Category: Armenian Question

“The great Turk is governing in peace twenty nations from different religions. Turks have taught to Christians how to be moderate in peace and gentle in victory.”Voltaire’s Philosophical Dictionary

  • Normalization of Ankara-Yerevan relations cannot be supported: Turkish expert

    Normalization of Ankara-Yerevan relations cannot be supported: Turkish expert

    FerruhDemirmenThe United States, New York, Oct.10 /Trend News K. Pashayeva /

    The process of normalizing the Ankara -Yerevan relations, developed on the incorrect basis, cannot be supported, Energy Expert Ferruh Demirmen told the Turkish Forum website.

    The protocols give no assurance or confidence that Armenia will take steps expected with normalization. The indications are that the Turkish government has forced itself into a predicament, possibly even a trap, of its own making, Demirmen said.

    Earlier Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan told Trend News in an exclusive interview that Turkey and Armenia will sign a deal to establish diplomatic ties on Oct. 10 or 11.

    Three major Turkish-American umbrella organizations, the Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA), Turkish Coalition of America (TCA), and the Federation of Turkish American Associations (FTAA) have supported the normalization process. They considered this step as a step towards regional peace and as a blow to the Armenian diaspora, making it ineffective in its lobbying efforts against Turkey, the Turkish Forum wrote.

    However Demirmen believes, the normalization process, in its present form, is ill-founded, ill-advised, and cannot be supported from the Turkish point of view. The arguments advanced for normalization, while sounding reasonable, and in principle commendable, represent to a large extent wishful thinking for the Turkish side, not backed by the two diplomatic protocols announced by Turkey and Armenia

    No caveat or pre-conditions are attached to normalization and the opening of the common border,” the expert said. Given that the opening of the border will overwhelmingly benefit Armenia, the protocols call for no concessions from Armenia, Demirmen added.

    Genocide allegations and the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict are the chief thorny issues between the two countries; but for Turkey, Armenia’s hitherto hostile behavior is also a cause for deep resentment, the Turkish expert added.

    On the genocide issue, the protocols call for the establishment of a bilateral commission to study “the historical dimension with the aim to restore mutual confidence between the two nations, including … an examination of the historical records and archives to define existing problems and formulate recommendations.” There is no mention to specifically address the genocide issue, whether it happened or not, Demirmen said.

    This work may continue for years, during which time the border will remain open. Because, the Armenians diaspora would continue to insist on recognizing the genocide, Demirmen wrote.

    There are also reports from Armenian sources that the Armenian government will insist that the historical commission should focus not on whether “genocide” occurred – because this is a given “fact” – but rather, how it occurred.

    In a recent interview with the Armenian Reporter in New York, Armenian President Serzh Sargisyan noted that Armenia and the diaspora are “one family,” and that recognition of “genocide” is a “long-awaited victory for justice.”

    A clear message, but not a helpful one for normalizing relations, Demirmen believes.

    The language in the protocols on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue is even fuzzier. Other than a “commitment to the peaceful settlement of regional and international disputes,” the protocols contain no concrete reference to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. There is no mention of ending the illegal occupation of the Azeri territory by Armenia – notwithstanding the UN resolutions – of the innocent Azerbaijani civilians that fell victim to ethnic cleansing by Armenian forces, and of the plight of one million Azerbaijani refugees, Demirmen noted.

    The author also noted that on a recent visit to Moscow, the Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian stated that the Nagorno-Karabakh issue never entered into negotiations with Turkey, and never will.

    In any case, while the Nagorno-Karabakh issue drags on in negotiations, the Turkey-Armenia border will remain open, the expert believes.

    Normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations without the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will be a “sellout” by Turkey of brotherly Azerbaijan, and a betrayal of Azeri nation’s trust in Turkey.

    The chief fallout from a rift in Azerbaijani-Turkish relations will be energy projects – including Shah Deniz II gas supply for the Nabucco project. Throughput to the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) crude pipeline may also be curtailed, the expert added.

    Source: en.trend.az, 10.10.2009

  • Turkey, Armenia Prepare to Take Step Toward Reconciliation

    Turkey, Armenia Prepare to Take Step Toward Reconciliation

    By MARC CHAMPION

    Turkey and Armenia look set to sign an accord Saturday aimed at reopening their shared border and establishing diplomatic relations, a move backed by the U.S. and European Union with potentially sweeping consequences for the region.

