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Understanding Intricacies Of U.S. Policy

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  • Understanding Intricacies Of U.S. Policy

    UNDERSTANDING INTRICACIES OF U.S. POLICY
    By Ivan Gharibyan

    NEWS.am
    15:20 / 12/09/2009

    U.S. President Barack Obama goes on exploring every avenue to go
    back on his election pledge next April, when the U.S. is expected to
    officially recognize the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey in 1915.

    >From the very first moment, when President Obama clearly showed
    he had no intention to at least pronounce the term "genocide"
    during his traditional address on April 24, U.S. diplomatic circles
    started exerting tremendous efforts to "launch" the Armenia-Turkey
    normalization process. Only some progress in this matter would allow
    the U.S. Administration to state with innocence that recognizing the
    Armenian Genocide would do harm to the fragile normalization process.

    The Turkish authorities at once grabbed at the primitive trick by
    their principal ally and have recently been constantly referring to
    talks with Yerevan as one more argument against the U.S. recognizing
    the Armenian Genocide.

    April 24 is nearing, and the U.S. President desperately needs progress
    in the Armenia-Turkey normalization process. Under the circumstances,
    not only the ratification of the Armenian-Turkish protocols signed in
    Zurich on October 10, but also the reopening of the Armenian-Turkish
    border, can be considered progress.

    At this point the major world power has faced serious problems, as
    it has obviously overestimated its influence on Turkey. Although
    Turkey is the United States' principal ally in the region, the
    Erdogan-headed Government has been implementing a quite independent
    policy. New evidence thereof was the Turkish Premier's recent visit
    to Washington, when he showed a blatant disregard for the top-ranking
    U.S. officials' statements on the necessity for Armenian-Turkish
    reconciliation without any preconditions.

    The Turkish Premier said his say, and the U.S. Administration has now
    to exert every effort to have the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settled
    as soon as possible, otherwise Turkey will never reopen the border
    by April 24, 2010. An obstacle to the settlement is nothing, but the
    illogical policy pursued by Turkey's "small brother", Azerbaijan, which
    is seeking to thwart the negotiations by means of bellicose statements.

    As a result, referring to U.S. diplomats, Turkish mass media
    reported the U.S. Administration allegedly plans to have "some
    occupied territories" of Azerbaijan vacated by next April. It is
    obvious that the possible withdrawal of Armenian troops from the
    security zone round Nagorno-Karabakh is one of the components of
    the comprehensive Nagorno-Karabakh peace process. Also, as the
    Armenian side has repeatedly stressed, nothing is agreed on unless
    all the details are agreed on. So the international community has
    to work hard at the key point, namely, determining the final status
    of Nagorno-Karabakh - provided it is interested in further radical
    geopolitical changes in the region.

    Thus, the U.S. Administration has to carry out serious work to
    get the only possible, mutually acceptable and fair solution to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Otherwise, all the recently exerted efforts
    will come to nothing, and the world will once more admit that the
    Presidents of the "world's most democratic state" are not in the habit
    of honoring their elections promises, even the firmest ones. Well,
    the U.S. is not going to "hurt" its favorite ally, Turkey - or...
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