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  • Turkey's South Caucasus Agenda

    TURKEY'S SOUTH CAUCASUS AGENDA
    Onnik Krikorian

    http://araratmagazine.org/2012/07/turkeys-south-caucasus-agenda/
    July 17th, 2012

    Onnik Krikorian is a journalist, photojournalist and blogger based
    in Yerevan, Armenia. He is also the Caucasus Regional Editor for
    Global Voices Online and posts for the London-based Frontline Club,
    His project on overcoming negative stereotypes in the South Caucasus
    is available online at http://www.oneworld.am/diversity.

    See more articles by Onnik Krikorian

    Strategically situated as a major conduit for vital energy resources,
    the South Caucasus has long been an area for competing regional and
    geopolitical interests. But while competition between Russia and the
    United States has preoccupied many analysts since 1991 when the three
    countries making up the region declared their independence from the
    former Soviet Union, some consider that Turkey could also play an
    important role in the Caucasus. Despite its well-known problems with
    Armenia, this is particularly true since tensions between Russia and
    Georgia culminated in the August 2008 war.

    At the beginning of March therefore, an international conference
    held in Tbilisi, the Georgian capital, brought together analysts,
    diplomats and decision makers from Turkey, the South Caucasus, and
    international bodies to discuss Ankara's perceived and potential agenda
    in the region. Organized by the Turkish Economic and Social Studies
    Foundation (TESEV) and the Eurasia Partnership Foundation (EPF),
    the question posed was what role could Turkey play in stabilizing
    the South Caucasus and how could civil society contribute to peace
    building despite low levels of civic engagement?

    Despite an initiative to launch a Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
    Platform in 2008 and attempts the following year to establish
    diplomatic relations with Armenia and open the border closed in
    1993, participants considered that Turkey is punching well below its
    weight. TESEV Foreign Policy Program's Aybars Gorgulu explained why.

    "The South Caucasus is little discussed or known in Turkey while
    successive governments neglected the region for too long," he said.

    "When the Soviet Union collapsed, Armenia and Georgia were not in
    Turkey's list of priorities. Instead, an opportunity was seen in
    the Turkic world, and financial and political resources were used to
    create a sphere of influence there. Relations with Azerbaijan also
    became the backbone of Turkey's foreign policy towards the region,
    largely driven by identity and kinship type factors, which some argue
    limited its success."

    Indeed, noted Gorgulu, Turkey's good relations with Azerbaijan and the
    solidarity between the two countries complicated Turkey's relationship
    with Armenia. "Both already had serious disagreements such as border
    recognition and the [1915] Genocide, but Turkey's unconditional
    support for Azerbaijan [in the conflict with Armenia over Karabakh]
    became another source of conflict," he noted.

    "Turkey's policy in the early 1990s was based on a romantic and
    idealized notion more defined by a gap between expectation and actual
    capability."

    On the other hand, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Turkey made a
    distinction in its foreign policy between the Caucasus and Central
    Asia. "It started to adopt a more constructive and comprehensive
    foreign policy strategy," Gorgulu argued. "So, in that sense,
    Turkey can be considered a latecomer to the region. The energy card
    was highly important for Turkey as a hub for the transportation of
    Caspian oil and gas to the West, and so, like Azerbaijan, Georgia
    also became an important country, especially after the construction
    of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline."

    Nevertheless, he continued, Armenia was always the missing piece in the
    puzzle. "Relations with Azerbaijan are still the backbone of Turkey's
    policy towards the region and even though the 'One Nation-Two States'
    motto does not really reflect the political reality," he stressed,
    "it is still reflected in official rhetoric and solidarity between
    Turkish and Azerbaijan state elites remains strong while there is
    domestic support as well."

    As for Armenia, after the much publicized "football diplomacy"
    initiative, expectations were raised for normalization, but the
    situation is now deadlocked with no breakthrough likely in the near
    future. And while civil society in Turkey is developing, there still
    remains little interest in the South Caucasus on both the state and
    NGO level. Even so, there has been significant progress in terms
    of dialogue between Armenian and Turkish NGOs, and in the absence
    of official relations, Gorgulu argued, it is the responsibility of
    civil society to continue with this process.

    Photo: Russian Military Road Block, Gori, Georgia, August 2008. The
    conflict between Russia and Georgia is seen as the main stimulus behind
    Turkey's initiative to engage with the South Caucasus © Onnik Krikorian

    The Official View from Turkey

    A Georgian priest comforts a resident of Gori during the Russian
    military occupation of the town in August 2008. The conflict between
    Russia and Georgia is seen as the main stimulus behind Turkey's
    initiative to engage with the South Caucasus © Onnik Krikorian

    Not surprisingly, the official line from Levent Murat Burhan, the
    Turkish Ambassador to Georgia, focused mainly on the problems in
    Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Karabakh. "Situated at the crossroads of
    East and West as well as North and South, and home to a multitude of
    different ethnicities, languages and religions, the South Caucasus
    is one of the most challenging in the global political landscape,"
    he said. "Its huge potential has not been fully realized because
    of conflict and shortcomings in terms of political, economic, and
    social development."

