Source: RFE/RL
There are increasing hints that Turkey and
Armenia could soon announce a deal reopening their border -- which has been
closed since 1993 -- and restoring diplomatic relations.
Regional analyst Richard Giragosian, director of the Yerevan-based Armenian
Center for National and International Studies, discusses the possibilities of
such a deal with RFE/RL correspondent Charles Recknagel.
RFE/RL: You are one of an increasing number of regional analysts who see
a forthcoming accord between Ankara and Yerevan. Why is that?
Richard Giragosian: We see broader developments that have moved
both parties, Armenia and Turkey, much closer to forging a historic agreement.
These broader trends include not only Russian support for such an initiative but
we also see [that] the upcoming visit of U.S. President [Barack] Obama to Turkey
[on April 6-7], the recent visit of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to
Turkey, and several months of secret negotiations and diplomatic negotiations
between the Armenians and Turks in Switzerland have paved the way for a historic
breakthrough agreement.
RFE/RL: There are some additional variables to consider that might
increase pressure to reach agreement, including Obama's campaign promise to
support a Congressional resolution that would recognize as genocide the killings
of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in the period of World War I, and the
upcoming Armenian Remembrance Day on April 24, which the White House
traditionally marks with a statement. How soon do you think a Turkish-Armenian
accord might be announced?
Giragosian: We see leaks of such a deal in the Turkish media and it
seems both sides are now preparing their respective societies to brace for an
announcement that possibly could come as early as April 16, when the Turkish
foreign minister arrives in Armenia in the form of a meeting of the Black Sea
Economic Cooperation organization.
However, I do not expect a breakthrough agreement to be unveiled during the
April 16 meeting. It seems more likely that Turkey will decide to wait until
after April 24 in order to exert maximum leverage over the Obama administration
to refrain from recognizing the "Armenian Genocide" in his April 24 statement.
Thawing Relations
RFE/RL: If there is an announcement of an accord, what points might it include?
Giragosian: Several elements will be announced, starting with an
agreement to open the long-closed border between Armenia and Turkey, followed by
an agreement to move toward diplomatic relations, with the Turkish ambassador in
Georgia most likely assuming the portfolio of representing Turkey in Armenia.
Third, we see an agreement as well to form a large, all-encompassing
governmental commission to resolve several issues, most importantly including
the "Armenian Genocide" issue. And fourthly, we do see signs of a possible
Turkish unveiling of a new document or road map on Nagorno-Karabakh committing
all sides to work within the OSCE Minsk Group mediation process and committing
all sides to working hard to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, which is the
last frozen conflict in the region.
RFE/RL: How much opposition is there in Turkey and Armenia to an accord?
Giragosian: Once the agreement is announced publicly, this will invite
confrontation with powerful vested interests. On the Turkish side, the vested
interests which will oppose this will perhaps be a nationalist reaction against
normalization. From the Armenian side, the Armenian government will have to deal
with the Armenian diaspora, which has taken the lead role in terms of Armenian
nationalism on this issue and the lead role in genocide-recognition efforts.
All Sides In Favor
RFE/RL: You are in Yerevan. What is motivating the Armenian government to pursue
an accord at this time?
Giragosian: The timing is both ironic and inductive to normalization
and an agreement, mainly because it is this Armenian government that is much
less popular and much less legitimate than any previous Armenian government,
making its desire for a foreign-policy success even more profound.
The Armenian government, embattled by a political internal stalemate, needs a
foreign-policy success to distract international attention and divert it away
from domestic shortcomings and also to endow it with a degree of legitimacy,
which it lacks.
RFE/RL: And what about the Turkish side?
Giragosian: We also see, for the first time, that it is in Turkey's
national security interest to open the border, to stabilize the restive Kurdish
regions of eastern Turkey, which, after the war in Iraq, is even a larger
concern for Turkey.
RFE/RL: Finally, what is Russia's position on a Turkish-Armenian accord?
In the past, Moscow -- which has strong ties with Yerevan -- has been seen as
against it. Has that changed?
Giragosian: The key difference here is that after the war in August [in
South Ossetia between Russia and Georgia], the Russians are now supporting the
process, unlike in the past, and in fact they are also looking to use open
borders between Armenia and Turkey to their own economic benefit by virtue of
their control over energy and telecommunications in Armenia, but also to further
isolate and marginalize Georgia, which is in their strategic interest.
But despite the negative agenda I do think that, regardless of the motivations,
that the end result is a net benefit for all sides.
... Payvand News - 04/03/09 ... --
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