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ISTANBUL: Armenia returns to busy Turkish agenda

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  • ISTANBUL: Armenia returns to busy Turkish agenda

    Armenia returns to busy Turkish agenda

    Sunday, June 19, 2011
    FULYA Ã-ZERKAN
    ANKARA ` Hürriyet Daily News

    Turkey will come under pressure to normalize its relationship with
    neighboring Armenia, another component of the zero-problems policy of
    the re-elected government as hopes are running high over a progress at
    the June 25 meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders mediated
    by Russia.

    The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan will meet next Saturday in Kazan
    in Russia at a meeting brokered by Russian President Dimitri Medvedev,
    one of the mediators of the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia
    over Nagorno-Karabakh, an Azeri territory occupied by Yerevan. The
    speculation reveals the two sides are close to a framework agreement,
    which will ultimately lead to a breakthrough over the long-running
    dispute.

    Initial signals of optimism came from Azerbaijani Foreign Minister
    Elmar Memmedyarov who said last week Armenia began to act more
    flexibly. Turkey, a party sided with Azerbaijan and closed its border
    with Yerevan in 1993 in solidarity with Baku, is not involved in the
    Minsk process leading negotiations between the two foes but says it is
    not very optimist.

    `There has been stagnation over the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. We are
    not very much hopeful but I hope progress will be made,' a senior
    Turkish Foreign Ministry diplomat told the Hürriyet Daily News.

    Concentrated on a heated election campaign at home and surrounded by
    unrest in its regional neighborhood in the Middle East and North
    Africa, Turkey could not set aside extra time and energy for the
    Caucasus and as long as the uprisings especially in neighboring Syria
    continue, Ankara appears to fall short of channelizing into
    normalizing Armenia ties. The Foreign Ministry diplomat already
    confessed: `Right now regional issues are a priority for us.'

    An Armenian expert also agrees.

    Richard Kirakossian, director of the Regional Studies Center, said the
    Karabakh conflict was not considered as an important factor during the
    election campaign in Turkey, stressing the situation remained the same
    as Turkey currently has more important regional issues related to
    Syria, Libya as well as Israel.

    However, genocide resolutions brought to the US Congress every year
    are hanging like a sword of Damocles over Turkey. Last week,
    pro-Armenian lawmakers introduced a fresh congressional resolution
    calling on the United States to recognize World War I-era deaths of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as `genocide.'

    `Undoubtedly, there will be pressure from the United States to
    normalize relations with Armenia in the post-election era,' opposition
    deputy Faruk LoÄ?oÄ?lu told the Daily News.

    His Republican People's Party, or CHP, opposed the protocols and
    reconciliation with Armenia unless a settlement was reached to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

    `It is necessary to reconsider the protocols. If a further step is
    going to be taken in relations with Armenia, the calibrations of the
    process should be set well,' said LoÄ?oÄ?lu, Turkey's former ambassador
    to Azerbaijan and the US. `The CHP is in favor of Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation but any normalization should observe Turkey's
    interests.'

    Turkey wants to create a belt of security and stability in the
    Caucasus and believes Armenia is no exception to this policy. Turkish
    diplomatic sources said the process stalled because of the two
    countries' failure to manage the normalization, but they hoped efforts
    would continue. In the post-election era, the Turkish government is
    expected to introduce a set of confidence-building measures as a sign
    of its commitment to the normalization process.

    Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian, in a recent interview with
    the BBC, said his country was ready to establish diplomatic
    relationship with Turkey without any preconditions and slammed the
    closure of border in the 21st century as `absurdity.'

    ¢ Anna Israelyan, senior reporter for Armenian Daily Aravot,
    contributed to this report.

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=syria-unrest-pushes-armenia-ties-to-peripheries-2011-06-19

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