Tag: Turkey-Armenia

  • Turkey’s Caucasus Allies Ponder Armenia Deal

    Turkey’s Caucasus Allies Ponder Armenia Deal

    Azeris say Turkey’s border accord with Armenia is a betrayal of their alliance.

    By Kenan Guluzade in Baku (CRS No. 514, 15-Oct-09)

    The Turkey-Armenia peace deal has angered Azeris, who accuse Ankara of betraying them by not tying its signature to a resolution of the Karabakh conflict.

    Turkey and Azerbaijan, whose people are close ethnic kin, have been allies since the end of the Soviet period, and Turkey broke off ties with Armenia in 1993 to support Azerbaijan over the Karabakh conflict.

    Now, 15 years after the war ended with a ceasefire, Armenians still rule Nagorny Karabakh as a self-proclaimed state – in defiance of the international community, which considers it part of Azerbaijan – and Armenian forces hold around a seventh of Azerbaijan’s internationally recognised territory.

    “Sometimes the opinion is expressed that the normalisation of Turkish-Armenian relations, the opening of the border, could in future help the regulation of the Nagorny Karabakh conflict. I do not support these opinions,” said President Ilham Aliev on the eve of the signing ceremony.

    “I think that if Turkish-Armenian relations normalise before the Karabakh problem is resolved, then the position of Armenia in the talks process will toughen. I am absolutely convinced that these two processes – the regulation of the Nagorny Karabakh conflict and the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border – should move in parallel. Maybe there is no official connection between these processes, but there is an unofficial one.”

    The day after the October 10 signing ceremony, Azerbaijan’s newspaper headlines made clear the country’s reaction to the move. “Everyone agrees, except Azerbaijan,” said the Mirror. “The Armenian-Turkish protocols are signed. Will Turkey keep its promise to Azerbaijan?” asked the Echo.

    On October 13, activists from the Organisation for the Liberation of Karabakh protested outside the Turkish embassy. The next day, they held another protests, with about 40 people taking part – a large number for an unsanctioned demonstration in Baku. The police broke up both protests, and detained several participants, but not before the protesters had shouted their slogans.

    The protesters shouted “Shame on the Turkish government”, “No ratification” and “Turkey, don’t betray Azerbaijan” and burned portraits of the Turkish president, prime minister and foreign minister.

    Analysts doubted the protest would change much, however, and said direct pressure should be put on the Turkish government.

    “To hold this protest in Azerbaijan is ineffective. Only large protests in Turkey can affect the process. And we must act in solidarity with the Turkish opponents of the protocols’ ratification,” said Boyukaga Agayev, an expert on the South Caucasus.

    Large protests in Turkey have not materialised, however, although opposition parties have pledged to disrupt the ratification process, and pro-Azerbaijan activists have distributed anti-Armenian stickers and Azerbaijani flags.

    Not everyone in Azerbaijan thinks they should. Ilgar Mammadov, co-founder of the opposition Republican Alternative Civic Union movement, said he hoped Turkey and Armenia would sign their peace deal, thus giving Turkey a chance to counteract Russian influence in the South Caucasus. Armenia is currently a close Russian ally, and Moscow has military bases there.

    “If the border is opened, over time Turkey and its western partners will be able to build a solid and legitimate economic and political presence in Armenia. That presence would allow them to drag Armenia out of the hands of the decision-makers in the Kremlin when Baku and Yerevan are close to a deal next time,” he said.

    But his opinion is a rare one. Most opposition politicians in Azerbaijan, no matter how fierce their criticism of the government on other questions, line up behind Aliev when it comes to Karabakh.

    “I think it is necessary to hold talks with the Turkish government and appeal to the Turkish people. In Turkey, the government cannot take a step on this without the support of the nation. The will of the Turkish nation could force the government to refrain from taking this step,” said Ali Kerimli, chairman of the opposition Party of the National Front of Azerbaijan.

    Turkey’s parliament is due to vote on ratifying the deal on October 21, according to officials in Ankara, and Azeri politicians still hope the deal might be avoided.

    “We hope that during the discussion of the protocols in the Turkish parliament, the deputies will unanimously tell Armenia and the world that ratification of these documents is possible only after the liberation of the occupied territories of Azerbaijan,” said Ganira Pashayeva, who also singled out France, Russia and America, which attended the signing ceremony , as possible friends of Azerbaijan.

