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ANKARA: Turkey Pre-Empts Any Exclusion Of Baku In Armenia Normalizat

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Pre-Empts Any Exclusion Of Baku In Armenia Normalizat

    TURKEY PRE-EMPTS ANY EXCLUSION OF BAKU IN ARMENIA NORMALIZATION
    Fulya Ozerkan

    Hurriyet Daily News
    April 5 2010
    Turkey

    Ankara believes Azerbaijan is an integral part of a solution to the
    problem in the Caucasus and says its exclusion from the process is
    out of the question

    With speculation abounding about the Obama administration's alleged
    quest to neutralize the Azerbaijan factor in the Turkish-Armenian
    normalization process, Ankara said it is out of the question for
    Turkey to be involved in any formulation that excludes Baku.

    "It is unquestionable for Turkey to leave Azerbaijan out of the cycle
    in any manner," Foreign Ministry spokesman Burak Ozugergin told the
    Hurriyet Daily News on Monday.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced last week he would
    participate in an international nuclear security summit in Washington
    on April 12-13, which took him a while to decide after a United States
    committee passed a resolution labeling the 1915 killings of Armenians
    as genocide.

    But the margins of the summit will see diplomatic traffic between
    Turkey and Armenia to revive the stalled normalization process.

    Erdogan is expected to meet with Armenian President Serge Sarkisian,
    and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu does not rule out a meeting with
    members of the Armenian diaspora. Although diplomats say the program
    is not yet clear, Erdogan may meet with U.S. President Barack Obama
    for brief talks on the Ankara-Yerevan reconciliation before April
    24, a day of commemoration for the 1915 events when U.S. presidents
    deliver an annual message.

    Azerbaijan's absence at the summit, however, is strengthening the
    argument of Washington's so-called plans to eliminate Azerbaijani
    pressure on Turkey, so that Ankara could take more progressive steps to
    normalize ties with Yerevan. Turkish diplomatic sources told the Daily
    News it is up to the host country, namely the United States in this
    case, to decide which country to invite to the summit. The diplomats
    added Azerbaijan's non-participation should not be interpreted as
    Baku's exclusion.

    Heads of state and government from more than 40 countries are expected
    to attend the summit.

    "We have not announced the full list of participants to the
    international summit yet," U.S. Embassy spokesperson Deborah
    Guido-O'Grady told the Daily News when asked if Baku was invited.

    She denied the reports over the alleged U.S. plan to exclude Baku
    from the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement as "incorrect."

    "Azerbaijan and the United States work closely on a wide range of
    issues, including the Minsk process, as well as with other countries
    in the region including Turkey and Armenia," stated the spokesperson.

    Together with Russia and France, the U.S. co-chairs the Minsk Group
    of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, or OSCE,
    which aims to find a settlement for the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Turkey says any solution to the problem will facilitate the
    Turkish-Armenian relationship, while Armenia opposes the Turkish
    linkage of normalization in ties to the conflict with Baku.

    In a briefing last Monday at the Foreign Press Center in Washington,
    U.S. Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg said, "Azerbaijan is
    a very important partner to the United States. It's a strong force
    for peace and stability in the Caucasus."

    Steinberg said he appreciated Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's
    efforts to support the Minsk process.

    "We know these are difficult issues for all of the parties concerned
    and that we need to find creative ways to overcome the differences
    because, in the long term, deeper integration in the Caucasus, just as
    we've been discussing in the Balkans, is in the interest of all the
    region, and we want to see improved ties among all the key countries
    in the Caucasus along with Turkey. There has been an opportunity to
    move that forward," he added.

    The official also praised the leadership of both Erdogan and Sarkisian
    to move forward with the protocols. "We want to support that process.

    At the same time we move forward on the Minsk process to try to
    resolve the differences between Armenia and Azerbaijan."

    Ambassador Tan set for Washington

    After Erdogan's announcement that he would soon send the Turkish
    envoy who was recalled after the passage of the genocide measure
    back to the U.S., Turkish diplomatic sources said Ambassador Namık
    Tan would leave for Washington on Tuesday. The decision is seen as
    a positive signal to end the recent spat with Washington.

    The relations between the two allies took a down turn last month when
    the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs voted to recognize Armenian
    genocide allegations by a margin of one vote on March 4. In protest,
    Turkey recalled Ambassador Tan for consultations. U.S.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also made a phone call to Davutoglu
    urging Turkey to send the envoy back to his post while reiterating
    the invitation for the nuclear summit.
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