    But Saturday’s agreement, though important, would be just a step toward those goals. It would also do little to end a corrosive dispute between the two nations over whether the World War I-era massacre of up to 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire was genocide.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is due to attend the signing ceremony in Zurich Saturday, reflecting the Obama administration’s involvement in trying to improve a broken relationship that has long complicated U.S. ties with Turkey, an important U.S. ally in the Middle East and a North Atlantic Treaty Organization member.

    [Turkey Armenia]

    On Thursday and Friday, in an important piece of the accord’s choreography, the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan met in Moldova for talks aimed at resolving their conflict over Nagorno Karabakh, a largely ethnic-Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan that broke away with Armenian military aid in the early 1990s.

    A statement by the Minsk Group — France, Russia and the U.S. — which mediates the negotiations, described the talks as constructive. But Azeri President Ilham Aliyev, who has pushed Turkey not to sign the accord until Armenia agrees to a resolution of the Karabakh dispute, told Azeri television that the talks had made no progress, Russian news agency Interfax reported.

    Diplomats familiar with preparations said the signing in Zurich would go ahead on Saturday, although debate was continuing over how the ceremony, very sensitive on both sides of the border, would be presented.

    Turkey wants to stress linkage between the border opening and resolution of the Karabakh conflict by having the Minsk Group present, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal. Armenia doesn’t want the group there.

    Mrs. Clinton’s planned attendance has some American Armenians up in arms. “I don’t think Clinton should be there,” said Ken Hachikian, chairman of the Armenian National Committee of America. “The U.S. is twisting Armenia’s arm very hard to accept this. … Why? Because they want Turkey to have a way out of recognizing genocide, and to get into the EU.”

    AFP/Getty ImagesArmenian protesters march through the capital of Yerevan to protest against the government’s plans to sign an accord to reopen its border with Turkey.

    Many Armenians object to clauses in the accord that recognize the current border and set up a historical commission to examine disputes, likely to include the 1915 massacres. Turkey, which demanded the commission, disputes the killings amounted to genocide.

    Some Armenians say they are willing to back the rapprochement with Turkey, arguing that it will ease the country’s isolation. “This will test the courage of Turkey and whether they are sincere about the process. … We expect the border to open without any preconditions,” said Anthony Barsamian, an executive board member of the Armenian Assembly of America. Mr. Barsamian said he hoped the deal would free President Barack Obama to follow through with his campaign pledge to allow U.S. recognition of the genocide.

    It is the Karabakh issue, however, that is likely to hold up implementation of the agreement, analysts and diplomats say. After the document is signed, it will need to be ratified by both parliaments to take effect, a process that could be drawn out by either side.

    “It is a significant event, but there is a way to go,” Thomas de Waal, who wrote a book on the Karabakh conflict, said of the signing. Turkey closed the border in 1993 to protest what it saw as Armenia’s occupation of 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory. Mr. Erdogan, the Turkish leader, has said he won’t open the border until the conflict is resolved.

    Write to Marc Champion at [email protected]

  • TURKEY MADE THE WORLD REMEMBER KARABAKH CONFLICT… BUT AT WHAT COST?

    TURKEY MADE THE WORLD REMEMBER KARABAKH CONFLICT… BUT AT WHAT COST?

    Thursday, 01 October 2009
    ergun_sThe TRT interview with Sedat Laciner, the Director of International Strategic Research Organization, «Turkey Made The World Remember Karabakh Conflict» published in www.HistoryofTruth.com on 30 September 2009, concerning the protocols that will allegedly be signed on October 10 by Turkey and Armenia, is replete with perceptions and/or predictions that I find hard to accept or support. I decided to share with my readers my responses to that interview on a line-by-line basis.

    TRT: Why Switzerland?

    LACINER: First of all, it is hard to find countries that do not support Armenian allegations.

    (EK: There are no countries in the entire continents of Asia or Africa which support Armenian allegations. There are only three countries in Latin America and only two in North America which support Armenian allegations (all because of the Armenian political pressure.) Out of 55 or so countries in Europe, small or large, only 15 support Armenian allegations (also because of the Armenian political intimidation.) In summary, out of some 204 countries which are members of the U.N., only about 20 countries support Armenian allegations-i.e. less than 10 percent. Therefore, to say «it is hard to find countries that do not support Armenian allegations» is incorrect, unfair, and if not based on ignorance or sloppiness, may be even considered malicious.)

