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THE RUBIK´S CUBE OF TURKEY – ARMENIA RELATIONS
Diba Nigar Goksel
1
European Stability Initiative
Abstract:
“Secret talks” and diplomatic efforts towards “normalizing relations” – which is a term commonly used to refer
to the establishment of diplomatic relations and the opening of the common border – have continued on and off
between Turkey and Armenia since the latter’s independence in the Fall of 1991. These efforts culminated with
the signing of two protocols in October 2009, establishing diplomatic relations and paving the way to start
examining their troubled history. The initiative attracted much public attention and came close to change the
nature of the bilateral relations. This article examines the main sticking points between the two countries, the
incentives for reconciliation on both sides, and the reasons why the recent efforts came as far as they did – as
well as why a stalemate has ensued since then.
Keywords:
Turkey, Armenia, “normalizing relations”, “secret talks”.
Resumen:
Las “conversaciones secretas” y los esfuerzos democráticos para la “normalización de relaciones” (que es un
término comúnmente usado para referirse al establecimiento de relaciones diplomáticas y la apertura de la
frontera común) han proseguido intermitentemente entre Turquía y Armenia desde la independencia de ésta
última en otoño de 1991. Tales esfuerzos culminaron con la firma de dos protocolos en octubre del 2009,
estableciéndose relaciones diplomáticas y estableciendo el camino para empezar a examinar su turbulenta
historia. La iniciativa atrajo mucha atención pública y estuvo cerca de cambiar la naturaleza de las relaciones
bilaterales. Este artículo examina los principales puntos de encuentro entre los dos países, las iniciativas de
reconciliación a ambos lados y las razones por las que los esfuerzos actuales llegaron tan lejos (así como por
qué se asiste a un bloqueo desde entonces).
Palabras clave:
Turquía, Armenia, “normalización de las relaciones”, “conversaciones secretas”.
Copyright © UNISCI, 2010.
Las opiniones expresadas en estos artículos son propias de sus autores, y no reflejan necesariamente la
opinión de UNISCI. The views expressed in these articles are those of the authors, and do not
necessarily reflect the views of UNISCI.
1
Diba Nigar Goksel is Senior Analyst and Caucasus Coordinator of the European Stability Initiative.
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1. Old Tensions and New Problems
The Nagorno Karabagh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan had been brewing since the
Armenian-majority parliament of the enclave expressed its intention to secede from
Azerbaijan in 1988. The following tension turned into a full fledged military confrontation in
the winter of 1991/92. With Armenian forces occupying districts beyond Karabagh in
Azerbaijan proper and more specifically with the occupation of Kelbajar in April 1993,
Turkey decided to halt its ongoing talks with Armenia to establish relations. The train that had
run once a week during the Soviet era between Gyumri in northwest Armenia and Kars in
Turkey was also stopped. Turkey has since kept the border with Armenia closed, hoping ‘to
level the playing ground’ by leveraging the prospect of an open border as an “incentive” for
Armenia to reach a compromise at the negotiating table for the solution of the Karabagh
conflict with Azerbaijan. Though a ceasefire was signed between Armenia and Azerbaijan in
1994, various attempts to bring about resolution of the problem, most notably by the OSCE
Minsk Group, have not yielded tangible results.
Besides the closed border and Karabagh problem, history is a major stumbling block
for normalization of ties between Armenia and Turkey. Clashing narratives on how and why
Armenians were driven out of Anatolia by the Union and Progress government of the
crumbling Ottoman Empire runs deep in both countries’ conceptions of their history. Whether
the massacres and deportations of Armenians in 1915 should be referred to as ‘genocide’ or
not is still a very emotionally and politically charged issue. The pursuit of international
“genocide recognition” campaigns is largely viewed as a hostile act in Turkey.
The third issue of contention between the two countries is the recognition of Turkey’s
border. The declaration of independence of the Republic of Armenia which states that “The
Republic of Armenia stands in support of the task of achieving international recognition of the
1915 Genocide in Ottoman Turkey and Western Armenia”
2
complicates the bilateral relations.
According to the mainstream Turkish perspective, the use of the term “Western Armenia”
(referring to Eastern Anatolia) implies territorial claims. Though officially Armenia has not
expressed territorial claims from Turkey, for Armenian politicians there is a “political cost” in
explicitly recognizing the common border with Turkey due to expectations in the Armenian
society regarding their “historical homeland.” The direct and indirect involvement of the
Armenian Diaspora in Turkey-Armenia relations has rendered the bilateral relationship even
more complex.