    “First of all, they must put pressure on Yerevan, so Armenia frees the Azerbaijani lands. Peace and cooperation in the region are possible only after Armenia leaves the occupied territories.”

    Kenan Guluzade is editor of www.analitika.az.

  • Armenia: Turkey Accord Rings Alarm Bells

    Armenia: Turkey Accord Rings Alarm Bells

    Armenians do not share world’s joy over protocols, fear Ankara has a hidden agenda.

    By Naira Melkumian and Gayane Mkrtchian in Yerevan, and Karine Ohanian in Stepanakert (CRS No. 514, 16-Oct-09)

    Armenia’s diplomatic and border agreement with Turkey, signed in Zurich on October 10, comes against a background of strong misgivings at home and even stronger concerns among the powerful Armenian diaspora.

    The two protocols that were signed set a timetable for restoring diplomatic ties and reopening their joint border and are subject to approval in the two parliaments.

    The deal was mediated by Switzerland and signed in the presence of senior officials from several countries including United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

    “We believe strongly that this is in the best interests of both Armenia and Turkey. We recognise how hard it is, and what courage it takes to move forward in the face of very strong opposition in both countries,” Clinton told journalists later.

    That was an understatement. Many Armenians say the government betrayed the memories of up to 1.5 million Armenians killed in Turkey in 1915 by making peace with the successor of the Ottoman Empire.

    Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan spent the first week of October travelling around the main centres of Armenia’s ten million-strong diaspora, seeking to persuade them of the importance of the deal.

    “I am convinced that your support and your desires are directed at making our visits interesting and successful, and will give me the possibility of expressing my sincere opinion to our brothers and sisters abroad, of finding out their opinion, and of course, take into account both their opinion and the fact that the majority of Armenians live outside Armenia,” Sargsyan told the country on the eve of his trip.

    But his appeal was not successful. In Paris, the police clashed with Armenian demonstrators when they tried to clear a space so that Sargsyan could lay flowers at the memorial to the 1915 victims. There were also large protests in New York, Los Angeles and Lebanon, where protesters chanted “no to the protocols” and “president, don’t betray us”.

    The opinion of Hakob Petrosian, an Armenian living in Cyprus, was typical. He said Sargsyan might consider himself president of all Armenians, but those in the diaspora felt betrayed.

    “Sooner or later, Turkey would open its border so as to become a member of the European Union. He should have waited,” Petrosian said.
    The opinion is common inside Armenia as well, and analysts said Sargsyan’s decision to force through peace with Armenia’s large, wealthy neighbour could backfire on the president.

    “Many Armenians think these protocols are badly thought through, and contain a number of diplomatic and political time bombs. In such a situation, the opposition parties with support from a significant part of the population could become a major force. This could provoke a new political crisis in Armenia,” said Shushan Khatlamajian, a respected Armenian analyst.

    The Armenian government said the protocols did not imply that it was abandoning its demand that Turkey recognise the deaths of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey during World War One as genocide. Turkey denies that genocide is a correct description.

    “With these protocols, Armenia is not accepting any obligations, is not making any unilateral promises. Armenia is signing these protocols with the aim of creating conditions for the establishment of normal conditions between the two countries,” said Sargsyan in a television address on the eve of the ceremony.

    But Armenians, as always when the genocide question is discussed, were distrustful.

    “The genocide, which killed millions of Armenians, the mass resettlement of Armenians across the whole world as a result, and the mistrust between the two peoples created an emotional, rather than a rational assessment of these events,” said Gagik Baghdasarian, a Yerevan schoolteacher.

    Armenia’s business elite, however, had no hesitation in welcoming the move, which will give Armenian producers and importers a whole new market to trade with. Turkish goods have entered Armenia for years, but only via Georgia, meaning they have been more expensive than they need be.

    The Armenian parliament’s economics committee said that, by even a pessimistic estimate, the national economy would expand by three per cent because of the move, while exports would increase by almost a third.

    “If the border is opened, the economy of Armenia will get new possibilities, we will receive access to new markets, the possibilities of communication will improve and we will be able to integrate further into the world economy,” said Finance Minister Tigran Davtian.