    LACINER: … Of course it would be better if it would be an objective country like England,

    (EK: England? Objective? Really? England is the one party that is most responsible for the continuation of the genocide allegations today which are based on the Blue Book, wartime propaganda material compiled and edited by Toynbee and Bryce. The Turkish parliament in 2005 sent a joint letter/request to the House of Commons and Lords to take back the hearsay and forgeries contained in that book and apologize to Turkey for causing immeasurable suffering by deliberately spreading falsified information. England was at the heart of using Ottoman-Armenians against the Ottoman Empire before, during, and after the WWI. To call England objective would be to ignore history.)

    LACINER: …but the mission of mediation is an important factor here. Switzerland was not very ambitious for mediation.

    (EK: It is unacceptable, if not also embarrassing, to have to go to Switzerland, hat in hand, and asking for their mediation. Switzerland has passed a law banning questioning a certain characterization of a historic event without the court verdict supporting such ban. Thus, the Swiss have chosen to be a party to the conflict. Who are these Turkish negotiators who ignorantly brought Switzerland into this conflict, much less begged for their mediation? Don’t they have any idea what happened in 1920 in a small town called Sevres just a few kilometers from where they are? Did they forget about spirit of Lausanne 1923?)

    LACINER: … On the other hand, it could be an advantage for Turkey that Switzerland previously gave support to the Armenian allegations.

    (EK: How can Switzerland’s blatantly pro-Armenian beliefs and policies be an advantage? How can any logical and informed person believe such a naïve suggestion?)

    LACINER: … Turkey can make itself understood better and same time it can strengthen its thesis.

    (EK: Turkey needs Switzerland to be understood? Or strengthen its thesis? Is it not strong enough now? How can it be stronger by talking to the Swiss?)

    TRT: What is the position of Azerbaijan?

    LACINER: Turkey is already making all steps with Azerbaijan. Karabakh problem is as important as the issue of so called Armenian genocide for Turkey. Turkey already declared this and Prime Minister several times underlined that fact. In the process, if we count Switzerland, Azerbaijan is like a fourth party. Besides, Turkey and Azerbaijan constantly share information about the processes. Azerbaijan is being informed about developments, other than that Turkey took the approval of Azerbaijan about this issue. Azerbaijan is aware of Turkey’s good will and they trust Turkey.

    (EK: Is that why Aliyev hastily went to Russia last May to promise Nabucco-earmarked gas to Russian gas pipeline as soon as news of Turkey-Armenia border opening hit the Turkish media? Because Azerbaijan trusts Turkey?)

    LACINER: … The World was unaware of the occupation in Karabakh till now. The land that Armenia keeps under occupation is more than the land that Israel invaded. Turkey made the world realize the occupation in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    TRT: What will be the gains of Turkey?

    LACINER: Success of protocols is dependent on the process of resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh problem, and that is told to Obama, Russia and France. The next meeting towards resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will be in a much more serious mood.

    (EK: We will see soon enough, won’t we? Too much is bet on too few «perceived» gains that are questionable and doubtful.)

    LACINER: … First of all, this process (alone) is the gain of Turkey by itself.

    (EK: Says who?)

    LACINER: … In the opinion of international community, Turkey had an image like Turkey was smothering Armenia and not letting it develop. By this process Turkey proved that it is not aggressive.

    (EK: Not a convincing argument. Even if it were true, does the dubious outcome justify the high cost?)

    LACINER: … If protocols can be realized Turkey will gain many more advantages. A committee of historians is planned to be established. Such a committee may undermine the genocide allegations of Armenian Diaspora.

    Although there are rumours about borders, recognition of borders clearly mentioned in protocols.

    Although Armenia does not recognize treaty of Kars now, they will be recognizing it through protocols.

    Dashnaks are very uncomfortable that ratifying protocols will mean that Armenia recognizes Turkey’s territorial integrity.

    (EK: As you read these lines, Armenia’s constitution still refers to eastern Anatolia as Western Armenia. Armenia’s politicians and Diaspora make no secret of the fact that they want land and reparations fro Turkey. So, what exactly does it mean to say «recognition of borders clearly mentioned in protocols»? At the first opportunity, cannot Armenia easily say «Yes, Turks put that statement in the protocol, but we never agreed to it»? Then what?

    LACINER: … What will be the gains of Turkey? We can count three of them. First is recognition of borders,

    (EK: Let’s not count the eggs before the chickens lay them. We don’t even have chickens yet…)

    LACINER: … second is about genocide allegations, and third is Nagorno-Karabakh problem.

