

    Pipeline problem

    The situation is further complicated by the fact that Azerbaijan is
    one of the countries expected to supply natural gas to the planned
    Nabucco Pipeline, which would connect Turkey and Western Europe.

    The project is one of Turkey's main economic focuses for the future,
    but Baku has intimated that Azerbaijan could create problems, if it
    feels betrayed by Turkish attempts to reconcile with Armenia.

    Experts think such intimations are probably a bluff.

    "Azerbaijan has threatened to revise its pipeline policies, but you
    have to question whether that is meant seriously," Hallbach said. "Such
    a move would actually be directly contrary to their interests."

    "Nothing has happened yet," Senkyr concurred. "It's probably an
    expression of disappointment, and the future will depend on how Turkey
    acts in its negotiations with Armenia."

    Does Moscow hold the key?

    On Saturday, Erdogan is to call on Russian Prime Minister Vladimir
    Putin. The situation in the Caucasus, where Russia has enormous
    influence, will likely be one of the topics for the two leaders.

    Russia, say regional specialists, could be the ideal mediator to
    break the many conflicts of interest dividing Turkey, Azerbaijan and
    Armenia at the moment.

    "Especially compared with the situation surrounding Georgia, Russia
    is relatively neutral concerning Nagorny-Karabakh," Hallbach told
    DW-WORLD.DE. "It could indeed put pressure on Armenia to withdraw
    its troops."

    Senkyr agrees that Russia is interested in bringing stability to the
    volatile Caucasus but said other interests could come into play.

    "From an energy standpoint, Russia has no desire to see Azerbaijan
    so closely tied to the EU," Senkyr said.

    No one expects a breakthrough to come any time in the immediate
    future. Erdogan would likely be satisfied if his two-day visit to
    Azerbaijan and upcoming trip to Russia bring some small steps toward
    a lasting solution.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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