The thorny issues in the Turkey-Armenia relationship have remained more or less the
same over the years: history – the pursuit of genocide recognition by Armenian groups and
the Turkish state’s efforts to prevent this-, the occupation of Azerbaijani lands by Armenia
and Turkey’s support to Azerbaijan to prevent this from turning into a fait accompli, and the
recognition of Turkey’s borders by Armenia. These three issues have been weaved together
by Turkey, Azerbaijan, Armenia and the US over the years in an effort to break the
intertwined deadlocks in a way that serves their own interests: Ankara holds in its hand cards
such as its strategic position and ability to open the border with Armenia; Baku leverages its
energy resources and close ties with Turkey; Yerevan utilizes the resource of its Diaspora and
the districts of Azerbaijan it occupies; and Washington comes to the brink of recognizing the
1915 events as genocide on an annual basis.
2
“Declaration of Independence”, Armenian Foreign Ministry (23 August 1990), at
http://www.armeniaforeignministry.com/htms/doi.html.
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2. The Taboos and Domestic Politics of Bilateral Relations
The approach for decades of the Turkish state to the tragedy experienced by Armenians
during World War I in the Ottoman Empire has entrenched the problems between the two
nations substantially. Generations of Turks have been educated with little or no information
about this page of Turkish history, and laws have been used to penalize different
interpretations of that era as an “insult” to “Turkishness”.
Turkey, in particular after it was granted candidacy status by the EU in 1999, has
taken significant democratization strides. The increased freedoms have been reflected
positively in the intellectual debate pertaining to Armenia as well. Improvements in both the
legal and social arena have allowed historians to challenge the official versions of the history
of Armenians in Anatolia. One example that stands out is the conference titled “Ottoman
Armenians during the Decline of the Empire: Issues of Scientific Responsibility and
Democracy” held on 24-25 September 2005 at Bilgi University. The participants discussed
the fate of the Armenians during the final days of the Ottoman Empire with previously
unimaginable openness. Another event that shook the debate in Turkey was the assassination
of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink on 19 January 2007 by a 17 year old nationalist
who was arrested thereafter. Founder and editor-in-chief of the weekly Agos, Dink was a
voice calling for change in Turkey and appealing to the hearts and minds of not just
intellectuals but ordinary Turks. He had been targeted by nationalist circles for years,
receiving death threats and prosecuted under article 301 of the Turkish penal code. Following
the assassination, over 100.000 Turks gathered in front of Agos newspaper to mourn his loss
and protest the incident, carrying banners of “we are all Hrant Dink, we are all Armenian” as
a sign of solidarity. Dink’s funeral on 23 January 2007 was attended by several thousands of
people.
A third development shaping the debate in Turkey in a new direction was the signature
campaign launched by Cengiz Aktar and other liberal Turkish intellectuals on 15 December
2008, with the following text: "My conscience does not accept the insensitivity showed to and
the denial of the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I
reject this injustice and for my share, I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian
brothers and sisters. I apologize to them." Increased contact between Turks and Armenians
fostered through bilateral NGO projects also positively influenced the mutual perception and
understanding between the two nations.
Bilateral NGO projects began on a systematic basis in 2001 with the support of the US
State Department funds coordinated by the American University Center for Global Peace. The
resultant 13 projects lasted until early 2005. Of these, the most high profile was the Turkish
Armenian Reconciliation Commission (TARC) that existed between 2001 and 2004. An
evaluation report of the implemented projects was prepared by the
Yerevan based
International Center for Human Development (ICHD) in 2006 with Eurasia Foundation
support.
3
David Phillips (who was not only the facilitator of TARC, but also led the planning
phase of the rest of the projects that the American University subsequently supervised)
authored a book focusing primarily on the experiences of TARC (Un-silencing the Past:
Track Two Diplomacy and Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation) in 2005. The second round of
multiple parallel projects was again funded by the US State Department (USAID) and
3
“Track 2 Diplomacy, Armenian-Turkish Track 2 projects: Assessment of Best Practices”, International Center
for Human Development (ICHD), (2006), at http://www.ichd.org/files/pdf/T2D_Book.pdf .
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implemented this time by the Eurasia Partnership Foundation,
4
beginning in fall 2007. In
recent years, the range of donors for bilateral projects widened to include the Swiss and
British Embassies, the German foundations (such as Friedrich Naumann and Friedrich Ebert),
and Open Society Institute.
Constructive steps taken by the Turkish government complemented this changing
atmosphere. On 29 March 2007, the restoration of an ancient Armenian Church on the
Ahdamar Island of Van province, Surp Khach built in the 10
th
century was celebrated with a
ceremony. An amendment to the Foundation Law of Turkey in 2004 lifted some of the
restrictions to the restoration of other Armenian churches in Turkey and increased the rights
of the Armenian minority living in Turkey. While article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code,
restricting freedom of speech on the grounds of “insulting Turkishness” was amended to limit
instances of prosecution on the basis of such grounds, charges were dropped against many
who were facing trial for statements they had made regarding the 1915 events. Though in the
early 2000s orchestrated intimidation of Turks who challenged the nationalist conceptions of
history took place, including court cases being opened against intellectuals such as Elif Safak
and Orhan Pamuk, these initiatives subsided with the arrest in 2008 of the key figures of the
ultranationalist networks in Turkey.
