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Sarkisian Hopeful That Turkey 'May Yet Mends Ties With Armenia'

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  • Sarkisian Hopeful That Turkey 'May Yet Mends Ties With Armenia'

    SARKISIAN HOPEFUL THAT TURKEY 'MAY YET MEND TIES WITH ARMENIA'

    www.asbarez.com/2009/05/22/sarkisian-hop eful-that-turkey-%e2%80%98may-yet-mend-ties-with-a rmenia%e2%80%99/
    on May 22nd, 2009

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-President Serzh Sarkisian insisted on Friday that
    Turkey may still agree to unconditionally normalize relations
    with Armenia soon despite its leaders' renewed linkage between
    Turkish-Armenian reconciliation and the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Sarkisian dismissed as too "pessimistic" his critics' belief
    that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's recent public
    pronouncements on the issue preclude the success of the year-long
    dialogue between the two neighboring nations.

    "I believe that Turkey still retains its great chance to show
    the international community and citizens of Armenia that it is a
    modern country, that it is guided by modern standards, principles of
    international law. And so in my view, it is still too early to draw
    conclusions," added Sarkisian.

    Erdogan has stated on numerous occasions in recent weeks that
    Turkey will not establish diplomatic relations and reopen the
    border with Armenia as long as the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict remains
    unresolved. His statements have been endorsed by Turkey's powerful
    military.

    "[Armenian] occupation of Karabakh is the cause here and closing of
    the border is the effect. It is impossible for us to open the border
    unless that occupation ends," the Turkish premier said during an
    official visit to Azerbaijan last week.

    The Turkish Prime Minister's remarks earned him criticism on
    Monday when the French co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group mediating
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict warned Turkey to drop its ongoing
    efforts to link the normalization of its relations with Armenia to
    a Nagorno-Karabakh resolution. "The normalization of Armenia-Turkey
    relations should not be confused with the Karabakh conflict," French
    Ambassador Bernard Fassier said in Ankara on Monday. "These are
    different and parallel processes."

    Fassier said that Armenia and Azerbaijan are closer than ever to
    a compromise solution and linking the Karabakh peace process with
    Turkey's negotiations with Armenia can jeopardize the new momentum
    in the talks.

    Armenia has also criticized Erdogan for making the normalization
    of Turkish-Armenian relations conditional on a Nagorno-Karabakh
    settlement, saying that such statements could hamper both the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani, as well as the Armenian-Turkish negotiations.

    Sarkisian, and his foreign minister, Eduard Nalbandian have
    expressed concern that Erdogan's stance could hamper both the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani, as well as the Armenian-Turkish negotiations.

    But leaders have so far commented on the implications of Erdogan's
    stance for the implementation of a U.S.-brokered "roadmap" to the
    normalization to Turkish-Armenian relations. The document has still
    not been publicized by Ankara and Yerevan.

    The Armenian president is facing growing domestic criticism over
    his conciliatory policy toward Turkey. The Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation says Sarkisian has helped the Turks scuttle an official
    U.S. recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide while failing to secure
    the lifting of Turkey's 16-year economic blockade of Armenia. The
    government's approach to the talks with Turkey, according to the ARF,
    have also given Ankara a chance to manipulate the Nagorno-Karabakh
    peace process by positioning itself as an actor in the negotiations.

    Sarkisian was speaking on Friday at a joint news conference with
    Croatia's visiting President Stjepan Mesic. His office said the two
    leaders agreed on the need for the establishment of "normal relations
    between states without preconditions."

    Mesic, whose country went through a bloody war following the break-up
    of Yugoslavia, expressed hope that Armenia will eventually make peace
    with both Turkey and Azerbaijan. "It's better to negotiate for ten
    years than to fight for ten days," he told journalists.
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