    (EK: Protocol before resolution in Karabagh or resolution in Karabagh before protocol? That is the question. It should have been the latter. Now a resolution in Karabagh will be harder. Why would Armenia feel motivated to end its military occupation and allow Azeri refugees to return now that Armenia got what it wanted?)

    LACINER: … Normalization of relations would be the fourth gaining for Turkey.

    TRT: What kind of developments are expected to happen in Armenia and Caucasus?

    LACINER: … Opening of borders will affect Russia.

    (EK: After the Georgian war, Russia was trapped in Armenia. Turkey, through its ill-advised protocols with Armenia, not only saved Armenia but also Russia-in-Armenia.)

    LACINER: … But the main problem might be the situation of Georgia. Since Armenia and Azerbaijan use Georgia as a route for transportation, the influence of Georgia will decrease. On the other hand, Azerbaijan will have another gate to World and it will be relaxing for Azerbaijan. But we should not be expecting results so soon. Moving in hurry may cause conflicts in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    (EK: Diplomacy and international relations are a balancing act of interests, not unlike a trade. The Turkish term describes it bets: «alis-veris» taking-and-giving. What these protocols represent fro Turkey is «veris-veris», giving-and-giving.)

    What if we lose Azerbaijan’s friendship and support because of a murky dealing with Armenia? Who will fill the Baku-Tiflis-Ceyhan pipeline with oil?

    Nothing would make me happier that to be proven wrong on all of the above. But I don’t hold out any hope that the upcoming developments will prove me wrong anytime soon…

  • Current Turkish “opening” to Armenia cannot be supported

    Current Turkish “opening” to Armenia cannot be supported

    By Ferruh Demirmen

    The Turkey-Armenia normalization process, due to take effect soon, in its present form carry imponderables that raise serious questions as to its merits for Turkey.

    Three major Turkish-American umbrella organizations, the Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA), Turkish Coalition of America (TCA), and the Federation of Turkish American Associations (FTAA), regrettably issued statements recently in support of the normalization process.

    In their endorsement, ATAA and TCA stressed, as has the Turkish government, the importance of diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia in pursuit of regional peace, while FTAA, being more prophetic, argued that the process would be a blow to the Armenian diaspora, making it ineffective in its lobbying efforts against Turkey.

    There is, however, fierce opposition to the normalization process both in Turkey and Armenia.

    No pre-conditions

    The normalization process, in its present form, is ill-founded, ill-advised, and cannot be supported from the Turkish point of view. The arguments advanced for normalization, while sounding reasonable, and in principle commendable, represent to a large extent wishful thinking for the Turkish side, not backed by the two diplomatic protocols announced by Turkey and Armenia. The protocols, initialed on August 31 and due to be signed on October 10, form the blueprint for the normalization process.

    Reading through the protocols, the one thing that is striking is the generality of the language and the lack of concrete steps to be taken to resolve the outstanding issues between Turkey and Armenia. No caveat or pre-conditions are attached to normalization and the opening of the common border.

    Given that the opening of the border will overwhelmingly benefit Armenia, the protocols call for no concessions from Armenia.

    Genocide allegations and the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict are the chief thorny issues between the two countries; but for Turkey, Armenia’s hitherto hostile behavior is also a cause for deep resentment.

    Genocide issue

    On the genocide issue, the protocols call for the establishment of a bilateral commission to study “the historical dimension with the aim to restore mutual confidence between the two nations, including … an examination of the historical records and archives to define existing problems and formulate recommendations.” There is no mention to specifically address the genocide issue, whether it happened or not.

    Nor is there any commitment to open Armenian archives for examination. Turkish archives are already open.

    Likewise, the time frame for the completion of the commission’s work is left open. This work may continue for years, during which time the border will remain open.

    Swiss and other international experts will be joining Armenian and Turkish experts, and herein lies a potential trap for Turkey – considering how the West is already biased against the Turkish position. Switzerland is one country where denial of “Armenian genocide” is punishable by law. France is another one.

    Furthermore, assuming that the commission will reach a well-defined conclusion, there is no commitment on the part of Armenia that it would abide by this conclusion, or that it would try to dissuade the diaspora Armenians from continuing the genocide rhetoric.

    In its August 23, 1990 Declaration of Independence, Armenia stated that it will continue supporting international recognition of “the 1915 genocide,” and has done so ever since.

    It is probable that the Armenian diaspora will press for genocide recognition with undiminished fervor, with implicit if not explicit support of Armenia, regardless of the conclusions reached by the historical commission. The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), the chief lobbying arm of the diaspora in America, is firmly against the Turkish-Armenian protocols. The Armenian-American community, in general, is also opposed.