    The August 2008 war between Russia and Georgia demonstrated the
    danger posed by persisting protracted conflicts and why the present
    status quo is neither desirable nor sustainable in the long term,
    Burhan argued. As such, he concluded, the region is a priority in
    Turkish foreign policy.

    Burhan provided examples of this Turkish approach in terms of
    supporting security and stability and creating a climate of regional
    cooperation. Initially supported officially in Yerevan as well as by
    the international community, even if controversial for many in the
    Diaspora, Turkey in particular remains committed to the normalization
    process with Armenia, he stated, believing that the two protocols
    signed in Zurich at the end of October 2009 represented a unique
    historical opportunity to establish peace and stability in the South
    Caucasus.

    Nevertheless, he added, Turkey considers that the normalization process
    with Armenia and resolution of the Karabakh conflict are connected
    and that they therefore affect each other. "With the stalemate [over
    the disputed territory] also negatively affecting regional dynamics,
    and even though the Turkey-Armenia and the Armenia-Azerbaijan tracks
    are to be negotiated separately, there is a relation between the two,"
    he said. "A positive move in one will help facilitate progress in
    the other."

    "A more general example, related to this, is that we believe the
    unsolved conflicts in the South Caucasus are the main obstacles
    to peace and stability in the region," he continued. "Therefore,
    immediately following the Georgian-Russian conflict in August 2008
    we introduced an initiative to bring together regional Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) members. The Caucasus
    Stability and Cooperation Platform initiative was launched after the
    outbreak of hostilities and we believe it is the right mechanism to
    address all regional problems."

    The Armenian Perspective

    Naturally, the Armenian position presented by former Turkish Armenian
    Reconciliation Commission (TARC) member and Yerevan State University
    Professor David Hovannisyan was more critical. "Bilateral relations
    should simply be that," he countered. "They aren't multilateral,
    so when the Turkish government decided to make linkages between the
    Armenia-Turkish normalization process and the conflict between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan over Nagorno Karabakh it wasn't fair or helpful in
    creating a more positive environment for further dialogue."

    Hovannisyan also said that he considered the proposal of a Caucasus
    Stability and Cooperation platform was naive. "Considered seriously,
    the initiative was a good one but it was also completely idealistic
    and unrealistic," he explained. "Even if the Turkish initiative did
    reduce tensions in the region during and after the August 2008 war,
    it couldn't become a new process. There is instead the need for
    trust, new open-minded elites, new governments, and a real process
    of democratization in all the countries in the region."

    In combination with involvement in the European Union's Eastern
    Partnership, Turkey's role could be more active, but ultimately it
    is limited in terms of Armenian-Turkish relations, Hovannisyan
    continued. "There are normal diplomatic procedures for the
    establishment of diplomatic relations so why did Armenia and Turkey
    begin to discuss the text of the protocols? It was from our point
    of view genocide so if we really want to create a real process of
    reconciliation between two nations there also needs to be an apology."

    Flanked by an Armenian security detail, the car carrying Turkish
    President Abdullah Gul drives from Zvartnots Airport to Downtown
    Yerevan less than one month after the August 2008 war between Georgia
    and Russia © Onnik Krikorian

    Challenging the Status Quo in the South Caucasus

    Chaired by Guenther Baechler, the Swiss Ambassador to Georgia, the
    first of three panels examined the current role of Turkey in the South
    Caucasus and how that should develop in the future. The panel addressed
    whether Turkey is living up to its potential and whether there is a
    systematic approach in terms of any strategy for the future. Was the
    absence of reference to Russia and Iran in the Turkish Ambassador's
    address diplomatic courtesy in order not to address competitors in
    the region?

    Temel Iskit, a retired Turkish Ambassador, considered these important
    questions that had to be answered. Iskit also thought that while the
    Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform was a positive initiative
    on the part of Turkey, its timing was not helpful. "Turkey was not
    seen as an objective player in the region," he said. "It was, and
    still is, considered to be closer to Azerbaijan than Armenia. Even
    so, the initiative was welcomed by Armenia and not Azerbaijan and
    Georgia because it was the first time Ankara initially approached
    Yerevan without preconditions."