5
These positive developments were overshadowed by “politically incorrect” statements
from leading members of the Turkish government that aggravated Armenian distrust and the
perception of an unchanging Turkey. For example in February 2008 Prime Minister Erdogan
said: “The character of this nation does not allow it to commit such crimes,” then in
December 2009 he said: “my ancestors can not have committed genocide”. Using the
existence of Armenian illegal labor migrants in Turkey to “prove” Turkish goodwill and
threatening to deport them as the Prime Minister did in mid March 2010 has been seen to
reduce the perception of his sincerity. Moreover, Turkish Defense Minister in November 2008
made an improper comment implying that had the Greek and Armenian minorities stayed in
Anatolia, the creation of a Turkish nation state would not have been possible in the early 20
th
century. While in May 2008, the then Economy Minister said, “We don’t need them, they (the
Armenians) need us.”
Besides rhetoric, there are continuing institutional arrangements in Turkey that do not
conform with the progressive developments, though reactions to such acts from the Turkish
society have been strong and effective, and this has instilled confidence on a sustainable
change. Though there is still deep distrust in Armenia towards Turks
6
, and this is regularly
exploited by Armenian opposition parties, the positive changes in Turkey have come a long
way in breaking the monolithic view of Turks in Armenia.
4
Eurasia Partnership Foundation can also be referred to as EPF or Eurasia Foundation or Eurasia throughout this
file.
5
Detailed information available at www.esiweb.org ( “Noah’s Dove Returns, Armenia, Turkey and the Debate
on Genocide”, European Stability Initiative (ESI) (21 April 2009), at
http://www.esiweb.org/index.php?lang=en&id=156&document_ID=108).
6
Depicted also in ESI research of Armenian press coverage of the apology campaign, Surp Khach church
renovation, and the murder –and then funeral - of Hrant Dink
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3. The Context of the Football Diplomacy
The most recent round of talks which began in August 2007/April 2008 was Swiss mediated.
These negotiations are also known as “football diplomacy” because they gained a high public
profile with the trip of Turkish President Abdullah Gul to Yerevan for a World Cup
qualifying match between the two countries’ national football teams on 6 September 2008.
The motivating factors on the Turkish side for venturing into an ambitious attempt for
reconciliation was the result of a number of separate dynamics that coincided. In view of the
changing realities of Turkey’s neighborhood, the AKP government that had come to power in
2002 conceptualized a new foreign policy. The party program laid out the approach as
follows: “The dynamic circumstances brought about by the post cold war period have created
a suitable environment for developing a foreign policy with several alternatives. In this new
environment Turkey must […] rearrange and create its relations with centers of power with
alternatives, flexibly and with many axes.”7 The vision of the foreign policy set out in the
AKP platform was “multifaceted”, “free from prejudices and obsessions”, “based on
mutuality of interests”, “promising more initiatives in solving regional crises, advancing
regional cooperation, and increasing […] attempts to maintain good relations with its
neighbors.”8 Our goals, said Gul in 2005, are “to promote good neighborly relations with all,
to replace disagreement with cooperation, to seek innovative mechanisms and channels to
resolve regional conflicts, to encourage positive change in our region, and to build cross-
cultural bridges of dialogue and understanding.”9 The motto “zero problems with neighbors”
has been frequently used by the AKP government to communicate their motivations. To
maximize its influence in the Caucasus and to play a role in the resolution of the Karabagh
conflict, Turkey needed to normalize its relations with Armenia.
Another development that from a Turkish perspective could make a contribution in the
reconciliation process was the change of president in Armenia with the February 2008
elections. Though Serzh Sarkisian had been the favored candidate of the outgoing president
Robert Kocharian, his name did not carry a “negative charge” in Turkey. Kocharian, who
served as President of Armenia from 1998 to 2008 had headed Karabagh’s defense and
security structures and served as Karabagh’s Prime Minister and President. Once he became
President of Armenia, contrary to the position adopted by his predecessor President Levon
Ter Petrosian, the international recognition of the 1915 events as “genocide” became one of
Armenia’s foreign policy aims. Serzh Sarkisian, like Kocharian, was from Nagorno-Karabakh
and his track record did not set him apart from the “establishment”. He had been involved in
the Karabagh movement to secede from Azerbaijan, had led the Karabagh defense forces and
served as Defense Minister and Prime Minister of Armenia (during Kocharian’s presidency).
Nevertheless, from the start, Sarkisian took a more proactive and bold role in reaching out to
Turkey. Some analysts have argued that this was because he needed a foreign policy victory
to compensate for his waning legitimacy due to his inability to deliver the economic and
political benefits expected by the society.
10
7 “Party Programme”, Justice and Development Party (AKP), at
http://eng.akparti.org.tr/english/partyprogramme.html.
