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BY ARA
KHACHATOURIAN
The deafening silence from
Yerevan after the ill-timed announcement of a “roadmap” deal
last week continues to fuel speculation on whether there are
preconditions attached to the agreement and what role did the
deal play in President Obama's decision to defy his campaign
pledge.
“Turkey seems to have been motivated to produce a
headline-grabbling initiative by the prospect of the US
president, Barack Obama, pushing the US closer to formal
recognition of the 1915 events as genocide. Mr. Obama's personal
position on the issue is clear: he accepts the Armenian version.
However, he has declared himself willing to hold fire if this
will help the cause of normalizing Armenian-Turkish ties,” said
a piece entitled “Cooling Off” in the Economic Intelligence Unit
Briefing.
In a report published in the Hurriyet Daily Wednesday, unnamed
sources, once again, are asserting that there was “an implicit
threat” by Obama to use the word “genocide” in his April 24
statement. This “threat” was “pivotal to strong-arming Turkey
and Armenia out of their deadlock,” according to Hurriyet.
The newspaper reports that the so-called threat was first used
by Obama on April 7 at a meeting with Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan and later by US negotiators, adding that
Obama told urged the announcement of a deal before April 24
“The deal was concluded on April 22 after lengthy negotiations
in both Yerevan and Ankara, under the mediation of U.S.
officials. Matt Bryza, U.S. assistant secretary of state,
conducted 14 hours of marathon talks with the Armenians in
Yerevan while talks in Ankara were conducted between the U.S.
Ambassador to Turkey James Jeffrey and Foreign Ministry
Undersecretary Ertugrul Apakan,” writes Hurriyet.
“In those talks the Turkish side insisted on a reference to
Nagorno-Karabakh. Ankara specifically sought a pledge to
withdraw from at least five of seven regions surrounding
Nagorno-Karabakh that Armenia had occupied in addition to the
enclave, to use as a bargain chip. Armenians refused to bow to
U.S. pressure, however, the Turkish side was asked to accept the
deal without reference to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. Turkey
only swallowed the package after it was made clear that in the
absence of a brokered deal Obama would use the word 'genocide,'"
adds Hurriyet.
Meanwhile, the Economist report asserts that “it is understood
that the agreement commits the sides to establishing diplomatic
relations, opening the interstate border gradually and
establishing a joint historical commission to consider the death
of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during 1915.”
If Obama decided to bargain with his pledge to garner a deal,
which, at the end of the day, will benefit only US interests,
then his campaign promise that mobilized an entire community was
nothing more than a farce and he should be held accountable,
especially after the generally rave reviews he received for this
first 100 days.
Another problematic element is that Turkish and Western press
reports indicate and assert that there are preconditions
attached to this so-called “roadmap.” We have heard not so
convincing assurances from Armenia's leadership that they would
not agree to preconditions, but unless the Hurriyet, the
Economist and the New York Times are all making the same
assumptions and not being “fed” this information then the
Armenian government has a duty to share that information with
the public.
The Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson continually assures
the public that their decision-making is not based on press
reports. However, the sad experience of the road to the
“roadmap” has shown that the foreign press reports have thus far
been on the mark. It falls on the foreign ministry and the
Armenian leadership to prove otherwise, before it's too late.
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