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Football diplomacy: Turkish-Armenian relations

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  • Football diplomacy: Turkish-Armenian relations

    The Economist
    Sept 5 2009
    U.S. Edition


    Football diplomacy: Turkish-Armenian relations


    It may take a long time to restore relations between two old enemies

    AFTER decades of fierce animosity, are Turkey and Armenia getting
    closer to peace? This week the two countries announced plans for six
    weeks of "internal political consultations" before establishing
    diplomatic ties and reopening their border. Coming after several
    months of Swiss mediation and arm-twisting by America, the declaration
    makes reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia a real prospect'but
    not a foregone conclusion.

    Hopes of a new friendship blossomed in September 2008 when Turkey's
    president, Abdullah Gul, became the first modern Turkish leader to
    visit Armenia, for a football World Cup qualifier (which Armenia
    lost). A full deal seemed imminent in April when the two countries
    initialled a preliminary agreement, including a plan to reopen the
    border. This was sealed by the Turks in 1993 in solidarity with their
    Azeri cousins during Azerbaijan's short, sharp war with Armenia over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mainly Armenian enclave of Azerbaijan (which
    Armenia won).

    Turkey had earlier insisted that it would not reopen the border until
    Armenia and Azerbaijan had made peace. But in April it seemed to
    change tack. The main reason was to stop America's Congress adopting a
    resolution to label the mass slaughter of the Ottoman Armenians in
    1915 as genocide. It worked: Barack Obama did not use the term in his
    annual April 24th statement on the anniversary of the killings.

    Yet days later the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    reverted to previous policy by insisting that peace with Armenia would
    come only if the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was solved. The switch back
    reflected nationalist reaction at home as well as Azerbaijan's threat
    to turn towards Russia. Armenia's president, Serzh Sargsyan,
    retaliated by saying he would not attend a return football match in
    Turkey on October 14th unless the border was on the verge of being
    reopened.

    This week's announcement is calculated to ensure that Mr Sargsyan
    comes to the match, maintaining the façade of reconciliation. By
    careful coincidence the time for internal political consultations ends
    just before the match. Links of various sorts between the two
    countries are growing fast and Armenian tourists have been flocking to
    the Turkish coast. Yet hostility to a deal from opposition parties in
    both countries is strong.

    Armenia's hardline nationalists are furious that the government has
    agreed both to the present border and to a joint historical commission
    that might yet call the genocide into doubt. They also accuse Mr
    Sargsyan of selling out Karabakh. Even if the April 22nd deal is
    accepted, another hurdle has been raised: both countries' parliaments
    must agree. To stifle domestic anger (and perhaps embarrass the Turks)
    Armenia also chose to publish the full text of the agreements in
    April. They do not mention Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Turkey's response has been contradictory. Its foreign minister, Ahmet
    Davutoglu, insists that he hopes that the border will be reopened by
    the end of the year. But he also says that peace with Armenia is
    sustainable only if it makes peace with Azerbaijan. Long-running talks
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan seem to be going nowhere. Mr
    Davutoglu's most accurate assertion may be that Turkey and Armenia are
    at the start of a "long process." How long is anybody's guess.
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