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Armenia, Turkey Won't Discuss The Deepest Source Of Their Enmity

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  • Armenia, Turkey Won't Discuss The Deepest Source Of Their Enmity

    ARMENIA, TURKEY WON'T DISCUSS THE DEEPEST SOURCE OF THEIR ENMITY

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    01.09.2009 14:39 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia and Turkey, bitter foes for a century, took a
    step toward reconciliation Monday by announcing they would launch final
    talks aimed at establishing diplomatic ties. But they won't discuss
    the deepest source of their enmity: the World War I-era massacres of
    Armenians under Ottoman rule, the Associated Press reports.

    Both sides said in a joint statement they expected the talks to
    take six weeks and to end with an agreement setting up and developing
    ties. The two countries, whose shared border is closed, are U.S. allies
    and came under American and European pressure to move toward peace. The
    parliaments of the two countries must ratify a deal on diplomatic
    normalization, and in Turkey, nationalist sentiment and suspicion
    about Armenian intentions is particularly high, the article says.

    The author also reminds of the lingering Karabakh conflict.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Monday that Turkey would
    "guard" Azerbaijan's interest during its reconciliation with Armenia,
    saying in comments broadcast by NTV television that "our aim is to
    establish stability in the Caucasus."

    Turkey, however, clearly seeks to enhance its growing image as a
    regional statesman and a coveted ally of world powers in a strategic
    and often unstable region. The rapprochement with Armenia coincides
    with efforts to resolve a long-running feud with Turkey's Kurdish
    minority - issues that are vital to Turkish efforts to earn membership
    in the European Union, the article says.

    One of the biggest disputes between the neighboring countries is
    over the World War I-era massacre of up to 1.5 million Armenians,
    the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey denies that the deaths
    constituted genocide, contending the toll has been inflated and that
    the casualties were victims of civil war.

    Armenian President Serge Sargsyan indicated the dispute would not be
    a deal-breaker between the two neighbors.

    "It's important ical justice be restored. It's important that our
    nations are able to establish normal relations," Sarkisian said in
    an interview published Monday by the BBC Russian service. "But we do
    not regard a recognition of genocide as a preliminary condition for
    establishing relations."

    Turkey was one of the first countries to recognize Armenia's
    independence in 1991, but the two countries never established
    diplomatic relations and their joint border has been closed since
    1993 over the conflict in Nagorno Karabakh.
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