8 Ibid.
9 Gül, Abdullah: “Other Statements and Messages by Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs
Abdullah Gül”, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkey, at
http://www.mfa.gov.tr/data/BAKANLIK/BAKANLAR/AbdullahGul_Speecheskisaltilmisversiyon.pdf.
10
Armenian analyst Richard Giragosian has made this point in a number of speeches and articles.
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The first high profile initiative from President Sarkisian trying to reach out to Turkey
was the speech he made in Moscow on 23 June 2008, in which he said:
"Armenia's position is clear: In the 21
st
century borders between neighboring countries
must not be closed. Regional cooperation could be the best means of supporting
stability. The Turkish side offers to form a commission that would study historical
facts. We don't oppose the creation of such a commission, but it should happen when
the border between the states is open. Otherwise, it could become a matter of delaying
the issue for years and a means of abuse. In the near future I am intent on taking new
steps furthering the Armenian-Turkish relations. Most probably, I will invite the
Turkish President Abdullah Gul to Yerevan so that we could together watch the
football match between Armenia and Turkey."
This was followed by an official invitation to Turkish President Abdullah Gul from President
Sarkisian to the football match scheduled for 6 September 2008. This set into action the high
profile diplomatic exchanges which followed. However it was the August 2008 war between
Georgia and Russia over South Ossetia and the hurried Ankara proposal, announced on 13
August 2008 by Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan in Moscow for a “Caucasus Stability and
Cooperation Platform” (CSCP) that provided the justification for Abdullah Gul to accept this
invitation. The visit was presented to the Turkish public primarily as an opportunity to discuss
the CSCP.
But the responses from different Turkish political and social ranks to Abdullah Gul’s
acceptance of this invitation were not all positive. The leader of the Nationalist Action Party
(MHP) said that Gul’s travel to Yerevan would damage Turkey’s honor. The head of CHP
(Republican People's Party) summed up his party’s concerns with the following statement:
"Did Armenia recognize Turkey's borders, did it abandon genocide claims, is it pulling out of
the Karabagh lands it occupies? If these things did not happen, why is he going?"
Nevertheless, the visit of Abdullah Gul to Yerevan went relatively smoothly. The Dashnak
Party (ARF) organized protests along the avenues which the Gul's motorcade crossed.
Security measures were intense. The visiting Turkish press reported many human stories.
Psychologically it was an important turning point. The visit infused an added sense of
normalcy and legitimacy in Turkey towards those working on reconciliation in the civil
society or media sectors.
The next development contributing to Turkey’s incentives to move along the
rapprochement was the US elections in December 2008 which brought Barack Obama to the
White House. During his campaign Obama had been unequivocal in his support for labeling
the 1915 events as “genocide”. Leading figures of Obama’s administration have been on
record recognizing the 1915 events as genocide, including the Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton and Vice President Joe Biden. And Obama announced during his campaign that “as
President I will recognize the Armenian Genocide."
11
In the first few months of 2009, an intense diplomatic traffic between Turkish and
Armenian Foreign Ministers took place. Azerbaijan, increasingly nervous, reminded Turkey
of its strategic value by signing a memorandum for selling natural gas to Russia, raising
concerns on the feasibility of the Western-favored Nabucco natural gas pipeline. There were
11
“Noah’s Dove Returns…”, op. cit.
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in the meantime statements and signals emanating from the US administration that
Washington would caution against taking any steps that might disrupt the ongoing efforts of
Turkey and Armenia to reconcile and normalize. This meant for the most observers that the
word genocide would not be uttered if “the process” was ongoing. As anticipated, such
linkages have given Turkey an incentive to demonstrate that the process is ongoing, but it was
not a sufficient incentive to actually bring the process to fruition.
On 6-7 April Obama visited Turkey in his first bilateral trip abroad after his
inauguration. In Turkey, Obama said that his views on the Armenian genocide "had not
changed and were on the record." While Turkey was under pressure from the US to make
concrete commitments to normalize relations with Armenia, the reverse pressure was coming
from Azerbaijan. Expressions of strong concern from Baku for the blow to Azerbaijan’s
national interests followed. Already, Azerbaijani diplomats argued, there were indications that
Armenia was hardening its position at the negotiation table. The point was that Yerevan had
gained an upper hand with the prospect of normalization with Turkey. Moreover, the leaders
in Baku resented the fact of not being properly briefed by Turkey. President Ilham Aliyev’s
refusal to attend the Alliance of Civilizations Summit in Istanbul on April 6-7 grabbed the
spotlight in Turkey and was covered extensively by the press. Given the sense of solidarity
latent in the majority of the Turkish public towards Azerbaijan, the revelation of a serious
problem between the Turkish and Azerbaijani governments put pressure domestically on the
AKP government.
