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International Recognition Of Armenian Genocide: Second Breath

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  • International Recognition Of Armenian Genocide: Second Breath

    INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE: SECOND BREATH
    By Ivan Gharibyan

    news.am
    March 10 2010
    Armenia

    On the threshold of the 95th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
    in Ottoman Turkey, official Ankara is receiving more and more new
    signals that the process of international recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide is going on.

    No sooner had Turkey digested the approval of an Armenian Genocide
    resolution by the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs than it
    received bad news from Spain and Sweden. Recently the Parliament of
    Catalonia unanimously recognized the Armenian Genocide, which may
    cause the Parliament of Spain to approve a similar decision as well.

    The official statements that it is only the position of Catalonia
    are not so important. Of importance is that the process got under way.

    Swedish political parties intend to hold a hearing of the issue.

    Everything suggests the following: no matter how hard Turkey tries to
    blackmail the international community by threatening to thwart the
    Armenia-Turkey normalization process should any country define the
    1915 events as genocide, the process is going on. This fact can easily
    be explained, but Ankara is unwilling to understand elementary things.

    No doubt, Turkey's present problems are the result of its own policy.

    Kid-glove Turkish diplomacy is doing its best to link the international
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide to the Armenian-Turkish
    reconciliation - two processes that have nothing in common. The
    Turkish authorities' policy has for many years been "fed" by different
    U.S. administrations, which have repeatedly prevented the U.S. Congress
    from approving relevant resolutions. At present, the U.S. Secretary
    of State, who has overtly disowned her own position and stood up for
    Ankara, is trying to frighten everyone with a possible failure of the
    Armenian-Turkish normalization process. Washington even pretends to
    be unaware of the detrimental effects of its position and attempts
    to anticipate the development of Armenian-Turkish dialogue.

    The United States is supposed to realize that Turkey is responsible
    for the present situation in the region, as it interfered in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and imposed a blockade on Armenia. The U.S.

    should also be aware that making Turkey realize the need to stop
    cashing in on the Genocide denial policy would enable Armenia and
    Turkey to establish normal relations in the shortest space of time.

    But the United States continues supporting Turkey's policy thereby
    torpedoing the Armenian-Turkish normalization process, while it claims
    it is strongly for a success in this process.

    The latest developments have shown this, as well as Armenia's new
    foreign policy after Serzh Sargsyan was elected president, has not
    been very detrimental to the process of international recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide. In any case, although a number of foreign
    newspapers published articles about the "soccer diplomacy's" negative
    effects on the process, it remains topical, and evidence thereof is
    the latest decision by the Parliament of Catalonia and, most likely,
    a positive result of hearings at the Swedish Parliament.

    Turkey, in turn, has to either put up with the inevitability of
    international recognition of the Armenian Genocide or the country's
    all attempts to reform its society and turn into a democratic state
    will be sacrificed to its own stereotyped thinking.
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