    But the doubters are not convinced by the argument, saying that economic ties could undermine Armenian independence, since the country’s businessmen are in no position to compete with their counterparts in much larger Turkey.

    The opposition Dashnaktsutiun party, which has battled for recognition of the 1915 deaths as genocide for nearly a century, said Armenia lacked methods to protect its own producers, who could be swallowed up by competition from over the border.

    Dashnaktsutiun is particularly strong in the diaspora, which is an important source of financial help for Armenia and also lobbies for its interests abroad, and some opposition politicians fear the protocols could undermine global Armenian unity.

    “The Dashnaktsutiun party decisively intends to block the ratification process of the Armenian-Turkish protocols. To achieve this, it is prepared to use all possible political and constitutional methods,” said Hay Dat, head of the party’s political office.

    Kiro Manoian, head of the party’s office for political issues, pointed to a statement made by Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that Turkey would not open the border until there was a resolution to the conflict over Nagorny Karabakh. Karabakh, which is ruled by Armenians but internationally considered part of Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan, has long been a block to relations between Ankara and Yerevan.

    “Turkey does not intend to open the border with Armenia, and is using all its force to avoid recognition of the genocide,” Manoian said.
    A number of Armenian analysts agree with him, and point to press reports that a three-hour delay in the Zurich signing ceremony was caused by Armenia’s insistence that the Turkish foreign minister remove a veiled reference to Karabakh in a speech he was due to make.

    “The delay in the signing of the protocols revealed Turkey’s strategy, to play with Armenia and to create new conditions before every issue can be resolved. This causes me concern, although the Armenian side is holding to its positions,” said Ruben Safrastian, director of the Oriental Institute at the Armenian National Academy of Sciences.

    Movses Hakobian, defence minister in the government that rules Nagorny Karabakh, said he was not concerned.

    “I have an Armenian education and reading these protocols I have no fears for the Nagorny Karabakh republic. As defence minister, I do not want to comment on the actions of the president of Armenia. I can just say that the Nagorny Karabakh problem cannot be resolved without Karabakh’s participation,” he told A1+ television.

    However, ordinary residents of the unrecognised state were not so confident.

    “Today it is clear that the Turkish authorities are linking the protocols’ ratification in parliament with the Karabakh question, and are aiming to gain territorial and political concessions from the Armenians… There is no doubt that the Turks are trying to focus their interest on territorial concessions in Karabakh. This is a real threat for us,” said Masis Mayilian, chairman of Nagorny Karabakh’s public council for foreign politics and security.

    Naira Melkumian is freelance journalist in Yerevan. Karine Ohanian and Gayane Mkrtchian are members of IWPR’s Cross Caucasus Journalism Network. 

    Armenians do not share world’s joy over protocols, fear Ankara has a hidden agenda.

    By Naira Melkumian and Gayane Mkrtchian in Yerevan, and Karine Ohanian in Stepanakert (CRS No. 514, 16-Oct-09)

    Armenia’s diplomatic and border agreement with Turkey, signed in Zurich on October 10, comes against a background of strong misgivings at home and even stronger concerns among the powerful Armenian diaspora.

    The two protocols that were signed set a timetable for restoring diplomatic ties and reopening their joint border and are subject to approval in the two parliaments.

    The deal was mediated by Switzerland and signed in the presence of senior officials from several countries including United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

    “We believe strongly that this is in the best interests of both Armenia and Turkey. We recognise how hard it is, and what courage it takes to move forward in the face of very strong opposition in both countries,” Clinton told journalists later.

    That was an understatement. Many Armenians say the government betrayed the memories of up to 1.5 million Armenians killed in Turkey in 1915 by making peace with the successor of the Ottoman Empire.

    Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan spent the first week of October travelling around the main centres of Armenia’s ten million-strong diaspora, seeking to persuade them of the importance of the deal.

    “I am convinced that your support and your desires are directed at making our visits interesting and successful, and will give me the possibility of expressing my sincere opinion to our brothers and sisters abroad, of finding out their opinion, and of course, take into account both their opinion and the fact that the majority of Armenians live outside Armenia,” Sargsyan told the country on the eve of his trip.