The Turkish Prime Minister and other leading figures of the government underlined
time after time in the next two weeks that Turkey would not normalize relations with Armenia
until an agreement on Nagorno-Karabakh was reached between Armenia and Azerbaijan. This
reflected a shift in the political rhetoric. Azerbaijan played its hand effectively, tapping into
two marked aspects the foreign policy conduct of the AKP government: Its desire to turn
Turkey into an energy hub and, as a consequence “indispensable” for the energy security of
its partners particularly in the West, and its receptivity to public opinion. Azerbaijan’s
displeasure was strongly represented in the Turkish press and struck a chord among wide
segments of the society. Yet, the foreign ministries of Turkey and Armenia managed to issue
the following joint statement on 22 April 2009:
“Turkey and Armenia, together with Switzerland as mediator, have been working
intensively with a view to normalizing their bilateral relations and developing them in
a spirit of good-neighborliness, and mutual respect, and thus to promoting peace,
security and stability in the whole region. The two parties have achieved tangible
progress and mutual understanding in this process and they have agreed on a
comprehensive framework for the normalization of their bilateral relations in a
mutually satisfactory manner. In this context, a road-map has been identified. This
agreed basis provides a positive prospect for the on-going process”.
No details were provided, leaving much room for speculation. The statement had clearly been
timed to give justification to President Barack Obama to abstain from labeling the 1915
events as “genocide” in his April 24 Armenian Remembrance Day message. Washington had
passed the message that progress in Turkey-Armenia reconciliation could prevent the “US
recognition of genocide” at least for one more year. Indeed, on April 24, Obama referred to
1915 events as the Meds Yeghern, or Great Catastrophe in Armenian. Yet, both Turks and
Armenians wrecked havoc by the wording choice of Obama. The leadership in Armenia was
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accused by many Armenians around the world for having created a context (i.e. the
appearance of an ongoing rapprochement) which supposedly justified Obama’s abstinence
from pronouncing the G-word. Frustration among Armenians hiked when in May 2009 Prime
Minister Erdogan visited Baku and delivered a powerful speech in the Azerbaijani Parliament
assuring his audience that the Turkish-Armenian normalization was linked to the resolution of
the Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict over Karabagh. President Sarkisian was under immense
pressure not to continue the Turkey-Armenia rapprochement. He therefore announced that he
would not come to the re-match between Turkish and Armenian national football teams
scheduled for October 2009 in Turkey unless there was a concrete progress in the
rapprochement with Turkey.
On 31 August 2009, two protocols that had been initialed by the two countries’
Foreign Ministers were released: “Protocol on establishment of diplomatic relations” and
“Protocol on development of mutual relations”. The two documents were signed on the same
day, and in the words of the Armenian constitutional court “they regulate interrelated and
complementary matters” and “are linked through cross-references and prescribe mutual
obligations.” The release of the protocols to the public was timed to narrowly “save the day,”
allowing 6 weeks of public debate before a signing ceremony which would take place in
Zurich on 10 October 2009, just in time to display positive momentum which could justify
Sarkisian’s attendance to the soccer game which was scheduled for 14 October 2009.
4. The Protocol Formula
While one of the protocols confirms ”the mutual recognition of the existing border between
the two countries as defined by the relevant treaties of international law” and relates the
“decision to open the common border” as well as to establish diplomatic relations, the other
foresees the establishment of an intergovernmental bilateral commission with seven sub-
commissions (for political consultations, transport, communications, energy infrastructure and
networks, legal matters, science and education, trade, tourism and economic cooperation,
environmental issues, and the historical dimension). Though the content of the two protocols
offered a general framework towards establishing and developing diplomatic relations
between Armenia and Turkey, it left the thorniest issues vague and open to interpretation.
Eventually such ambiguities did not prove to be constructive, as they led to exaggerated fears
and unreasonable expectations on both sides.
From an Armenian perspective, the most problematic aspect of the protocols was the
“sub-commission on the historical dimension to implement a dialogue with the aim to restore
mutual confidence between the two nations, including an impartial scientific examination of
the historical records and archives to define existing problems and formulate
recommendations, in which Armenian, Turkish as well as Swiss and other international
experts shall take part.” Given the sensitivity of the debate on history, this convoluted
wording induced a fierce debate. How were the historians going to be selected? Were they
meant to represent the official perspective of their countries? Would they try to decide if the
“1915 events” could be qualified as “genocide”? The answers to these types of questions were
crucial, particularly for many Armenians who feared that the history sub-commission was a
tool Turkey would use to declare to the world that even Armenians were engaged in a study
that aimed to determine the facts of 1915. This, they feared, would constitute a setback for
genocide recognition campaigns. Indeed, certain statements that the Turkish government
representatives made in defense of the protocols against the Turkish opposition exacerbated
this Armenian concern.
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A more healthy debate about the pros and cons of a history commission was needed.
