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Clinton, Sarkisian In Another Phone Call On Turkey

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  • Clinton, Sarkisian In Another Phone Call On Turkey

    CLINTON, SARKISIAN IN ANOTHER PHONE CALL ON TURKEY

    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/09/22/clinton- sarkisian-in-another-phone-call-on-turkey/
    Sep 22, 2009

    WASHINGTON-YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
    telephoned President Serzh Sarkisian at the weekend to again discuss
    Armenia's ongoing rapprochement with Turkey facilitated by the
    United States.

    A one-sentence statement issued by Sarkisian's office on Sunday
    said the two touched upon "issues related to the current stage of
    the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations. It gave no other
    details. There was no word on the conversation, the second in a month,
    from the U.S. State Department.

    Clinton has regularly talked to Armenian and Turkish leaders this year
    in an effort to push forward their fence-mending negotiations. Her
    previous phone call with Sarkisian was reported on September 21,
    ten days before the publication of two draft agreements envisaging
    the establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkish
    and reopening of their border.

    Their latest conversation came the day after official Yerevan accused
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of acting against "the
    letter, spirit and aims" of those agreements. Erdogan reportedly
    stated on Friday that Turkey will not reopen the Armenian border as
    long as the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict remains unresolved.

    In a late-night statement, Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian warned
    that Ankara risks "ruining" the Turkish-Armenian dialogue by again
    linking it to the Karabakh peace process.

    Although the protocols unveiled by the two governments on August 31
    makes no direct reference to the conflict, certain points within the
    document put Armenia on record as supporting the territorial integrity
    of its neighbors, preclude it from "interfering" in the internal
    affairs of neighboring countries such as Azerbaijan, and prohibit it
    from serving as the guarantor of Artsakh's independence. The State
    Department was quick to welcome those documents and urge Ankara and
    Yerevan to "proceed expeditiously" in implementing them.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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