    But his appeal was not successful. In Paris, the police clashed with Armenian demonstrators when they tried to clear a space so that Sargsyan could lay flowers at the memorial to the 1915 victims. There were also large protests in New York, Los Angeles and Lebanon, where protesters chanted “no to the protocols” and “president, don’t betray us”.

    The opinion of Hakob Petrosian, an Armenian living in Cyprus, was typical. He said Sargsyan might consider himself president of all Armenians, but those in the diaspora felt betrayed.

    “Sooner or later, Turkey would open its border so as to become a member of the European Union. He should have waited,” Petrosian said.
    The opinion is common inside Armenia as well, and analysts said Sargsyan’s decision to force through peace with Armenia’s large, wealthy neighbour could backfire on the president.

    “Many Armenians think these protocols are badly thought through, and contain a number of diplomatic and political time bombs. In such a situation, the opposition parties with support from a significant part of the population could become a major force. This could provoke a new political crisis in Armenia,” said Shushan Khatlamajian, a respected Armenian analyst.

    The Armenian government said the protocols did not imply that it was abandoning its demand that Turkey recognise the deaths of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey during World War One as genocide. Turkey denies that genocide is a correct description.

    “With these protocols, Armenia is not accepting any obligations, is not making any unilateral promises. Armenia is signing these protocols with the aim of creating conditions for the establishment of normal conditions between the two countries,” said Sargsyan in a television address on the eve of the ceremony.

    But Armenians, as always when the genocide question is discussed, were distrustful.

    “The genocide, which killed millions of Armenians, the mass resettlement of Armenians across the whole world as a result, and the mistrust between the two peoples created an emotional, rather than a rational assessment of these events,” said Gagik Baghdasarian, a Yerevan schoolteacher.

    Armenia’s business elite, however, had no hesitation in welcoming the move, which will give Armenian producers and importers a whole new market to trade with. Turkish goods have entered Armenia for years, but only via Georgia, meaning they have been more expensive than they need be.

    The Armenian parliament’s economics committee said that, by even a pessimistic estimate, the national economy would expand by three per cent because of the move, while exports would increase by almost a third.

    “If the border is opened, the economy of Armenia will get new possibilities, we will receive access to new markets, the possibilities of communication will improve and we will be able to integrate further into the world economy,” said Finance Minister Tigran Davtian.

    But the doubters are not convinced by the argument, saying that economic ties could undermine Armenian independence, since the country’s businessmen are in no position to compete with their counterparts in much larger Turkey.

    The opposition Dashnaktsutiun party, which has battled for recognition of the 1915 deaths as genocide for nearly a century, said Armenia lacked methods to protect its own producers, who could be swallowed up by competition from over the border.

    Dashnaktsutiun is particularly strong in the diaspora, which is an important source of financial help for Armenia and also lobbies for its interests abroad, and some opposition politicians fear the protocols could undermine global Armenian unity.

    “The Dashnaktsutiun party decisively intends to block the ratification process of the Armenian-Turkish protocols. To achieve this, it is prepared to use all possible political and constitutional methods,” said Hay Dat, head of the party’s political office.

    Kiro Manoian, head of the party’s office for political issues, pointed to a statement made by Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that Turkey would not open the border until there was a resolution to the conflict over Nagorny Karabakh. Karabakh, which is ruled by Armenians but internationally considered part of Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan, has long been a block to relations between Ankara and Yerevan.

    “Turkey does not intend to open the border with Armenia, and is using all its force to avoid recognition of the genocide,” Manoian said.
    A number of Armenian analysts agree with him, and point to press reports that a three-hour delay in the Zurich signing ceremony was caused by Armenia’s insistence that the Turkish foreign minister remove a veiled reference to Karabakh in a speech he was due to make.

    “The delay in the signing of the protocols revealed Turkey’s strategy, to play with Armenia and to create new conditions before every issue can be resolved. This causes me concern, although the Armenian side is holding to its positions,” said Ruben Safrastian, director of the Oriental Institute at the Armenian National Academy of Sciences.

    Movses Hakobian, defence minister in the government that rules Nagorny Karabakh, said he was not concerned.

    “I have an Armenian education and reading these protocols I have no fears for the Nagorny Karabakh republic. As defence minister, I do not want to comment on the actions of the president of Armenia. I can just say that the Nagorny Karabakh problem cannot be resolved without Karabakh’s participation,” he told A1+ television.