Expectations from the Turkish side that dialogue about history would prevent campaigns
among the Armenian Diaspora for genocide recognition reflected a lack of understanding of
the dynamics of the Armenian communities around the world. And the outright rejection –
without suggesting formulas that might be more effective- by many Armenian groups was
unfortunate. Ultimately, though “official assignment” for joint history research might indeed
be tricky, it is evident that both nations can only benefit from more serious research on their
controversial history, and from a deeper understanding of the role of different actors as well
as the diversity of the tragedies which occurred in different regions of the ailing empire.
Another “catch” in the protocols was the issue of the border. Because the 1921 Kars
treaty which defined the mutual border was not explicitly mentioned in the protocols, critics
in Turkey claimed that the protocols did not ensure that Armenia recognize the border. On the
other hand, hardliner Armenians interpreted the wording as a recognition of the border and
accused the Armenian authorities of compromising the Armenian “historic homeland.”
The third element of the protocols that led to divergent interpretations was the absence
of any mention of Karabagh. This ambiguity allowed the Armenian leaders to claim that
progress in the resolution of the Karabagh conflict was not a “precondition,” while the
Turkish side argued that the two processes were “synchronized.” It was stipulated in the
protocols that they would come into force not when they were signed but on the “first day of
the first month following the exchange of instruments of ratification.” The Turkish side thus
assumed it could sign the protocols but not ratify them in parliament until satisfied with the
movement towards the resolution of the Karabagh conflict.
While President Sarkisian claimed the two processes were not linked, Azerbaijan was
assured by Ankara that they were. This doubletalk was not sustainable, given the blatant
contradictions which observers quickly spotted. When confronted, Turkish leaders spelled out
the fact that Turkey would not ratify the protocols until “the occupation of Azerbaijan” ended.
It is still not clear what this exactly means. Would for example Armenia’s withdrawal from all
or some of the districts surrounding Karabagh be enough? Or, for example, would an
agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan on the principles of an eventual agreement
suffice? Lack of clarity set the stage for misunderstandings in the highly sensitive
environment of the Turkey-Armenia-Azerbaijan triangle.
With the benefit of hindsight, it can be argued that the protocols and the scheme for
their implementation was based on a few miscalculations and ungrounded assumptions. The
effort to avoid clarity on the most controversial issues inflated the situation of mistrust and
did not facilitate the process. The widespread perception among both Armenians and Turks
that the protocols could deliver Turkey the upper hand in “genocide diplomacy” was
misfounded, The truth is that Yerevan authorities can not prevent this campaign even if they
wanted to – and would drastically lose ground domestically if they tried. Another
questionable assumption was that the solution of the Karabagh conflict was imminent and that
the prospect of an open border with Turkey would empower Sarkisian and motivate
Armenians to follow through with necessary compromises at the negotiation table with
Azerbaijan. Turkey’s brinkmanship backfired. The resistance to Karabagh-related
compromise among Armenians was in fact exacerbated by the perception that this
compromise might be part of a trade-off with Turkey. And finally, the extent of negative
reactions from Azerbaijan appears to have been underestimated.
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In defense of the protocols, they did lay out some ground-rules upon which a future
relationship can rest and the debate they stimulated made the respective positions of various
segments of the societies in both countries known. The discussion about the protocols was a
learning process that permitted both countries to develop more realistic understanding of their
respective maneuver space.
5. The Negative Spiral
Between the time when the protocols were released on 31 August 2009 and the signing of the
protocols on 10 October 2009, a fierce debate ensued in Turkey, in Armenia, and among
Turkish and Armenian Diaspora around the world. The leaders of the two countries used this
period for informative exchanges in their respective societies. The Armenian side arguably
took this mission more seriously than their counterparts in Turkey. In the Armenian
parliament, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) which has 20 seats, and the
Heritage Party, with its 7 seats took negative stances against the protocols, while the biggest
opposition bloc with no seats in the parliament, the Armenian National Congress, was also
critical. Former Minister of foreign affairs, Oskanian, advocated against the protocols as well.
The ruling coalition, made up of the Republican Party with 65 seats, Prosperous Armenia with
24 seats and the Rule of Law with 9 seats were supportive of the protocols and in total had
enough seats to pass it in the Parliament.
The ARF statement on 1 September 2009 stated that the protocols “call into question
the fact of the Armenian Genocide and nullify the timeless rights of the Armenian people.”
The statement continued to point out that Turkey conditions the Armenian-Turkish process
with the Karabagh issue. Under heavy rain, the ARF organized a protest rally in the center of
Yerevan on 2 September 2009 with posters that read “No concessions to Turkey” and
“Armenian spirit will never surrender.” Armenian National Congress leader former President
Ter-Petrosian underlined the potential harms of a joint history commission saying that this
enabled Turkey to “stop the danger of the US recognition”.