    With the diaspora’s anti-Turkish lobbying efforts continuing in full force, Armenia can, as a last resort, “wash its hands off,” arguing that it has no “control” on the diaspora.

    There are also reports from Armenian sources that the Armenian government will insist that the historical commission should focus not on whether “genocide” occurred – because this is a given “fact” – but rather, how it occurred.

    In a recent interview with the Armenian Reporter in New York, Armenian President Serge Sargsian noted that Armenia and the diaspora are “one family,” and that  recognition of “genocide” is a “long-awaited victory for justice.”

    A clear message, but not a helpful one for normalizing relations.

    So, how is the establishment of the historical commission as foreseen in the protocols really make a difference as far as genocide allegations? A check of reality is in order here.

    Nagorno-Karabagh conflict

    The language in the protocols on the Nagorno-Karabagh issue is even fuzzier. Other than a “commitment to the peaceful settlement of regional and international disputes,” the protocols contain no concrete reference to the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict. There is no mention of ending the illegal occupation of the Azeri territory by Armenia – notwithstanding the UN resolutions – of the innocent Azeri civilians that fell victim to ethnic cleansing by Armenian forces, and of the plight of one million Azeri refugees.

    On a recent visit to Moscow, the Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian stated that the Nagorno-Karabagh issue never entered into negotiations with Turkey, and never will.

    Still, as part of the normalization process, Armenia may implement a cosmetic withdrawal from the occupied territory, but this will fall well short of the UN demands, and will not in any way satisfy Azerbaijan. The Minsk Group has been ineffective to date.

    In any case, while the Nagorno-Karabagh issue drags on in negotiations, the Turkey-Armenia border will remain open.

    Occupation of Nagorno-Karabagh by Armenian forces was the reason Turkey closed the Turkey-Armenia border in 1993.

    Normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations without the solution of the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict will be a “sellout” by Turkey of brotherly Azerbaijan, and a betrayal of Azeri nation’s trust in Turkey.

    Other than trust, the chief fallout from a rift in Azeri-Turkish relations will be energy projects – including Shah Deniz II gas supply for the Nabucco project. Throughput to the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) crude pipeline may also be curtailed, and the Kazakh oil reaching Baku (due to increase following recent agreement between Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan) across the Caspian Sea, instead of the BTC outlet, will likely be exported from the Black Sea ports of Supsa (Georgia) or Novorossiysk (Russia).

    Economics aside, that will increase oil tanker traffic through the Bosporus.

    Should these eventualities materialize, Turkish politicians, or rather the AKP leaders, will have a lot in their hands to “explain.”

    Other issues

    Other thorny issues between Turkey and Armenia include refusal of Armenia to recognize the 1921 Kars Agreement (signed between Turkey and the three neighboring Soviet Republics defining the borders), reference to Mount Ararat as a national symbol in Armenia’s Constitution, inclusion of the Mount Ararat insignia on Armenia’s national flag, and reference to eastern Turkey as “Western Armenia” in the Armenian Declaration of Independence.

    Such stance on the part of Armenia is an antithesis of good intentions towards a neighbor. Yet, apart from a veiled reference to the Kars Agreement, the issue is largely ignored in the Turkish-Armenian protocols.

    How could a country like Turkey normalize relations with a neighbor when the latter signals territorial claims on its neighbor – and does not want to alter its mind-set?

    Could the U.S. have a normal diplomatic relation with Mexico if the latter claimed in its Constitution that the southwest U.S. is part of a larger Mexico?

    Lingering in the background, of course, is the nefarious ASALA terror that caused the death of more than 40 Turkish diplomats in various countries in the 1970’s and ‘80’s.

    Armenia cannot be directly blamed for ASALA’s terror, but the Armenian officials have not publically condemned the dastardly acts of ASALA.

    Memories are still fresh on Armenian president Andranik Makarian’s warm welcome extended to the ASALA terrorist Varadian Garabedian when the latter was released from French prison in 2001. The Yerevan mayor Rober Nazarian gave the terrorist assurance that he would be given food, shelter and a job in Yerevan. In fact, Garabedian received a hero’s welcome when he stepped into Armenian soil. He had been convicted in France of the 1983 bombing of the Turkish Airlines bureau at the Paris-Orly airport, killing 8 people and wounding 61.

