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  • ANKARA: Armenia, Turkey Agree To Continue Reconciliatory Talks Despi

    ARMENIA, TURKEY AGREE TO CONTINUE RECONCILIATORY TALKS DESPITE RIFTS

    Today's Zaman
    April 14 2010
    Turkey

    At a time when efforts to normalize their bilateral ties have been
    stalled for a number of reasons, the leaders of Armenia and Turkey
    agreed at a landmark meeting to continue these efforts despite visible
    difficulties ahead.

    Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan and Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan held a rare bilateral meeting in Washington on Monday
    on the sidelines of a two-day nuclear security summit hosted by US
    President Barack Obama that started earlier on Monday at the Washington
    Convention Center. The two leaders had held another rare meeting in
    January 2009, when they both participated in an annual meeting of
    the World Economic Forum (WEF) held in the ski resort town of Davos,
    Switzerland.

    The main item on the agenda of the almost one-and-a-half-hour-long
    meeting was a detailed exchange of views on a letter recently sent
    by Erdogan to Sarksyan, well-informed sources said. The letter was
    sent via Feridun Sinirlioglu, the Foreign Ministry undersecretary,
    who last week paid successive visits first to Yerevan and then to
    Baku as Erdogan's special envoy.

    It contained a message that an agreement would better serve the
    interests of the two countries, especially when compared to the cost
    of the failure to achieve peace.

    In addition to Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and
    his Turkish counterpart, Ahmet Davutoglu, Armenian Presidential
    Administration Deputy Chief of Staff Vigen Sargsyan and Sinirlioglu
    attended the meeting.

    The Armenian and Turkish sides agreed to continue efforts to normalize
    their relations via contacts led by the foreign ministers of the two
    countries, the same well-informed sources said. Yet, there was no other
    statement on whether contentious issues regarding the process came
    on the agenda of the meeting and if they did, what the leaders said.

    As an outcome of closed-door talks that had been held for more
    than a year through the mediation of Switzerland on ways to restore
    diplomatic relations and open their mutual border, Ankara and Yerevan
    announced almost a year ago, on April 22, 2009, that they had reached
    an agreement on a road map to normalize their relations.

    Overcoming painful ups and downs -- particularly stemming from
    uneasiness over Azerbaijan -- the two countries took a landmark
    step in Zurich in October when Davutoglu and Nalbandian signed two
    protocols to establish diplomatic ties and re-open their border.

    However, the process hit a rocky patch in January after an Armenian
    court upheld the legality of the protocols but underlined that they
    could not contradict Yerevan's official position that the alleged
    Armenian genocide must be internationally recognized. Turkey accused
    Yerevan of trying to set conditions on the deals. The process of
    normalization has also been crippled by Turkey's insistence on parallel
    progress on the Nagorno-Karabakh territorial dispute between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan.

    According to Turkish media reports, during the meeting, Erdogan
    recalled that Turkey expects development in the resolution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, while Sarksyan said Turkey could not impose
    this as a precondition. The Turkish side also expressed uneasiness
    over the Armenian-American diaspora's intense lobbying efforts for
    official recognition of the alleged genocide, underlining that those
    efforts have been harmful to the efforts at normalization.

    'Language of conditions' Despite the absence of a joint statement
    following their meeting, Armenian and Turkish leaders, in remarks
    delivered separately following the meeting, reiterated their well-known
    positions.

    Speaking at George Mason University's new Center for Global Islamic
    Studies in Fairfax, Virginia, Erdogan criticized a long-running effort
    in the US Congress to pass a resolution declaring that Anatolian
    Armenians were victims of genocide nearly a century ago.

    "We are against a one-sided interpretation of history," Erdogan said.

    "History cannot be written in parliament and judged by parliament."

    Turkey recalled its US ambassador last month in protest after the
    Committee on Foreign Affairs in the House of Representatives passed
    a resolution declaring that the Ottoman-era killings amounted to
    genocide. The full House has yet to vote on the resolution.

    The venue for Sarksyan's remarks was Washington National Cathedral
    as he laid a wreath at the tomb of US President Woodrow Wilson
    (1856-1924), known as the architect of the "Wilsonian Armenia," the
    boundary for an Armenian state drawn up by Wilson for the Treaty of
    Sèvres, which was imposed on the Ottoman government by the victorious
    Western powers at the end of World War I.

    "This morning I met with the prime minister of Turkey. Our position has
    been and remains very straightforward. Turkey cannot speak with Armenia
    and the Armenian people in the language of conditions. We will simply
    not allow that. We are not preparing in any way to question the fact
    of the Armenian Genocide, or to pretend that we believe that Turkey
    can play any diplomatic role in the process of finding a solution to
    the problem of Nagorno-Karabakh," Sarksyan was quoted as saying by
    Armenian media as he spoke to members of the Armenian community there.

    "Any new foreign policy is subject to temptations because we are
    walking down a path no one has walked before. I am confident Armenia
    will pass this exam with honor," Sarksyan also said in remarks
    delivered in Armenian.

    Later on Monday, Sarksyan held a bilateral meeting with Obama, who
    has urged Armenia and Turkey to "make every effort" to advance the
    normalization of relations between their two countries.

    "The president commended President Sarksyan for his courageous efforts
    to achieve normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey
    and encouraged him to fulfill the promise of normalization for the
    benefit of the Armenian people," the White House said in a statement
    after the meeting. "President Obama also urged that both Armenia and
    Turkey make every effort to advance the normalization process and
    achieve legislative ratification of the protocols of normalization,"
    it said, adding that Obama voiced his support for Armenian democracy.

    Erdogan hopeful Obama won't use g-word Erdogan was scheduled to have
    a bilateral meeting with Obama on Tuesday on the sidelines of the
    summit, only days before April 24, the day Armenians claim marks
    the anniversary of the beginning of a systematic genocide campaign
    against Anatolian Armenians in the last years of the Ottoman Empire.

    Last year, Obama avoided using the g-word in his message, although
    he had pledged to recognize the Armenian diaspora's genocide claims
    in his election campaign.

    In an interview with CNN International aired on Tuesday, Erdogan
    said Turkey cannot accept that the killings were genocide and that
    he was confident Obama would also not use the term. "That would be
    my expectation, because to this day, no American leader has uttered
    that word, and I believe President Obama will not," he said.

    Noting that the time when the killings took place was a period of war
    and revolts, he pointed out that the Turkish people also suffered
    terrible losses during the 1914-18 conflict. "No nation, no people
    has the right to impose the way it remembers history on another nation
    or people -- and Turkey does not try to do that."
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