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  • Turkey, Azerbaijan Re-Synchronize Conflict Resolution And Border Ope

    TURKEY, AZERBAIJAN RE-SYNCHRONIZE CONFLICT RESOLUTION AND BORDER OPENING
    Vladimir Socor

    The Jamestown Foundation
    December 11, 2009

    Signing of the protocols in Zurch, Switzerland on October 10, 2009

    Under the protocols signed in Zurich, Switzerland on October 10,
    Turkey should establish full diplomatic relations with Armenia and
    re-open the land border between them. The United States, main driver
    of this initiative, insists that the protocols should be ratified
    and implemented "without preconditions and within a reasonable
    time-frame." President Barack Obama reaffirmed this position most
    recently in the run-up to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    December 7-8 Washington visit. Such reminders are being addressed
    equally to Ankara, Yerevan, and Armenian advocacy groups in the United
    States (Anatolia news agency, PanArmenian.Net, December 7, 8).

    "Without preconditions" is widely understood to mean that Yerevan
    would not campaign for US recognition of an Armenian genocide by
    Ottoman Turks; and that Ankara would re-open the border without a
    synchronized withdrawal of Armenian troops from certain Azerbaijani
    districts (five districts beyond Karabakh are usually mentioned at
    this stage of the Karabakh conflict-resolution process).

    "Within a reasonable time-frame" is widely interpreted to mean
    Turkish parliamentary ratification of the border-opening move by
    or before April 2010. This would avert the adoption of an Armenian
    genocide resolution in the US Congress, and deflect advocacy groups'
    pressures on the Administration to recognize such a genocide in the
    president's annual April 24 statement on this issue.

    Turkey recognized Armenia following the Soviet Union's collapse, but
    closed the land border in 1993 when Armenian forces began seizing
    districts beyond Karabakh in Azerbaijan, resulting in mass-scale
    ethnic cleansing. For 16 years, Turkey has taken the position that the
    re-opening of the land border depends on Armenian troops' withdrawal
    from those districts.

    US administrations of both parties have all along encouraged Turkey to
    reopen that border, so as to relieve Armenia's economic semi-isolation
    in the region. This position stems partly from US domestic political
    calculations and partly from a nineteenth century Manchesterian
    belief (still informing US policies on selected issues) about trade
    as a basis for peace among nations. Until the current year, however,
    Washington did not strongly press this issue with Turkey.

    >>From Azerbaijan's standpoint, the principle of conditionality -border
    opening in return for troop withdrawal-forms the basis of its strategy
    for peaceful, stage-by-stage resolution of the conflict with Armenia.

    That conditionality was and remains Azerbaijan's main diplomatic
    leverage for regaining those districts peacefully and returning the
    displaced population to its homes, pending an ultimate determination of
    Upper Karabakh's status. By the same token, the conditional re-opening
    of the border holds out a major incentive for impoverished Armenia
    to withdraw the troops from those occupied districts.

    Azerbaijan had built its political and diplomatic strategy on that
    basis over the years and it counted on Turkey all along to adhere to
    that conditionality.

    President Obama's initiative, announced during his April 2009 visit
    to Turkey, struck a powerful blow at those assumptions. Turkey was
    being asked to lift that conditionality, and Ankara showed willingness
    to do so. European Union authorities in Brussels encouraged Turkey
    along that path. Washington and Brussels both claimed that Yerevan
    would become more tractable on withdrawing troops from Azerbaijani
    territories, once a process of Turkish-Armenian normalization moves
    forward, detached from that conditionality. In Brussels especially,
    this post-modern argument found a resonance out of tune with the
    real-world South Caucasus.

    Candidate Obama had pledged during the election campaign to recognize
    an "Armenian genocide," but President Obama could not do so without
    irreparable damage to US-Turkish relations. With pressures mounting
    from the president's own party for congressional and presidential
    recognition of genocide, the administration decided to press for
    Turkish-Armenian normalization and offered the re-opening of the border
    -with its economic benefits to Armenia-in lieu of genocide recognition.

    Obama's initiative could have generated positive dynamics throughout
    the region, with strategic gains for the United States, had it pursued
    the Turkish-Armenian normalization track in synchronization with the
    Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict-resolution track. By separating the two
    tracks, and privileging the first, the policy proved ineffective. The
    US and EU pressed for fast progress on Turkey-Armenia normalization,
    but failed to press for Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict-resolution
    in the "Minsk Group" or the bilateral format. In this situation,
    Turkey started backtracking soon after having signed the October 10
    protocols. Some U.S. administration officials with experience in the
    region did caution that progress was achievable if the two tracks
    were synchronized, rather than separated.

    For its part, Baku reached out to Turkey's government, political
    parties, civil-sector groups, and public opinion at large, with appeals
    to take Azerbaijan's interests into account. This outreach effort
    was a first for Azerbaijan and it proved effective. It generated a
    strong current of opinion in the Turkish public and parliament, which
    would now make it difficult for the Turkish government to sacrifice
    or discount Azerbaijan's interests, even if it decided to do so.

    The Turkish government, however, has adjusted its course, as Erdogan's
    Washington visit indicated. It remains for Baku to diversify its
    outreach to Turkey beyond Kemalist, nationalist, and moderate
    conservative groups, so as to encompass also the increasingly
    influential liberal opinion-making circles (ADA Bi-weekly, December
    1, 2009).

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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