    Call for judgment

    The notion of normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia is applaudable. Peace and political stability in the region require such normalization, and no reasonable person can oppose this process. Normalization, however, should be predicated on the ending of all hostile elements in the relations between the two countries.

    Other than closing the border in 1993, Turkey has not nurtured any adversarial notions towards Armenia. Countless Turkish citizens of Armenian origin, with their churches, hospitals, charities, etc. live peacefully in Turkey, enjoying the full rights of any Turkish citizen, including the right to vote, while at the same time the presence of some 70,000 illegal Armenian workers in Turkey is tolerated.

    No Armenian flags are publically burned or trampled upon on national holidays in Turkey, and children are not indoctrinated with anti-Armenian sentiments – in families, schools or mosques – from day one of reaching their consciousness.

    The despicable murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink – by unknown forces still under investigation – in January 2007 in Istanbul was widely condemned in Turkey, many Turks taking to the streets chanting “We are all Armenians,” or “We are all Hrant Dink.”

    Compare these realities with those in Armenia, and the Armenian diaspora, and what a stark, depressing contrast emerges! One would be hard put, for example, to find a single functioning mosque in Armenia.

    And no president of a Turkish-American organization was charged with and convicted of terror activities, like the ex-ANCA president Murat Topalian, who received, in 2001, a 3-year prison sentence in Ohio court for his involvement in a bomb attack against the Turkish House in New York in 1981.

    Notwithstanding some gross exaggerations, e.g., 1.5 million purported deaths, Armenians have a genuine sorrowful history to tell going back to World War I, and they want Turkey to account for the sad history. But Turks also have a painful, traumatic history, with 2.5 million Moslems (Turks and Kurds) contemporaneously perished in Anatolia, some half a million at the hands of renegade Armenian bands that joined the invading Russian and French forces, hitting the Ottoman forces from behind.

    Wartime tragedies are like the two sides of a coin, and if Armenia insists on accounting of history, it must also show empathy for the other side and face the excesses of its own history.

    That is why, it is essential that the historical commission that is envisioned in the protocols have access to all archival documents, Armenian and Turkish included, and the commission’s purview should be making a comprehensive review of the World War I events in their entirety.

    Turkey is prepared to face its history. Is Armenia prepared to face its own?

    Christian sympathies for the Armenian claims should not ignore or overlook tragedies visited on the Moslems.

    Wrap-up

    Wrapping up, reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia in principle is commendable, and in fact, long overdue. But such a process must first remove hostile attitudes that exist between the two countries. Because the animus, or an attitude of hostility, has been very largely on the Armenian side, Armenia must first change its attitude toward Turkey, e.g., by revising its Constitution.

    An expression of sorrow on the ASALA terror would be also helpful.

    The two Turkish-Armenian protocols, however, give no assurance or confidence that Armenia will take these steps. Based on ambiguous, noncommittal language in the protocols, one can only hope for a positive change on the Armenian side.

    But hope is not sufficient. There should be greater certitude in the protocols as to how Armenia will alter its conduct.

    The only certain clause in the protocols is the one that calls for the opening of the Turkey-Armenia border within 2 months after the protocols take force. There is little doubt that the land-locked Armenia, with most of its population living in poverty, will reap major economic gains from the free-trade opportunities afforded by a re-opened border.

    Once the border is opened, it will be virtually impossible to reverse the process regardless of how Armenia behaves. Closure of the border would draw harsh criticism from the U.S. and the EU.

    The Turkish-Armenian protocols, devoid of any pre-conditions, are being pushed by Turkey’s AKP government at the strong urging of the U.S., in particular President Obama in person. The EU is also pressuring Turkey. By signing these protocols, the government hopes to earn “brownie points” from the U.S. and the EU in an effort to further advance its Islamic political agenda.

    This is regrettable. While the issue is one of political convenience for the AKP government, it is essentially a matter of national dignity for Turkey.

    A fundamental question that the government must explain is, other than “brownie points,” what it will actually gain from the signing of the two protocols. If the purpose is to deflect the Obama administration from recognizing Armenian “genocide” – as President Obama said he would during the election campaign – it is a black mark for the Turkish foreign policy. It would be caving in to what is effectively a blackmail.

    When he visited Turkey in April, Obama inveighed that he had not changed his “thinking” on genocide allegations. The implication – a veiled threat – was not lost on Turks.

    Another key question is, if the protocols are ratified by the Turkish Parliament and they become binding, how the government will handle the Azeris’ certain displeasure. Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan has repeatedly assured the Azeris that he will not disappoint them. Yet, the protocols give little hope of a diplomatic breakthrough in the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict.

