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  • Erdogan's Peculiar Games

    ERDOGAN'S PECULIAR GAMES

    Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am
    Sept 22 2009
    Armenia

    The other day Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan organized a
    peculiar game to make the impression that the Turkish Government is
    going to drift away from the policy of normalizing its relations with
    Armenia. This was done by means of statements apparently designed to
    provoke official Yerevan's negative reaction.

    Specifically, at his meeting with the managers of local media outlets
    late last week, the Turkish Premier ruled out the reopening of the
    Armenian-Turkish border before the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has been
    settled. Recep Erdogan must have meant the signing of a framework
    agreement between the Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents. So
    the Turkish leaders are making one more attempt to link the
    Armenian-Turkish rapprochement to the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process
    despite international mediators' repeated statements that the two
    processes are simultaneous, but independent of each other.

    To our delight, RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan gave a rapid and
    clear response this time. It was for the first time since "football
    diplomacy" was launched that he had warned the Turkish authorities that
    the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement might be wrecked. "If the Turkish
    leaders have problems with signing the documents, they must not try
    to resolve them in defiance of the spirit, letter and purposes of the
    initialed documents," the Armenian Foreign Minister said, commenting
    on his Turkish counterpart's statement.

    The Turkish leaders do have problems, indeed. On the one hand,
    Baku's incessant howl, which makes top-ranking Turkish officials
    declare their love to their "younger brother." On the other hand,
    the pressure on the part of the Turkish Opposition, which is widely
    represented in Parliament and, if supported by some members of
    the ruling party, capable of torpedoing the ratification of the
    Armenian-Turkish Protocols. However, the picture does not seem
    to be so clear in the context of the recent steps made by Turkish
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. In this delicate situation, when
    the large parliamentary factions are not inclined to vote for the
    ratification of the Protocols, Minister Davudoglu was supposedly to
    exert efforts to diminish their influence on public opinion. However,
    quite the opposite is taking place during the political consultations
    in Turkey: the Foreign Minister is holding meetings with the leaders
    of all small parties that received at least 1% of votes at the recent
    parliamentary elections. All this despite the fact that the political
    "dwarfs" were expected to pronounce against normalizing relations with
    Armenia in the hope of reaping political dividends. As a result, Ahmet
    Davudoglu's praiseworthy initiative to make the domestic political
    consultations as open as possible produces an impression that most
    of the ruling elite representatives disagree with the Protocols.

    What is the reason? One may arrive at the following two conclusions:
    the Turkish leaders hoped for the Armenian public to torpedo the
    process, as they did not expect a calm, and even positive, response
    in Armenia; official Ankara simulates serious opposition to the final
    signing of the Protocols for the purpose of reducing the influence of
    the Armenian forces that object to the documents but remain inactive,
    as they hope the Turkish Parliament will vote them down. Anyway, the
    Turkish authorities' behavior adds to tension in the Armenian-Turkish
    rapprochement process, which may prove to be irreparably damaged.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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