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  • David Phillips: Davutoglu wanted to scratch the Protocols and negoti

    David Phillips: Davutoglu wanted to scratch the Protocols and
    negotiate a whole new agreement

    Thursday 6 February 2014 10:19
    Photo: from Edge.passblue.com website

    David L. Phillips



    Mediamax continues "Special File" project, that presents unknown or
    less known details of the Armenian foreign policy.

    David L. Phillips is Director of the Program on Peace-Building and
    Rights at Columbia University's Institute for the Study of Human
    Rights. He has served as Senior Adviser to the Bureau of South and
    Central Asian Affairs, Bureau for Near Eastern Affairs, and Bureau for
    European and Canadian Affairs at the U.S. Department of State, and as
    Senior Adviser to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of
    Humanitarian Affairs.

    David L. Phillips has extensive experience working on Turkish-Armenian
    issues as Chairman of the "Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation
    Commission". He is the author of books "Unsilencing the Past: Track
    Two Diplomacy and Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation" (2005) and
    "Diplomatic history: The Turkey-Armenia Protocols" (2011).

    - The rapprochement process between Armenia and Turkey is now almost
    completely stalled, and even the recent meeting between Edward
    Nalbandyan and Ahmet Davutoglu not to have broken the ice. Do you
    consider it possible to return Zurich Protocols on the agenda?

    - The Protocols are suspended. Prime Minister Erdogan and his AKP-led
    government are responsible for the diplomatic impasse. Ankara can
    revive the process at any time by submitting the Protocols for
    ratification by the Turkish Grand National Assembly. There's also
    another way.

    Erdogan can issue an executive order to open the Turkey-Armenia border
    for normal travel and trade. He can instruct Turkey's Foreign Ministry
    to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia. Such steps take
    leadership; they require statesmanship. It is unlikely that Erdogan
    will act to repair relations with Armenia, as Turkey embarks on a
    2-year election cycle.

    - Once you mentioned that all the parties, including the stakeholders,
    made some mistakes during the process. If we cast a retrospective
    glance, which were the main mistakes of main parties - Turkey, Armenia
    and US - and what lessons could they learn from that failed attempt of
    normalization?

    - Ankara repeatedly tried to link normalization of relations with
    Armenia to events in Nagorno-Karabakh, even though there was no
    mention of NK in either of the protocols or the annexes. Turkish
    officials thought the normalization process would be served by
    "constructive ambiguity." They assumed that the two issues would be
    considered in parallel. There is no place for wishful thinking in
    diplomacy.

    When the Protocols were announced, there was a firestorm of
    controversy in Azerbaijan. Ankara grossly underestimated Azerbaijan's
    opposition and economic leverage. Erdogan travelled to Baku with his
    newly-appointed Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu who wanted to scratch
    the Protocols altogether and negotiate a whole new agreement. Erdogan
    dismissed reports of de-linkage as "slander." He emphasized the
    principle of "one nation - two states," assuring Baku: "It is
    impossible for us to open the border (with Armenia) unless the
    occupation ends."

    Ankara was unabashed about declaring that the "dialogue on historical
    issues" would be used to contest whether events of the early 20th
    century met the definition of genocide. Turkish officials expected a
    historical commission to affirm its view that a "mutual tragedy"
    occurred, and to consider the deportation of Armenians within the
    historical context of Armenia's rebellion against the Ottoman Empire.
    That was a serious miscalculation.

    Ankara thought that normalization would mollify calls for recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide. Turkish politicians mistakenly view Genocide
    recognition as an obsession of the Diaspora. No Armenian - in any
    country or belonging to any political faction -- would ever forsake
    the goal of Genocide recognition for normalization of relations with
    Turkey.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Nalbandian announced the Protocols on April
    22, 2009 but the text of the Protocols was not made public until
    August 31. The Armenian Government should have been more transparent.
    Failing to disclose details of the Protocols until months after they
    were signed created a vacuum, which allowed speculation that the
    Protocols sold out Armenia's core national interests.

    The announcement was just two days before Genocide Remembrance Day.
    The timing was wrong. Critics of the Protocols maintained that they
    were announced to give President Obama cover so he wouldn't have to
    use the "G-word" in his Presidential statement on Remembrance Day.