    However, ordinary residents of the unrecognised state were not so confident.

    “Today it is clear that the Turkish authorities are linking the protocols’ ratification in parliament with the Karabakh question, and are aiming to gain territorial and political concessions from the Armenians… There is no doubt that the Turks are trying to focus their interest on territorial concessions in Karabakh. This is a real threat for us,” said Masis Mayilian, chairman of Nagorny Karabakh’s public council for foreign politics and security.

    Naira Melkumian is freelance journalist in Yerevan. Karine Ohanian and Gayane Mkrtchian are members of IWPR’s Cross Caucasus Journalism Network.

  • One Step at a Time

    One Step at a Time

    by TOL
    12 October 2009

    With Turkey and Armenia now talking to each other, outside powers hold the key to resolution of the Caucasus’ most intractable conflict.

    This week saw an important step toward an easing of the tensions surrounding the breakaway province of Nagorno-Karabakh, with an agreement to restore diplomatic ties and open the border between Armenia and Turkey for the first time since 1993. The presence of the French, Russian, and U.S. foreign ministers at the signing ceremony on 10 October signaled their countries’ commitment to the accord. Assuming that the countries’ parliaments ratify the deal, the border itself will be opened within two months.

    The deal nearly fell apart at the last minute when the Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers could not agree on the statements they would each make at the ceremony. In the end, both agreed to make no speeches.

    Each side had to make a substantial concession to realize this small step. The Armenian side had to swallow the fact that Ankara was not going to apologize for, or even acknowledge the existence of, the mass slaughter or, as the Armenians insist, genocide of more than 1 million Armenians in 1915. Instead, Turkey promised merely to open a dialogue with Armenia over the issue, including the creation of a joint historical commission. For their part, the Turks had to agree to lift their border blockade even though Armenia’s ally-cum-offshoot, the de facto Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh, illegally occupies 17 percent of the territory of Turkey’s ally, Azerbaijan. Armenian skeptics argue that the creation of the commission will mean the indefinite postponement of genocide recognition by Turkey. Turkish critics urged their government to insist that Armenia give up its territorial claims on Turkey as a precondition for opening the border.

    Opposition politicians and nationalists on both sides accuse their governments of selling out their national legacy for short-term economic gain and have vigorously protested the accord, whose confirmation by the parliaments is by no means a sure thing. Opening the Turkish border and allowing some trade with Armenia will be one small step in the direction of a lessening of tension. Opinions differ over who stands to benefit more from an open border – Armenia, because it would help revive its anemic economy, or Turkey, because it would boost Ankara’s influence in the region. Clearly, large-scale trade would take off only if Azerbaijan also opened its border with Armenia. Goods from Turkey that take 10 days to arrive in Azerbaijan via Georgia could cross Armenia in four hours.

     

    Remnants of a war lost: Wrecked Azerbaijani tanks in Nagorno-Karabakh. Creative Commons licensed photo.

     

    HISTORICAL PRECEDENTS

    The dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh is the toughest to solve of all the conflicts that erupted in the post-Soviet space – in Georgia, Moldova, and Tajikistan. It was the only one to involve the occupation of the territory of an internationally recognized sovereign state (Azerbaijan); and the only one to involve direct conflict between two states (until the 2008 war, Russia’s support for Georgian secessionists had been indirect). Also, the Karabakh conflict was unique in coming against the background of a century of hostility between Armenians and Turks, with many on both sides viewing the Azeris as a branch of the Turkish people.

    Sixteen years after the end of fighting in Karabakh, the dispute seems as far from resolution as ever. Two bodies cannot occupy the same space: the Karabakh Armenians are not willing to accept Azerbaijani rule, and Azerbaijan is not willing to give up any of its territory. (And that is not even getting into questions of war crimes, refugees, and so forth.) Time does not heal all wounds. It causes some sores to fester and infect the rest of the international body politic. In Armenia and Azerbaijan new generations have grown up who did not personally experience the casual multiculturalism and close friendships across ethnic lines that were the norm in the Soviet period. Rather, they have been raised on a pedagogic diet of national victimization and imminent threat.