    Armenia was eager to participate in the initiative, he explained,
    and even if this didn't happen, one by-product was the resulting
    approach towards Armenia in the form of a road map, enhanced by
    "football diplomacy," before the ill-fated signing of two protocols
    to normalize relations. "Even if Turkey hoped normalization might
    also contribute to resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict it
    was not perceived as such by Azerbaijan. Perceptions therefore need
    to be changed in all three countries," Iskit said.

    "There are two tracks, Armenia-Turkey and Armenia-Azerbaijan,
    but unfortunately at some point they start to converge. In Turkey,
    people's sympathies are with Azerbaijan so this creates political
    pressure on the government even if there is has been a change in
    terms of the country's attitude to Armenia and even the Genocide. Of
    course, it is slow to change, but over time both Armenia and Turkey
    will fully understand they share a common history. This is a long-term
    transformation and civil society is already playing a role in this."

    The View from Azerbaijan

    Avaz Hasanov, Director of Society for Humanitarian Research in Baku
    says the Azerbaijani government as well as domestic society fully
    supports Turkey's desire to resolve the Karabakh conflict while
    rapprochement is also in the interest of the US, EU, and partly Russia
    too. "Since the normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey
    will build peace and stability in the South Caucasus, integration into
    Europe will naturally increase as well," Hasanov opined. "Georgia is
    more active here, but Euro-integration will promote democratization
    and realization of peace in the region."

    Nevertheless, he added, energy and communication projects involving
    Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey but excluding Armenia do not help
    realize this goal.

    "Azerbaijan considers the economic blockade [of Armenia] as the main
    tool to push for a favorable resolution of the Karabakh conflict,"
    Hasanov argued. "So, the support of Turkey in terms of normalizing
    relations can also help overcome the myths and stereotypes prevalent in
    Armenian and Azerbaijani societies. [...] Unfortunately, however, much
    of civil society instead helps maintains the status quo by mirroring
    public opinion in its resistance to compromise for the sake of peace
    as well as the region's future. There is also no political will."

    Relics of War, Karabakh © Onnik Krikorian

    The International Community's Perspective

    "Turkey could potentially become a key actor in the South Caucasus,
    but why does Turkey not occupy that role in reality?" asked moderator
    Dieter Boden, a German diplomat and former Special Representative of
    the UN Secretary General on the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict and previously
    head of the OSCE Special Mission to Georgia.

    "Turkey has articulated itself as a central country in quite a few
    places, but relatively speaking this has been felt less strongly in
    the Caucasus," Nigar Goksel responded. "One reason for this could be
    that Turkey is cautious about stepping on Russia's toes."

    Goksel, a Senior Analyst and Caucasus Coordinator with the European
    Stability Initiative (ESI), also believed that unrealistic expectations
    were set in attempts to improve relations with Armenia.

    "Many in the West believed that with so many stalemates in the region
    the one positive dynamic that could be introduced would be opening
    Turkey's border with Armenia so that relations would normalize in
    order to break Russia's domination," she said. "It might also break
    stereotypes and introduce a positive dynamic into Armenia-Azerbaijan
    relations."

    Theoretically many analysts agree, but Goksel also noted that the
    opposite could be argued as well. "Azerbaijan's perspective that it
    is in its interest for the Armenia-Turkey border to remain closed and
    there is the view in Baku that Armenia will harden its position on the
    Karabakh issue if the border is opened," she explained. "A theoretical
    argument can also be made that a rift between Baku and Ankara can only
    give more power to Russia in the neighborhood while others argue that
    even if Turkey does open the border, Russia's leverage in Armenia is
    not going to decrease."

    Another big challenge for Turkey will be 2015, stated Goksel, noting
    that it would be the 100th anniversary of the Genocide, a term that
    nearly all participants except for the active Turkish Ambassador in
    Tbilisi used. "Here the question is what will Turkey do?" she said.

    "There will be significant pressure to do something, but it's very
    important that Turkey starts thinking about this now if it wants to
    play an important role in the region. It's also important that it
    doesn't react emotionally, but in a rational way that looks forward
    to the next 100 years of regional stability and cooperation."

    The International Crisis Group's Sabine Freizer agreed. "If the
    Armenian-Turkish process was undertaken half-heartedly and only
    for international reasons then Turkey is going to have a problem
    in 2015," she said before turning her attention to Karabakh. "The
    main miscalculation [with the protocols] was that there were two
    processes going on in parallel, and that while there was progress
    on Armenia-Turkey there was the sense that this was also true in the
    Nagorno Karabakh talks. Unfortunately that was not the case."'