    Perhaps the government is hoping secretly that the Parliament will decline to ratify the protocols, letting the PM effectively “off the hook.” That eventuality, of course, will trigger another headache. Parliamentary ratification is a Constitutional requirement in Turkey. The Parliament, however, cannot make any alterations to the protocols. It can only ratify or reject them.

    The indications are that the Turkish government has forced itself into a predicament, possibly even a trap, of its own making.

    In this context, it is particularly disconcerting that, according to Nalbandian, the text of the Turkish-Armenian protocols was prepared entirely by the Armenian side, with Turkey suggesting only minor revisions. Why such passivity on the part of Turkish foreign ministry?

    There is a perception that the Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu’s vision of “strategic depth” and “zero problems with neighbors” is turning the country into a weakling of a country lacking resolve and respectability. 

    It is also regrettable that ATAA, TCA and FTAA have lent support to the normalization process in its present form. Apparently they (at least ATAA and TCA) have chosen to toe the line with the official Turkish government policy. Living on a day-to-day basis with the realities of the Armenian propaganda perpetrated across America, these organizations should have known better. At the very least, they should have stayed neutral on the issue.

    [email protected]

  • ARMENIA WILL SIGN THE PROTOCOLS,

    ARMENIA WILL SIGN THE PROTOCOLS,

    SAYS TURKISH POLITICIAN BACK FROM YEREVAN
    Thursday, 08 October 2009
    The leader of the Liberal Democratic Party, who was in Yerevan recently, said he believes Armenia will sign the protocol and pass it through its parliament, despite objection from the opposition.
    Involved in civil dialogue with the Armenians since 2008, Cem Toker said the image of Turks and Turkey is changing over the course of the reconciliation process that started with last year’s visit by Turkish President Abdullah Gul to Yerevan to watch a football match. Toker, who has been to Armenia at least three times during the past 18 months, has met President Abdullah Gul to brief him about his impressions of Armernia. Gul made a bold decision to go to Yerevan last year, said Toker, who recalled that contradictory statements later came from Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan during his visit to Azerbaijan.
    “I wanted to support Gul,” he said of his visit to the Office of the Presidency, which lasted half an hour more than planned.The Armenian approach to Turkey has started to change, especially after Gul’s visit to Yerevan, Toker told the Hurriyet Daily News and Economic Review. “There is tremendous potential to forge friendship between the two countries,” said Toker. “Everyone has a tragic story about the 1915 events. But every tragic story also comes with a good story. They would tell stories of how family members were sent into exile and stories of how neighbors had saved lives by providing shelter and food.”
    Toker said he has never used rhetoric that would imply recognition of the Armenian claims that the World War I mass killings at the hands of the Ottomans amount to genocide. “People are innocent until proven guilty beyond a doubt. What has been accounted by grandfathers or great-grandmothers does not prove there has been genocide,” said Toker. “I have told the Armenians that even God cannot change the past. But we have to leave the past behind and look to the future,” he said.
    There is, however, a strong presence of nationalism as well, according to Toker. “I have seen in shops maps showing eastern Turkey as part of Armenia hanging on the walls. There are still people who believe that the eastern part of Turkey belongs to Armenia and that one day it will be taken back,” he said.
    Toker said there is tremendous reaction to the fact that a commission will be established to investigate past events as part of the agreements between the two governments. He expressed optimism however, saying that the documents will be endorsed by the Armenian parliament.
  • Turkey Sidesteps Obstacle to Armenia Pact

    Turkey Sidesteps Obstacle to Armenia Pact

    By MARC CHAMPION in Istanbul and NICHOLAS BIRCH in Kars, Turkey

    Turkey has dropped a key condition to signing an agreement Saturday that would reopen its border with Armenia and establish diplomatic relations between the two nations, which have been divided for generations by a dispute over genocide.

    “The agreement will be signed on Oct. 10,” Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told The Wall Street Journal — provided, he said, that Armenia doesn’t ask for changes to the text.

    Agence France-Presse/Getty ImagesArmenians in Lebanon on Monday protested efforts to establish diplomatic ties between Armenia and Turkey.

    Supporters of the pact — which include the U.S. and the European Union — say they hope the change could trigger a virtuous cycle, opening up and stabilizing a region that is increasingly important for oil and gas transit and last year saw a war between Russia and Georgia.

    But in Kars, the Turkish city closest to the Armenian border, skeptics point to a concrete monument to unity between the two peoples to show why an embrace between neighbors is far from certain.