    Why, after 16 years of inertia, are the two sides ready to make even this modest movement forward? The answer is external pressure. Last year’s Georgia war was a wake-up call to the international community. “Frozen” conflicts can thaw in a flash, and “local” conflicts can quickly draw in global powers, guns blazing. You don’t need to be Tom Clancy to imagine a scenario where the August 2008 conflict turned into a shooting war between Russia and the United States. In the case of Armenia, the resumption of war with Azerbaijan could conceivably draw in Turkey and Russia.

    Russia has the biggest leverage over Armenia, and Turkey probably has the closest connections to Azerbaijan – although neither country is in a position to dictate terms to its ally. Turkey is acting as a responsible regional power, even though the carrot of eventual entry to the European Union is looking more remote with each passing year.

    The Armenians’ anger over Turkish reluctance to acknowledge and apologize for the 1915 genocide is one of a series of cases where historical truth is an obstacle to current political and economic relations. 2010 will mark the 100th anniversary of Japan’s occupation of Korea – but Korean hopes that the Japanese emperor will visit Seoul and apologize for the colonization are unlikely to be realized. Greece continues to insist that the Republic of Macedonia’s name constitutes a territorial claim on the Greek province of the same name, and on that basis has blocked Macedonia’s entry to NATO.

    Resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute itself, or even something as ephemeral as a “road map” toward its resolution, is still nowhere in sight. Azerbaijan is unwilling to accept the consequences of its defeat in the 1992-1994 war, and has been using its burgeoning oil revenue to rebuild its armed forces. Many hardliners on both sides seem to believe that it will take another war before the two antagonists are really prepared to make the compromises necessary for a lasting peace (just as the 1973 war seemed to clear the way for peace between Israel and Egypt). Apart from the human costs of war, the chances of escalation and the involvement of other powers make such a scenario unacceptably risky. That is why, for once, Russia and the United States seem to be following the same script. Their continued cooperation in the pursuit of peace is the best chance for avoiding more wars in the Caucasus.

  • REAPING BENEFITS OF TRUCE

    REAPING BENEFITS OF TRUCE

    RBC Daily
    October 13, 2009

    Is what Moscow is after
    NOW THAT THE ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER TREATY IS SIGNED, YEREVAN NEEDS THE KREMLIN’S SUPPORT
    Author: Vyascheslav Leonov
    [Some profound changes are in the offing in the South Caucasus.]

         President Dmitry Medvedev met with his Armenian counterpart
    Serj Sargsjan, yesterday. The Armenian-Turkish border opened all
    over again will open a broad vista of opportunities for Russian
    Railways, but there is always the danger that Turkish capitals
    will expand into Armenia too and start herding Russian businesses
    out.
         The presidents actually met but a few days ago. It happened
    in Kishinev, Moldova, at the CIS summit where they and Azerbaijani
    leader Ilham Aliyev discussed Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian and
    Turkish foreign ministers Edward Nalbandjan and Ahmed Davutoglu
    signed the protocols to establish diplomatic relations and open
    the border in Geneva, the following day. Profound changes are in
    the offing in the South Caucasus, so that Moscow has to adjust its
    relations with Yerevan in accordance with the new geopolitical
    realities. Sargsjan is going Turkey to a football match between
    Armenian and Turkish national teams tomorrow, so that a stopover
    in Moscow for the last minute consultations was probably a good
    idea.
         The expected opening of the Armenian-Turkish border offers a
    whole spectrum of opportunities to Russia. Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov already called Russian Railways prepared to provide
    railroad service between Armenia and Turkey. Russian Railways
    obtained a 30-year concession for Armenian railroads, last year.
    In theory, the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement may even make
    railroad service between Armenia and Turkish ports possible at
    some later date.
         Medvedev and Sargsjan discussed the latest developments from
    the standpoint of new promising projects as well. Dmitry Abzalov,
    an expert with the Center for Political Situation, suggested that
    a transport corridor via Turkey might be established to allow
    Russia to export oil to Armenia. Alexander Skakov of the Institute
    of Strategic Studies, however, warned that Turkish capitals could
    be relied on to rush to the newly opened Armenian market and start
    pushing Russian businesses out.
         Alexander Krylov, an expert with the Institute of Global
    Economy and International Relations, said that Sargsjan needed the
    Kremlin’s political support at this time. The protocols signed in
    Geneva had to be ratified by the national parliaments of Armenia
    and Turkey yet. Armenian nationalists in the meantime claim that
    Sargsjan is through with the struggle for acknowledgment of the
    genocide and prepares to abandon Nagorno-Karabakh. In fact, the
    opposition already promised to ruin ratification. “Should
    ratification necessitate the use of the so called administrative
    resource, the Armenians might respond to it with mass riots, and
    Sargsjan needs the Kremlin on its side,” Krylov said.

