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ANKARA: US Diplomat Backs Proposed Commission On Armenian Issue

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  • ANKARA: US Diplomat Backs Proposed Commission On Armenian Issue

    US DIPLOMAT BACKS PROPOSED COMMISSION ON ARMENIAN ISSUE

    Today's Zaman
    June 18 2009
    Turkey

    A senior US diplomat has indicated the Obama administration's
    support for Turkey's almost five-year-old proposal to establish a
    joint commission of historians to resolve the question of whether
    the killings of Anatolian Armenians during World War I amounted
    to genocide.

    Remarks by Philip Gordon, assistant secretary of state for Europe
    and Eurasian affairs, came on Tuesday at a hearing of the Foreign
    Affairs Committee of the US House of Representatives. The hearing,
    chaired by Congressman Robert Wexler, was titled "Strengthening the
    Transatlantic Alliance: An Overview of the Obama Administration's
    Policies in Europe."

    Gordon recalled that he had recently paid visits to Armenia, Azerbaijan
    and Georgia since he observed that there are both challenges and
    opportunities in this region.

    "You have two parallel but separate tracks going on; a Turkey-Armenia
    normalization reconciliation process that we do think is quite
    potentially historic, where the two countries have agreed on a
    framework for normalizing their relations. That would include
    opening the border, which has been closed for far too long, which
    would establish diplomatic relations and would provide commissions
    in key areas, including history," Gordon said. He was apparently
    referring to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's 2005 letter to
    then-Armenian President Robert Kocharyan, inviting him to establish
    a joint commission of historians and experts from both Turkey and
    Armenia to study the events of 1915 using documents from the archives
    of Turkey, Armenia and any other country believed to have played a
    part in the issue.

    At a joint press conference in Ankara during Obama's landmark visit to
    Turkey in early April, President Abdullah Gul recalled the proposal
    and said: "If it has a high interest in this issue, any country --
    for example, it may be the US, it may be France -- can join this joint
    commission of historians, and we are ready to [face] the results."

    Gordon, meanwhile, also said: "And we encourage that process and
    we support it. We have said that it is an independent process and
    believe that it should move forward, regardless of whatever else is
    happening in Europe or anywhere else, because both countries would
    benefit. That said, it is nonetheless the case that at the same
    time negotiations on Nagorno-Karabakh are going on between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan, and that is part of the context in which the region
    moves forward. And we're encouraging that process as well. So, again,
    our view is that these are separate tracks. They're moving forward
    at different speeds. But we are engaged vigorously on both, because
    if both were to succeed, it really would be an historic opportunity
    for the region, from which all three of those countries would benefit."

    Gordon's remarks found a rapid response from the US-based Armenian
    diaspora. In a press release delivered later the same day, the Armenian
    National Committee of America (ANCA) said, "The establishment of an
    Armenia-Turkey commission of historians, a measure Turkey has long
    sought to cast a doubt over the overwhelming historical record of
    the Armenian genocide, stands in stark contrast to President Obama's
    statements during his campaign for the White House."
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