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Armenia And Turkey: Reconciliation: Russia Does Not Object

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  • Armenia And Turkey: Reconciliation: Russia Does Not Object

    ARMENIA AND TURKEY: RECONCILIATION: RUSSIA DOES NOT OBJECT
    by Kirill Zubkov

    What the Papers Say
    September 2, 2009 Wednesday
    Russia

    ARMENIA AND TURKEY ARE A STEP CLOSER TO NORMALIZATION AND ESTABLISHMENT
    OF DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS; An update on the Armenian-Turkish
    rapprochement.

    Closed since 1993, the state border between Armenia and Turkey might
    be finally deblocked come winter. Yerevan and Ankara are even prepared
    to establish diplomatic relations. Fortunately, the Armenian-Turkish
    rapprochement does not encroach on the interests of Russia in Armenia
    or, broader, in the South Caucasus. Moscow, Yerevan, and Ankara want
    peace and stability for the region.

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry reported yesterday that Ankara and
    Yerevan with Switzerland as the broker were working on the protocols
    "On establishment of diplomatic relations" and "On development
    of bilateral relations". "The consultation will take six weeks,
    so that the Turkish-Armenian will hopefully be opened by 2010,"
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said.

    The state border was closed in 1993 in a show of Turkish solidarity
    with Azerbaijan that lost Nagorno-Karabakh to the Armenians this
    year. As for diplomatic relations, Turkey never even established them
    with Armenia when the latter became a sovereign state in 1991. Yerevan
    demanded from Turkey to recognize the genocide in the Ottoman Empire
    in 1915-1917, something Ankara could not do, of course.

    Mikhail Alexandrov, Chief of the Department of the Caucasus of
    the Institute of CIS Countries, plainly told RBC Daily that "the
    Armenian-Turkish reconciliation does not mean dismantlement of the
    special relationship between Yerevan and Moscow." Sandwiched between
    Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Georgia, Armenia found itself isolated on
    all sides after the last year war in South Ossetia. The opening of
    the border with Turkey will make life considerably easier for Armenia.

    In the meantime, the reconciliation will also benefit Turkey which
    aspires to the status of the regional leader. "Ankara is through
    both with being exceptionally pro-Western and with its pan-Turkic
    illusions," Alexandrov said. "The period when Ankara participated in
    the blockade of Armenia in the name of solidarity with Azerbaijan is
    finally over."

    Maintenance of regional stability in accordance with the Security and
    Development Platform plan is Ankara's number one priority. Bracing
    for the forthcoming withdrawal of the US Army from Iraq, Turkey
    prepares itself for the nearly inevitable deterioration of the Kurd
    problem. Neither do Armenia and Russia want anything but stability
    in the region.
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