  • Turkey Again Links Armenia Moves With Karabakh

    Turkey Again Links Armenia Moves With Karabakh

    E4C90BCF AC7D 4D60 94C1 691A16D63AE9 w393 sU.S. — Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan attends the United Nations Security Council meeting during the UN General Assembly at UN Headquarters in New York, 24Sep2009
    12.10.2009
    Emil Danielyan

    Turkey will not normalize relations with Armenia before a breakthrough in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday, raising more questions about the implementation of landmark Turkish-Armenian agreements signed the previous night.

    “I want to reiterate once again that Turkey cannot adopt a positive attitude unless Armenia withdraws from occupied Azerbaijani territories,” he was reported to tell a news conference held in Ankara after a high-level meeting of Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

    Erdogan made clear that an internationally brokered agreement on Karabakh acceptable to Azerbaijan is critical for the ratification by the Turkish parliament of the two Turkish-Armenian relations envisaging that the establishment of diplomatic relations and opening of the border between the two nations.

    “If the problems between Azerbaijan and Armenia are solved, then it will be easier for the Turkish community to embrace the normalization of the relations between Turkey and Armenia. Also, it will make it easier for the Turkish parliament to adopt the protocols,” he said. The parliament and the Turkish public will therefore be closely following Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks, he added.

    480706EA 12EF 46C4 B273 58A92EC1A30B w203 s
    Switzerland — Armenias Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian (L) and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu sign documents during the signing ceremony of Turkey and Armenia peace deal in Zurich, 10Oct2009
     
    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who signed the protocols with his Armenian counterpart Eduard Nalbandian in Zurich late on Saturday, likewise linked their mandatory ratification with a Karabakh settlement. “We, the government, want the protocols to pass through Parliament but they need to be submitted for approval in an appropriate psychological and political atmosphere,” he told the state-run TRT television on Sunday.

    “Not only Karabakh but also the seven Azerbaijani districts adjacent to Nagorno-Karabakh are under occupation. That should come to an end,” said Davutoglu.

    The remarks came just hours after Azerbaijan criticized Turkey for sealing a deal which it said “clouds the spirit of brotherly relations” between the two Turkic countries. “The normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia before the withdrawal of Armenian troops from occupied Azeri territory is in direct contradiction to the national interests of Azerbaijan,” the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

    Official Yerevan did not immediately react to the latest statements by the Turkish leaders. In a televised addressed to the nation on Saturday, President Serzh Sarkisian implicitly threatened to walk away from the agreements if Ankara fails to complete the ratification process “within a reasonable time frame.”

    Sarkisian has for months been on the defensive at home in the face of persistent allegations by his political opponents that he pledged to make more concessions to Azerbaijan in the fence-mending talks with the Turks. He has been anxious to disprove any connection between the Karabakh issue and his policy of rapprochement with Turkey

    That should explain why Nalbandian strongly objected to a speech which Davutoglu planned to deliver during the signing ceremony in Zurich attended by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other foreign dignitaries. According to the “Hurriyet Daily News” newspaper, Davutoglu would have declared that the normalization of the historically strained Turkish-Armenian relations “will lead to new reconciliations in the South Caucasus.” The paper said the Turkish side, for its part, protested against Nalbandian’s intention to refer to the 1915 massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide in his statement.

    283E7CAF D5BF 4F72 B33B 38C16ACD42C6 w203 s
    U.S. — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton makes remarks following her meeting with her New Zealands counterpart in Washington, DC, 08Oct2009
     
    The dispute delayed the high-profile ceremony by more than three hours. The two sides agreed not to make any statements there in what appears to have been a compromise personally brokered by Clinton. “We had a good night in Zurich,” she said afterwards, according to the Associated Press news agency.

