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BAKU: Azerbaijan Gains From Turkish-Armenian Accords

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  • BAKU: Azerbaijan Gains From Turkish-Armenian Accords

    AZERBAIJAN GAINS FROM TURKISH-ARMENIAN ACCORDS
    Leyla Tagiyeva

    news.az
    Feb 25 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Vugar Seidov It is Azerbaijan that has gained from the Turkey-Armenia
    protocols, not Armenia, according to political scientist Vugar Seidov.

    Seidov, who is also the correspondent in Germany for Azerbaijan's
    state-run news agency AzerTAj, disagreed with remarks made yesterday
    by Richard Giragosian, director of the Armenian Centre for National
    and International Studies.

    Seidov accused the Armenian political scientist of trying "to discern
    victory in obvious defeat".

    Giragosian said that Armenia had gained two specific victories in the
    Turkey rapprochement process: the deterioration in relations between
    Azerbaijan and Turkey; and the omission of any mention of Karabakh
    from the protocols.

    He said that Russia, the United States and Europe had told Turkey
    that the normalization of relations with Armenia and resolution of
    the Karabakh conflict were two separate issues, but Seidov said this
    was the other way around.

    "Let's look at what we had before the signing of the protocols and what
    we have today. Before the protocols, we had the closed Armenian-Turkish
    border, frozen negotiations on the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict,
    friendly Azerbaijani-Turkish relations without a clear picture of the
    future position of Ankara on the Armenian-Turkish border issue and,
    finally, low gas tariffs. Now, let's see what we have today mostly
    thanks to the protocols: the Armenian-Turkish border is still closed;
    the Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations have intensified, which is
    bothering Yerevan; the fraternal relations between the Azerbaijani
    and Turkish people have strengthened, thanks to numerous senior
    Turkish officials commenting on the impossibility of opening the
    borders without progress in the Karabakh conflict, which was unheard
    of before the protocols; and Baku has doubled gas tariffs, which in
    turn has forced Ankara to increase its prices.

    "Has Azerbaijan benefited? Certainly, it has: the border is closed,
    the Karabakh process has intensified, friendship with Turkey whose
    leaders started to make promises more frequently than before has
    strengthened and gas revenues have grown. Has Turkey lost? It has lost
    almost nothing. Moreover, it has boosted its relations with Russia
    and raised its role in the South Caucasus, which can be seen in the
    discussions of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict between Turkish and
    world leaders in Washington, Moscow, Paris and Brussels. Has Armenia
    won? I don't see any dividend. On the contrary, the protocols have
    spoiled relations with the diaspora and worsened the split inside
    the country, while failing to reach the main goal of opening borders."

    The United States, Russia and Europe can deny a link between the
    opening of the border and Karabakh, but Turkey's opinion carries more
    weight, as it is Turkey that will open the borders, Seidov said.
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