    The statue of two 100-foot tall human figures, standing face to face on a hill above the city, is incomplete: A giant hand that would join the figures was never attached.

    It lies abandoned on the gravel below.

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    The monument, built last year, is now under threat of destruction.

    “Small-minded people blocked the monument and they will block the peace process too,” says Naif Alibeyoglu, who had the statue built when he was mayor of Kars. His 10 years in office ended in March. “You wait and see, [the deal] will end up like my statue: a statue without hands.”

    Supporters of the agreement, however, have sidestepped a significant hurdle: Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan said in an interview Sunday that the signing wasn’t dependent on progress at talks this week between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan over their territorial conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh.

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    It was because of Armenia’s effective occupation of the ethnic Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan that Turkey closed the border in 1993.

    An earlier attempt to sign the protocol in April stalled when Mr. Erdogan said it could go forward only after the Karabakh conflict was resolved.

    The parliaments of Armenia and Turkey need to ratify the protocol for it to take force, something Mr. Erdogan said he couldn’t guarantee, as parliamentarians in Ankara would have a free vote in a secret ballot.

    Mr. Erdogan also said the two processes — a resolution of the Karabakh conflict and rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia — remain linked, and that a positive outcome at this week’s talks, to be held in Moldova, would help overall.

    Turkish officials have continued to indicate that the border could take longer to open than the three months set out in the three-page protocol.

    The Turkish leader said the only obstacle to signing the deal Saturday would come if Armenia seeks to alter the text.

    “This is perhaps the most important point — that Armenia should not allow its policies to be taken hostage by the Armenian diaspora,” Mr. Erdogan said. Much of Armenia’s large diaspora opposes the protocol.

    Nicholas Birch for The Wall Street JournalThe hand was intended for a monument in Turkey to amity between the neighbors, but never attached.

    A spokesman for Armenian President Serge Sarkisian declined to comment on whether Armenia would seek changes to the protocol.

    He said the government would soon make a statement on “steps” concerning the protocol.

    Mr. Sarkisian has spent the week on a multination tour to explain his position to diaspora groups, some of which have protested the pact.

    Opponents say it will be used by Turkey to reduce international pressure on it to recognize as genocide the 1915 slaughter of up to 1.5 million ethnic Armenians in what was then the Ottoman Empire.

    The protocol would recognize the current frontier between Turkey and Armenia, and would set up a joint commission to review issues of history, likely to include the 1915 massacres. Turkey says they were collateral deaths during what amounted to civil war during World War I.

    Mr. Alibeyoglu, the former Kars mayor, worked hard to improve relations between his city — a former Armenian capital that changed hands and populations several times over centuries — and its natural hinterland, the Caucasus.

    He invited Armenian, Azeri and Georgian artists to festivals, signed sister-city agreements with cities across the region and, in 2004, gathered 50,000 signatures for a petition demanding the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border.

    Kars would stand to benefit from the ability to trade across a border 25 miles away by train and truck.

    But some 20% of the city’s population are ethnic Azerbaijanis, who consider opening the border while Armenia remains in control of a fifth of Azerbaijan’s territory a betrayal.

    Sculptor Mehmet Aksoy says he abandoned his plan to run water down the statues to pool as tears, because nationalists complained these would be tears of Armenian rejoicing at reclaiming territory.

    Indeed, one complaint of nationalist opponents of the protocol in Armenia is that the treaty’s recognition of current borders would prevent any future claim to the swathe of Eastern Turkey that Armenia won in a 1920 treaty, only to lose it again in the 1921 Treaty of Kars between Russia and Turkey.

    “Why is one figure standing with its head bowed, as if ashamed?” asks Oktay Aktas, an ethnic Azeri and local head of the Nationalist Action Party, or MHP, who wants the statue torn down. “Turkey has nothing to be ashamed of.”

    In fact, the two figures stand ramrod straight.

    On the other side of the border, Armenian nationalists have taken to the streets to protest the pact with Turkey.

    Turkey and Armenia are “like two neighbors who do not know each other,” says Mr. Alibeyoglu, who in 2004 organized a petition to open the border. “Is he a terrorist? A mafioso? We needed to break the ice.”

    Nationalists applied to Turkey’s Commission for Monuments to get construction of the monument stopped, on the basis that a viewing platform was built without permission.

    In November, the commission ordered that it be demolished.

    The monument’s fate awaits a decision from the central government in Ankara.

    Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A10