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Turkish Premier To Discuss Karabakh Settlement

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  • Turkish Premier To Discuss Karabakh Settlement

    TURKISH PREMIER TO DISCUSS KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

    Vestnik Kavkaza
    Sept 11 2012
    Russia

    Marina Petrova. Exclusively to VK

    Today the prime-minister of Turkey Recep Erdogan comes to Azerbaijan
    where he together with the president Ilham Aliyev will chair the
    session of the Strategic Cooperation Council. They plan to sign
    five bilateral agreements and discuss problems of politics, economy,
    military cooperation, and the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement.

    Ankara began to provide active foreign policy in the Caucasus
    straight after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Turkey recognized
    Azerbaijan~Rs independence a month before recognition of other
    former Soviet republics. Ankara was full of illusions connected with
    reviving of lost cultural ties between two nations. However, first
    enthusiasm disappeared, and time places everything in context. After
    20 years Azerbaijan didn~Rt approach Turkey as it approached Russia
    in cultural and value aspects. And Ankara~Rs policy on the settlement
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict influenced it much.

    Azerbaijan had never asked anybody, including Ankara, to interfere
    in the conflict directly. The Azerbaijani leaders might hope only for
    Turkey would explain the world the Azerbaijani point of view through
    its Western contacts. Almost the whole world stood for Armenia in the
    conflict in the early 1990s. Initially Turkey had a neutral position.

    It enabled Ankara to be a mediator and conduct several rounds of talks,
    and the foreign minister of Turkey Hikmet Cetin did his best for the
    US paid attention to the conflict.

    However, the moderate position of Turkey didn~Rt last long. In February
    1992 bloody massacres of Azerbaijani population took place in the
    town of Khojaly. Mass anti-Armenian demonstrations were held in Ankara.

    People demanded military intervention on the side of Azerbaijan
    from the Turkish authorities. The power couldn~Rt ignore people,
    and a new pro-Azerbaijani position had been elaborated soon.

    New Armenian advances, photos of numerous Azerbaijani refugees
    abandoning their homes, occupation of Azerbaijani territories,
    and mild, almost neutral position of official Ankara ~V all these
    circumstances caused heavy criticism of the government by the Turkish
    media and the opposition. The Turkish authorities had ambitious
    targets to return their regional leadership in the Caucasus and Middle
    Asia. In March 1992 the opposition demanded to send troops to the
    Armenian border. The government couldn~Rt ignore the criticism.

    In early March Ankara declared the examination of all planes flying to
    Armenia through Turkish air space. Moreover, Turkey didn~Rt give way
    to aid for Armenia through its territory, thus, it extended economic
    embargo against the country. By the middle of March 1992 the prime
    minister of Turkey Suleiman Demirel didn~Rt except even military
    intervention on the Azerbaijani side.

    However, there were several constraining factors which didn~Rt let
    Turkey to take any decisive steps in the conflict. First of all, Turkey
    depended on the American aid in the struggle against RKK in southeast
    Anatolia. Due to serious Armenian lobby in the US Congress, America,
    being officially neutral, actually stood on the side occupants. The
    same Armenian lobby could easily convinced the Congress to reduce the
    aid in the Turkish war against Kurds, if Ankara were involved in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict or made other firm pro-Azerbaijani steps.

    Furthermore, at that time Ankara intensively tried to gain accession
    to the European Union which believed that the country was developing
    democracy insufficiently. If Turkey dared at some military adventure
    in the Caucasus, it would pay too much for this in Europe. The EU
    demanded normalization of relations with Armenia from Turkey. It
    would be impossible in the context of Ankara~Rs participation in
    the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. Moreover, the stability in the
    region was necessary for construction of new oil and gas pipelines
    which had to transit Caspian and Middle-Asian energy resources to the
    European markets through the Turkish territory, which would increase
    its importance in Europe~Rs eyes.

    In addition, Turkey had to maintain good relations with Russia in
    the economic sphere even more than in the political one. After the
    dissolution of the USSR Russia turned into an attractive market, and
    Turkish companies flew into it. The trade turnover between Turkey and
    Russia in 1992 was in several times more than the turnover between
    Turkey and Azerbaijan and Middle Asian states combined. At the same
    time, Russia exported armament to Turkey for its struggle against RKK.

    Any military aid to Azerbaijan would mean to Ankara a serious worsening
    of relations with Russia. It was absolutely unprofitable.

    The situation with Northern Cyprus tied Turkish hand and foot in the
    Karabakh front. Even though the cases of Nagorno-Karabakh and Cyprus
    are absolutely different, the Turks didn~Rt forget what a negative
    reaction of the international society was caused by their intervention
    in 1974.

    And finally the sad past of the Ottoman Empire, especially the events
    of 1915 in Eastern Anatolia, wasn~Rt neglected. Even in the 1970s
    the Armenian Diaspora began to insist on recognition of these events
    as genocide of the Armenian population. Ankara was afraid that any
    activities in the Karabakh direction would be considered by powerful
    Western Armenian Diaspora as a new effort to massacre Armenians. It
    might lead to worsening of relations with the whole world and put
    Turkey to the situation of isolation. Turkey had to show its good will
    toward independent Armenia. The situation made a strict anti-Armenian
    and pro-Azerbaijani position impossible for Turkey. Suleiman Demirel
    tried to calm down the society furious about the massacre in Khojaly
    and stated that the military intervention of Turkey would only make
    the whole world support Armenia.

    As for the Azerbaijani reaction on the Turkish position, there were two
    aspects. On the one hand, the Azerbaijani were disappointed by Ankara
    which recently had stated on reconsolidation of brother nations. On
    the other hand, official Baku understood importance of constraining
    factors for the Turkish authorities. However, the Turkish image was
    ruined mostly by the unsuccessful energy deal between Ankara and
    Yerevan in November 1992. The main pressure leverage on Armenia was
    energy embargo. And though the deal failed, the Azerbaijani population
    didn~Rt forget about it. They could accept the Turkish passive position
    in a way, but they couldn~Rt forgive Ankara cooperation with their
    enemy. Soon Azerbaijan realized that Turkey lacks enthusiasm and
    political will to be its supporter in the international arena.

    Thus, the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict dispelled illusions of some
    Turkish officials who believed that it would be easy to gain authority
    in the former Soviet space. Considering complicated relations between
    Ankara, Washington, Europe, Moscow, and Middle East, Turkey couldn~Rt
    provide independent policy in the region.

    At the same time, Turkey has many times stated on a desire of intensive
    involvement into the process of the Karabakh settlement and being
    a mediator. Probably during the current meeting in Qabala the prime
    minister Erdogan and the President Aliyev will touch on this painful
    theme again.

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/politics/31237.html

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