    Yerevan thought the historical commission and other commissions would
    buttress facts affirming the Genocide and provide a forum for
    resolving issues, including legal matters. However, Dashnaks and
    others suspected that Turkey would manipulate the historical dialogue
    to question the veracity of the Genocide. Questioning the Armenian
    genocide is tantamount to undermining the Armenian state that,
    according to Article 11 of the 1990 Declaration of Independence, stood
    for "achieving international recognition of the 1915 Genocide in
    Ottoman Turkey and Western Armenia."

    The Armenian Constitutional Court opinion on the Protocols, gave
    Turkey something to complain about. The United States welcomed the
    Court's opinion. But Ankara did not. Opponents of rapprochement in
    Turkey used the Constitutional Court to raise questions about
    Armenia's goodwill.

    The State Department heralded the Protocols as a "diplomatic
    breakthrough" because it delinked bilateral issues between Turkey and
    Armenia from Nagorno-Karabakh. This understanding should have been
    made explicit when President Barack Obama met President Abdullah Gul
    and Erdogan during his trip in April 2009. Instead of affirming
    de-linkage, Obama was silent on the issue.


    David L. Phillips.
    Photo: from 3.bp.blogspot.com website.

    The U.S. should have worked with the Swiss Authorities to make sure
    that the text of remarks by Davutoglu and Nalbandian were exchanged
    well in advance of 5.00pm on October 10, 2009 (when the Protocols were
    to be signed). More advance notification would have prevented last
    minute problems that poisoned the atmosphere of the signing ceremony.
    There's a golden rule of diplomacy: no surprises!

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's personal involvement was critical
    to rescuing the signing ceremony and keeping the deal on track.
    Subsequently, monitoring ratification and implementation was assigned
    to U.S. officials of lesser rank. Secretary Clinton placed her
    personal prestige on the line. She could have helped maintain momentum
    by designating a Special Envoy for Ratification of the Protocols.
    State Department officials working on the file were competent, but
    more pressure at a higher level was needed to seal the deal.

    - In your monograph titled "Diplomatic History: The Turkey-Armenia
    Protocols", you recalled the details of signing ceremony on October
    10, 2009 and the last-minute hitch over the final statements. Can we
    conclude that such a step of the Turkish delegation demonstrated that
    Ankara didn't have enough political will and readiness to carry out
    the Protocols and Armenians just could not have any trust to Turkey
    after that?

    - Ambassador Ertugrul Apakan, the Turkish official who managed the
    negotiations, told me: "Reality has two shores." There was fundamental
    disconnect between the Turkish and Armenian sides. The last minute
    misunderstandings at the signing ceremony was a harbinger of problems
    to come. It was more than a problem of political will. There exists
    deep distrust between the parties. More work was needed then - and is
    still needed to build confidence. Civil society can play an important
    role with confidence-building measures. Even though the Protocols are
    suspended, it is still possible to open the border gate for tourism
    and commercial contact.

    DOSSIER

    Passages from David L. Phillips monograph "Diplomatic history: The
    Turkey-Armenia Protocols"

    Signing Ceremony

    The signing ceremony was scheduled to be held at the University of
    Zurich on October 10, 2009. Davutoglu and Nalbandian each planned
    remarks to commemorate the "historic moment in Turkish-Armenian
    bilateral relations." Turkish and Armenian negotiators had reached an
    understanding: they would avoid open discussion of sensitivities. To
    maintain constructive ambiguity, they agreed that neither Davutoglu
    nor Nalbandian would mention the genocide or refer to NK.

    Ten minutes before the signing ceremony, which was scheduled for 5:00
    p.m., the Armenian delegation asked to see the Turkish statement.
    Texts were exchanged through the U.S. delegation. Nalbandian saw
    Davutoglu's text and was aghast. According to an anonymous Turkish
    official, the Armenians objected to Davutoglu's emphasis on the joint
    historical commission, insisting that allowing the commission's work
    was tantamount to denial of the genocide. Armenian officials have a
    different recollection. An anonymous Armenian official insists that
    Davutoglu intended to speak about the historical commission's
    importance, as well as NK. Ambuhl reflects on their different
    memories, "Both sides were speaking the truth." Implicit and explicit
    differences were conflated.

