Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia And Turkey: Walking Up The Stairway To Normalization

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia And Turkey: Walking Up The Stairway To Normalization

    ARMENIA AND TURKEY: WALKING UP THE STAIRWAY TO NORMALIZATION
    Alice Radzyner

    Euros Du Village
    http://www.eurosduvillage.eu/Armenia-and-T urkey-Walking-up-the,3278
    Nov 11 2009
    EU

    Turkey and Armenia have 'strange relations and a difficult history'
    says Dr. Armine Ishkanian, a professor at the London School of
    Economics. On the 10th of October 2009, Turkey and Armenia signed
    protocols in Zurich re-establishing diplomatic ties for the first
    time in almost 100 years. Now, they can walk up the stairway to
    'normalization', although they both carry a heavy load of collective
    memory born out of traumatic common history. The protocols do not only
    hold importance for the two neighbouring countries. International
    and European authorities seem to rush the countries on the way to
    normalization - a push that assures benefits to all.

    A steep stairway to normalization Unlike taking conventional measures
    to re-establish diplomatic ties, such as trading, Turkey and Armenia
    took their first step onto the stairway to normalization through
    'football diplomacy'.

    It all started with a football qualifying match between Turkey and
    Armenia for the 2010 World Cup, in September last year. While no
    diplomatic links existed between the two states, the Armenian President
    Serzh Sargsyan invited his Turkish counter-part, Abdullah Gul, to watch
    the match in Yerevan. While small groups of nationalist fans booed the
    Turkish national anthem or brought anti-Turkish placards to the game,
    no violent protests were reported. When Mr. Gul invited Mr. Sargsyan
    to the Turkey-Armenia match on 14th October 2009 in Bursa, the latter
    claimed he would accept only if agreements would be reached on opening
    their common border, closed since 1993. This was the turning point.

    The 'football diplomacy' was successful. Four days before the match,
    Turkey and Armenia signed protocols in Zurich, creating joint
    commissions on political and trade relations. Professor Armine
    Ishkanian argues this to be the neoliberal approach of trading
    'cheese and tea', possibly leading to peaceful relations.

    For many, cooperating on politics and trade inspired hope. Others
    reacted with heated protests. Indeed, the stairway to Armenian-Turkish
    normalization is long and steep. The Armenian president in fact agreed
    to Turkey's proposition of establishing a historical commission. Its
    purpose is to examine the clashing perceptions of traumatic events
    which still shape Armenians' collective memory and affect the relation
    between both states : the massacre of 1.5 million ethnic Armenians
    in what is today eastern Turkey, in 1915. While most international
    historians agree that the systematic killings of the Armenian
    population qualify as genocide, Turkey has never accepted the term as
    an appropriate designation of the events. For the Turkish government,
    Armenians were merely victims of World War I amongst many others. This
    discord portrays a heavy load on Turkish-Armenian relations impeding
    their walk up to normalization.

    To many Armenians the idea of creating a Turkish-Armenian historical
    commission means doubting the victims' memories and invokes their
    government's 'betrayal'. Protests not only broke out on the streets of
    Yerevan, but also throughout the large Armenian diaspora in Lebanon,
    France and the USA. As revealed in an interview with an international
    lawyer who prefers to remain anonymous, "the moral, political, legal
    'toxicity' [of the 1915 events] cannot be denied and will have to be
    duly 'de-poisoned', for which purpose dogmatically legalistic, formal
    argumentations will be decisively unsuited. To scrap facts under the
    carpet will not work and will generate more additional 'toxicity'".

    The role of civil society in the reconciliation process between
    the two countries is indeed essential. When in 2007, Hrant Dink,
    an editor and journalist of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper
    Agos, was murdered in Turkey for his critical views, Turkish citizens
    showed solidarity. On the streets of Istanbul, people shouted :
    'We are all Armenians, We are all Hrant Dink'.

    Still, nationalist reactions remain frequent in both camps, and
    efforts from civil society remain too weak to eradicate the tensions.

    For the political breakthrough to happen, the political will of both
    governments was indispensable. This breakthrough occurred on the
    10th of October. Though, why only now ? Was the underlying reason for
    intensifying the talks a sudden will for friendship, or international
    pressure ?

    International interests : Pushing for faster normalization On the
    10th of October Armenian and Turkish officials were not the only ones
    attending the meetings in Zurich. The signing was in fact assisted by
    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Russian Foreign Minister
    Sergei Lavrov, and the EU Foreign and Security Policy representative
    Javier Solana.

    All participants seem to have strong interests in the opening of
    Turkey's and Armenia's common border. Turkey had closed the border
    in 1993 in solidarity with Azerbaijan after Armenian forces occupied
    the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh - a territory with a predominantly
    ethnic Armenian population. Approximately 25,000 casualties and
    nearly 1 million refugees were the outcomes of this war. International
    interests could have been the motives for rushing Armenia and Turkey
    up the stairway to normalization.

    For the EU and the US, the open border could lead to reducing their
    dependence on Russian energy, as oil and gas pipelines could be
    installed in the Caucasus, linking Central Asia directly to Europe.

    The Protocols certainly also have consequences for Turkey's EU
    accession. Turkey showed its will for stable and peaceful relations
    with its neighbours, hence diplomatic strength. Also, Turkey would
    potentially strengthen its position as a 'key security provider',
    according to Dr. Igor Torbakov, Senior Researcher at the Finish
    Institute for International Affairs. In a geo-political sense, Turkey
    would be at least a buffer and at best a key actor between the EU and
    the Caucasus. If Turkey ultimately became an EU member-state, its good
    relations with the Caucasus may also ameliorate relations between
    Russia and the EU. "Good, stable, expanding neighbourly relations
    with Armenia can be, in this respect, a valuable contribution, even
    a constitutive element", argues the consulted international lawyer.

    More importantly, normalization could shorten Turkey's path to EU
    accession given the significance of the Armenian diaspora. There
    are 10 million Armenians world wide, of which less than a third has
    the Armenian nationality or lives in Armenia. Positive developments
    in diplomatic neighbourly relations between Turkey and Armenia will
    undoubtedly strengthen Europeans' support of Turkey's accession. Once
    the disputes over the 1915 massacres are appropriately resolved,
    the diaspora too will have to finally assess Turkey's policies and
    its EU accession in a more objective, unemotional, manner.

    Mind your step The signing of the protocols on the 10th of October
    could be an enormous step towards normalization and good neighbourly
    relations.

    Only once the broken first step of the stairway - the 1915 issue
    - is fixed, civil society will be able to move on alongside the
    governments. Turkey may then be able to walk up the still steep,
    yet secure stairway towards EU-membership.
Working...
X