    U.S. President Barack Obama reportedly telephoned Clinton to congratulate her on overcoming the last-minute hitch that threatened to scuttle the deal welcomed by both the West and Russia. “He was very excited, he felt like this was a big step forward and wanted to check in,” the Associated Press quoted an unnamed senior State Department as telling reporters aboard Clinton’s plane as she flew from Zurich to London.

    Both Obama and Clinton stated earlier that the Turkish-Armenian agreements should be implemented “without preconditions and within a reasonable timeframe.”

    http://www.armenialiberty.org/content/article/1849079.html 
  • Sarkisian Confirms Turkey Trip, Again Warns Ankara

    Sarkisian Confirms Turkey Trip, Again Warns Ankara

    BB1EF58F 1E8E 4227 8567 6CFBD83A56C4 w393 sArmenia — President Serzh Sarkisian speaks to journalists.
    12.10.2009

    Armenia’s President Serzh Sarkisian announced on Monday his decision to visit Turkey this week to attend a football match between the two neighbors, while questioning Ankara’s commitment to honor the fence-mending agreements with Yerevan. (UPDATED)

    Sarkisian suggested that Turkish leaders’ weekend statements linking the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations with a settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh were “primarily addressed to the Azerbaijani audience.”

    “Otherwise, it would seem strange to me: if the Turks are not going to ratify the protocols, then why did they sign them [in Zurich on Saturday] in the first place?” he told journalists. “Maybe they thought that we might not display sufficient will and take a step back. Maybe.”

    “In any case, the ball is in the Turkish court today, and we have enough patience to await further developments,” said Sarkisian. “If the Turks ratify the protocols, if they stick to the agreed timetable, we will continue the process. If not, we will not be bound by anything and will do what we have announced.”

    In a televised address to the nation on Saturday, Sarkisian likewise implicitly threatened to walk away from the controversial agreements, which have put him at odds with nationalist groups in Armenia and its influential Diaspora, if Ankara fails to implement them “within a reasonable timeframe.” Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stated on Sunday that the establishment of diplomatic relations and reopening of the border between the two states hinges on a breakthrough in the Karabakh peace process.

    Galust Sahakian, the parliamentary leader of Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK), indicated on Monday that Armenia’s National Assembly will start debating the protocols only after they are approved by the Turkish parliament. “If Turkey makes any reservations, our parliament will not even include [the issue] on its agenda,” said Sahakian.

    Both the HHK and Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party have a solid majority in their respective legislatures.

    Sarkisian also made clear that he has accepted his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul’s invitation to watch with him the return match of Armenia’s and Turkey’s national soccer teams that will be played in the western Turkish city of Bursa on Wednesday. The Armenian leader said earlier that he will visit Turkey it only if Ankara takes “real steps” to normalize bilateral ties.

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    Turkey — Bursa city residents protest as local authorities banned to wave Azeri flags at the Turkey-Armenia football match due on October 14, 11Oct2009

    Sarkisian said on Monday that “sufficient prerequisites” are now in place for the landmark trip. “Turkey’s president, Mr. Gul, had responded to my invitation and come to Armenia [in September 2008,] and I now see no serious basis not to accept his invitation,” he said. “My counterpart has sent a written invitation, and unless something extraordinary happens in the next two days, I will go to Bursa and cheer for my favorite team.”

    The president answered journalists’ questions at Yerevan’s Zvartnots as he prepared to fly to Moscow for what his office described as a brief working visit. Shortly before his departure, Sarkisian sent a letter to U.S. President Barack Obama thanking Washington for its active role in the Turkish-Armenian dialogue.

    “I am convinced that without the decisive help of the United States it would have been impossible to make effective efforts in this direction,” he said after “warmly” congratulating Obama on winning the Nobel Peace Prize.

    Meanwhile, Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Cemil Cicek said later on Monday that the Erdogan government will send the protocols to the Turkish parliament “next week.” “The assembly will decide whether to approve or reject them,” Cicek told reporters after a cabinet meeting. But he underlined that the “parliament will undoubtedly follow developments in Armenia during this process.”

    According to the AFP news agency, Cicek described the pacts as a “sincere and serious show of will” by Turkey. But he reiterated that lasting peace in the region also depends on the resolution of the Karabakh dispute.

     
    https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1849587.html