    Calmy-Rey stayed upstairs in the "Aula," the auditorium where the
    signing ceremony was to take place. She was with the VIPs who were
    waiting to witness the signing of the Protocols. The media was off to
    one side of the auditorium. The Zurich mayor and university rector
    were mingling, trying to keep everyone engaged. Ambuhl left the
    Turkish delegation in the University of Zurich's Senate hall and
    rushed two kilometers in a police vehicle to the newly-renovated
    Dolder Hotel where the U.S. and Armenian delegations were staying. It
    was highly unusual in Zurich for a police vehicle with flashing blue
    lights to go speeding through town. He and Clinton went to
    Nalbandian's room. Nalbandian was visibly agitated, channel-surfing
    between football matches. The Swiss came up with a compromise: neither
    side would make remarks. Clinton and Nalbandian drove in the same car
    to the University of Zurich--three hours behind schedule.

    Diplomats attending the ceremony responded to the delay differently.
    Secretary General of the Council of the European Union Javier Solana
    was concerned, but followed the U.S. lead. French Foreign Minister
    Bernard Kouchner was energized, but did not play a major role; Ankara
    would never accept a mediation role for France. It viewed France as
    pro-Armenian because of the French Senate resolution recognizing the
    genocide and France's outspoken Diaspora community, which is a force
    in French politics. Lavrov used his influence to help seal the deal,
    providing Nalbandian with a strongly worded letter that urged him to
    sign.

    The Protocols were finally signed at 8:00 p.m. As agreed, no
    statements were made after the signing. Clinton, Solana, Calmy-Rey,
    Lavrov, and Kouchner stood behind Nalbandian and Davutoglu as
    witnesses, and as a signal of the international community's support.
    Calmy-Rey was the only speaker. Welcoming the agreement, she addressed
    the audience and media assembled in the Aula. Winston Churchill spoke
    in that same auditorium on September 19, 1946, saying: "The first step
    in the recreation of the European family must be a partnership between
    France and Germany." The historic address concluded, "Let Europe
    Rise." The symbolism was trenchant. If France and Germany could
    overcome their enmity and Europe could bind together in common
    purpose, then Turkey and Armenia could also overcome their
    differences.

    - Prime Minister Erdogan is actively seeking to succeed President Gul
    in 2014. According to British Oxford Analytica's report, "Erdogan
    could take the Armenian issue away from Gul and make it his own". Do
    you consider such a prediction realistic?

    - Erdogan is pugnacious and confrontational. He always acts in his own
    political interest, especially during an election cycle. When it comes
    to domestic politics, Erdogan risks more than he gains by focusing
    constructively on Armenian issues. There are more friendship monuments
    and churches to destroy, if Erdogan has his way. Anti-Armenian
    politics played well in Turkey. A return to that mentality would be a
    major setback.

    - In 2015, Armenians will commemorate the Centennial of Genocide. What
    impact will this date have on policies and moods both in Armenia and
    Turkey? Do you think the Turkish government will keep the protocols to
    make another "political show" ahead of 2015?

    - 2015 is an important centennial anniversary. Armenians wake up every
    morning, gaze across the border at Mount Ararat and lament the
    suffering of their ancestors and lost territories in "Western
    Armenia." On the other hand, Turkey is surrounded by problems, many of
    its own making. Davutoglu's "zero problems with neighbors" policy is a
    total fiasco. Armenian issues are way down the list of Turkish
    concerns. Initiatives such as the Gallipoli anniversary are clearly
    an attempt to dilute the centennial of the Genocide. But nothing has
    changed since Hillary Clinton observed, "The ball is in Turkey's
    court."

    The Obama administration can take the issue of Genocide recognition
    off the table by simply recognizing the Armenian Genocide. Rather than
    refer to his "well-known personal view," President Obama should
    characterize the events as genocide in his 2014 Presidential Statement
    on Armenian Remembrance Day. Secretary of State Kerry has always been
    a strong supporter of Genocide recognition.

    Turkey is increasingly an unreliable ally of the West. Erdogan
    tarnished his democratic credentials by cracking down on peaceful
    protesters last summer. The AKP is rife with corruption and cronyism.
    U.S. officials should see Turkey as it is, not as it was or how they
    want it to be.

    Aram Araratyan talked to David Phillips.

    http://www.mediamax.am/en/news/special-file/9013/




    From: A. Papazian
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