12
Members of the Armenian
National Congress argued that carrying the issue of history to any state discourse or initiative
would inevitably set any normalization up for failure. Heritage Party stated that the
recognition of current borders “deprives Armenia of the right to speak about the historical
facts of Turkey’s seizure of its homeland,” and Former Foreign Minister Oskanian stated that
“when we say that we recognize today’s Turkey’s borders, we note that we have no territorial
claim towards Turkey.”
The Armenian President held discussions not only with political parties and NGO’s in
Armenia to discuss the protocols but also met with leading groups in the Diaspora. In early
October 2009, he went on a weeklong tour to major Armenian communities in the Diaspora to
discuss and promote the process ongoing with Turkey. Paris was his first stop, followed by
New York, Los Angeles, Beirut, and Rostov-on-Don in Russia. The president was met with
massive protests, but also received the support of some important Diaspora organizations. On
of the most controversial aspects of the process was the plan to pursue joint work on history.
Closing the door to claims towards parts of eastern Turkey was seen to be an unacceptable
concession in particular for ARF affiliated groups. Sarkisian went out on a limb with his
defense of the protocols, arguing that the history work would “help the Turkish people to be
12
Ter Petrossian, Levon, “speech in front of Matenadaran”, (18 September 2009).
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more unbiased in going through the pages of their own history.”
13
Eventually, the Armenian
General Benovolent Union (AGBU), the biggest and oldest Armenian Diaspora organization,
and the Washington based Armenian Association of America (AAA) expressed support for
the protocols while the ARF affiliated Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
strongly opposed.
A comparison is useful in this regard. In Turkey, Foreign Minister Davutoğlu met with
a limited number of NGOs and the government made less of an effort to publicize the logic of
the decisions it had signed off. Opposition parties in Parliament criticized the protocols,
mirroring the Armenian opposition’s criticism, claiming that Turkey gained neither a promise
that genocide recognition campaigns would end nor a commitment from Armenia to end its
occupation of Azerbaijani lands. Moreover, the non-mention of the Kars treaty defining the
common border was interpreted by the Turkish opposition as an unreasonable concession.
Meanwhile, Turkish enthusiasts applauded and expected an unreasonably rapid resolution of
all the thorny issues between the two countries.
The protocols’ signing ceremony on October 10
th
was witnessed by the Swiss, US,
Russian and French foreign ministers and was ridden with tensions due to the mini-statements
that were to be delivered by both sides. It was obvious that what each side meant by its
signature was not synchronized. Nevertheless, Sarkisian did attend the football game in
Bursa, where he and the Turkish President Gul displayed warm relations. After that, the
protocols were sent to the Foreign Affairs Commission of the Turkish Parliament to be were
kept there until such a time that a step towards the solution of the Karabakh problem could
justify its ratification.
On 12 January 2010, the Armenian Constitutional Court declared the conformity of
the protocols to the constitution and it attached a text that stated that the protocols could not
be interpreted in a way that would contradict the declaration of independence. Though the
language of the prepared text of the Armenian Constitutional Court was likely to be geared to
the Armenian public opinion, it raised even more questions in Turkey. This decision was
interpreted as the confirmation that Armenia would stick to references of “Western Armenia”
and pursuit the genocide recognition campaigns. The response of the Turkish Foreign
Ministry came in six days, noting that, “it has been observed that this decision contains
preconditions and restrictive provisions which impair the letter and spirit of the Protocols. The
said decision undermines the very reason for negotiating these Protocols as well as their
fundamental objective.”
Turkey in a sense seized the constitutional court decision of Armenia as an “exit
strategy” and many columnists in the mainstream press jumped on the bandwagon with what
appeared to be an orchestrated reaction. In February 2010, the parliament of Armenia passed
an amendment to the law on international treaties, making it possible to suspend or terminate
agreements signed before they enter into force. Thus Yerevan was prepared to annul the
signing of the protocols in case Turkey delayed their ratification. The next development that
stirred the debate about the protocols and their possible derailment was the vote schedule in
the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US House on the HR 252, for “genocide recognition.”
14
13
Smbatian, Hasmik and Stamboltsian,, Gevorg: “Sarkisian Cotinues Diaspora Tour” (05 October 2009), at
http://www.armenialiberty.org/content/article/1843752.html.
14
For a full text of the resolution: “Affirmation of the United States Record on the Armenian Genocide Record”,
US House of Representatives, H. Res. 252 (17 March 2009), at
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=hr111-252
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6. Washington Tightening the Knot
When writing this paper, the 2010 replay to the annual flurry of the nearing Remembrance
Day on April 24
th
was in full force. On March 4
th
, the House of Representatives Foreign
Affairs Committee voted ‘yes’ with 23-22 votes to HR 252.