    Graphic via Caucasus Resource Research Centers (CRRC) Caucasus
    Barometer 2011

    Graphic via Caucasus Resource Research Centers (CRRC) Caucasus
    Barometer 2011

    Graphic via Caucasus Resource Research Centers (CRRC) Caucasus
    Barometer 2011

    Nevertheless, she noted, there is still some engagement between
    Armenia and Turkey which should continue regardless of the conflict
    with Azerbaijan. "There has been discussion about energy deals between
    Armenia and Eastern Turkey and that should go forward, and there are
    already some small steps. For example, Turkey is allowing Armenian
    trucks into its territory, it provides visas to Armenian citizens,
    and there are direct flights to and from Yerevan. Turkey hasn't shut
    off completely, but there's also the need to look to the future."

    Others such as Pascal Heyman from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Conflict Prevention Center suggested that
    Turkey could promote more Track II diplomacy initiatives, including
    those for Georgians, Abkhazians, and Ossetians.

    "Confidence building measures in the case of the Armenia-Azerbaijan
    conflict have been difficult to achieve agreement on, however, and
    when they are accepted they largely remain unimplemented.

    People-to-People contacts, such as those between journalists, have
    also been difficult to arrange, "he said.

    All the speakers, however, noted the urgency of the matter. "Ankara
    prefers to stabilize the situation hoping it won't get out of hand
    while waiting for a better time," said Peter Semneby, Former EU
    Special Representative for the South Caucasus. "This position is
    a dangerous one, if understandable, because it could mean tensions
    will build up under the surface and be more difficult to address in
    the future before becoming as uncontrollable as in 2008. There is an
    arms race which rapidly lowers the threshold for the use of violence
    and force if nothing is done."

    Graphic via Caucasus Resource Research Centers (CRRC) Caucasus
    Barometer 2011

    The Role of Civil Society

    Moderator Kenneth Yalowitz, a retired U.S. Ambassador to Georgia
    and Belarus, introduced the third and final panel, noting that the
    involvement of NGOs and other non-State actors will be crucial.

    "There are no such things as frozen conflicts and the situation is
    not stable as shown in August 2008 with the war between Russia and
    Georgia," he said. "The situation in terms of Nagorno Karabakh is
    unstable and could again turn into hostilities so there is much work
    to do in terms of ongoing negotiations and state-to-state relations."

    Unfortunately, Yalowitz noted, data from the Caucasus Resource
    Research Centers (CRRC) shows that the level of trust in NGOs, as
    well as an understanding of what civil society actually does, is at a
    very low level across the entire region. In the context of Karabakh,
    EPF's Vazgen Karapetyan offered an insight as to why. "There are some
    justifiable reasons why NGOs remain low key, but there are also some
    less than justifiable ones such as competition for resources on the
    local level so as not to lose 'business' and also because donors do
    not demand a serious impact," he explained.

    Negative stereotypes and hate speech, mainly from governments as well
    as the media, are therefore not challenged and the impact of civil
    society in mainstream society is limited as a result. Another reason
    is that a lack of coordination domestically, as well as cross-border,
    combined with the heightened official policy of constructing the "image
    of the enemy" raises suspicion among citizens towards confidence
    building and peace building initiatives. "That's a more than less
    legitimate reason for low awareness," he concluded.

    Craig Oliphant, formerly with the United Kingdom's Foreign and
    Commonwealth Office and now with the NGO Saferworld added some
    other reasons. "Frustrations and grievances in the Nagorno Karabakh
    conflict not only remain, but have actually worsened and increased,"
    he said. "Baku looks at Track II diplomacy and the involvement of NGOs
    with skepticism, considering that confidence building measures should
    not be seen as some kind of 'reward' for Armenia in the absence of
    any actual resolution. As a psychological problem, that's a particular
    challenge for NGOs."

    Even so, noted Oliphant, Turkey has shown itself to be an ideal
    host country for numerous cross-border civil society initiatives for
    participants from the South Caucasus. But, with many believing that
    Turkey is hesitant in encroaching upon Russia's perceived sphere of
    influence even if it does show an interest in engaging Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia, and with Armenia-Turkey relations and the Karabakh
    peace process in deadlock, it seems unlikely that Ankara will be able
    to assume a more pro-active role in the region any time soon.

    Nevertheless, with many considering that Ankara's priorities
    and interests in the region are almost identical to those of the
    European Union's, the debate and discussion will no doubt continue,
    and especially in the context of its approach to Armenia. "However,"
    remarked George Khutsishvili, director of the Tbilisi-based
    International Center on Conflict and Negotiation (ICCN), in the remarks
    from the floor that followed, "there are more questions than answers
    about what its role should be."

    One of two closed border gates separating Armenia and Turkey. One
    is close to Gyumri while this one is situated in Margara, Armenia ©
    Onnik Krikorian



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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