15
This development reignited the
debates in Turkey about the possible consequences of US genocide recognition, the chance of
salvaging the stalled “normalization process” between Turkey and Armenia, as well as the
hypothetical calculations of the opportunity cost of Turkey downgrading strategic relations
with Azerbaijan, Israel, or the US. Much effort was spent by the Turkish diplomatic machine
to prevent the recognition of genocide in America – either by Congress or in the annual
statement of the President on April 24
th
. Before the vote, 2 Turkish parliamentary delegations,
totaling 9 MPs visited Washington. The Turkish Ambassador to Washington was recalled
immediately after the vote. Both officials and the press responded harshly. On 5 March 2010
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan responded as follows: “This is a comedy. For
God’s sake, can history be looked at like this? Is it a politician’s job to look at history? Can
those who gave a ‘yes’ vote in that assembly find Armenia’s place on the map? …The
decisions that are made there do not bind us. With its history, its culture, its civilization,
Turkey is a very big state. This country is not a tribal state. I am saying openly, the decision
of the foreign affairs committee will not hurt Turkey at all. But it will hurt countries’ bilateral
relations and interests to a large degree. We will not be the ones who lose. Those who think
small will. Those who act with revenge and hostility will lose.”
Many leading names in the Turkish press took a doomsday approach, sounding fears
that such a resolution in the US can lead to territorial compensation to Armenians and will
empower other countries to pass such resolutions, qualifying the vote as a blow to Turkish
pride, calling on the AKP to realign its foreign policy to the expense of the US, predicting that
Armenian and Turkish nationalists will be empowered and the Turkish-Armenian
reconciliation process will be derailed, and stirring up anti-Americanism in the Turkish
society.
16
As much as a US Congress resolution recognizing genocide would be unfortunate, the
fears of legal consequences are overrated.
17
Ironically, the consequences of a prospective US
genocide resolution are likely to be determined mostly by the reaction of the Turkish
government to such a development.
The posturing and “leveraging game” played out each year by Turkey, Azerbaijan, the
US and Armenia as April 24 nears is based on faulty logic. At the end none of the
'punishments' in store are in the interests of the countries which threaten to deliver them.
Azerbaijan and its balanced foreign policy will not be better off if its relations with Turkey or
the US are severed. Neither the US nor Turkey will be better off if US Congress passes a
genocide resolution which leads the Turkish government to realign its foreign policy or derail
the reconciliation process with Armenia. Furthermore, the US will not benefit from the
domestic and regional consequences if Turkey were to proceed with the protocols to appease
Washington.
15
Ibid.
16
An analysis of Turkish press reactions is available at: European Stability Initiative (ESI), at
http://www.esiweb.org/rumeliobserver/, dated 12 March 2010.
17
“Turkey's friends and the international debate on the Armenian Genocide”, European Stability Initiative (ESI),
ESI newsletter (12 March 2010), at http://www.esiweb.org/index.php?lang=en&id=67&newsletter_ID=45.
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A more information-based discussion of the consequences of these resolutions would
go a long way in taking the emotional edge out of the Turkish public reaction and create
certain “immunity.” For this and other destructive elements in the debate in Turkey, a
consistent political leadership is important.
7. Conclusion, and Looking Forward
Allowing Turkish citizens to voice their opinions about history freely, maximizing the rights
and freedoms of the Armenian minority in Turkey, intensification of links between Turks and
Armenians in many areas of scholarship, culture and media is a win-win path forward. Such
steps are not only important for Turkey’s democratization but also for building confidence
among Armenians around the world and preparing both nations for any future diplomatic
normalization track. On the other hand, geopolitical moves such as opening the border with
Armenia is a separate issue, subject to a wide range of strategic considerations. Moving
forward on this front would present challenges for the Turkish government domestically, and
could risk shaking some of the basic pillars Turkey’s regional strategic vision rests upon. In
short, with the realization that the protocol-based normalization process will neither end
genocide campaigns nor necessarily boost the Karabagh solution forward, Ankara’s
cost/benefit analysis of following through with the initiative at this time appears to have
tipped to the negative. On the other hand, as long as the process is in limbo, it costs the
Armenian leadership political capital. A debate has therefore been ongoing in Armenia on
whether to withdraw from the process to prevent Turkey from reaping PR benefits.
With Turkish parliamentary elections scheduled for 2011, Armenian parliamentary
elections in 2012 and presidential elections in 2013, and then the 2015 climax of the 100
th
year anniversary of 1915 looming, expecting another ambitious normalization process in the
near future could be unrealistic. In the absence of progress on the Karabagh front, which has
the potential of setting into action a virtual cycle in the region, Turkey and Armenia may need
to resign themselves to taking baby steps. Efforts on finding common ground in the
diplomatic arena may need to continue behind closed doors, protected from the stresses of
managing public opinion. Meanwhile, at the level of civil society, education, media and
culture, activities abound and continue to create a “normalcy” at the people-to-people level.
The mutual understanding developing through civil dialogue and exchanges is fundamental in
that it will contribute to building a much more solid foundation upon which, eventually, full
normalization can rest.
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