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The developments from the Russian-Georgian war of last August, to the global financial crisis brought about essential changes in the political situation in the Caucasus. All the energy programs that have until now been implemented in the region, having Armenia debarred from, have always made the Caucasus “incomplete” in terms of regional security. The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Baku-Supsa pipelines blocked during August war asserted the time for “political railroads, roads and pipelines” is over and that the Caucasus would be more secure if it were full of “economic cross-roads”. In these circumstances, Turkish and Armenian leaders took historic and courageous steps on reconciliation of their over 15 years “closed” relationships. The rapprochement of Turkey and Armenia considers being “a new Door” for resolution the vacuum in the region and creation of good atmosphere for future regional intimacy.
In 1993 Turkey
closed the borders with Armenia regarding Nagorno-Karabakh war between
Azerbaijan and Armenians.
Turkey and Armenia intensified their negotiations
in August 2007 with diplomats regularly meeting in Geneva to discuss the issues
related to reconciliation. With President Abdullah Gul's visit to Yerevan in
September last year to attend a Turkish-Armenian soccer match, and the meeting
between Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and Turkish Prime Minister Tayip
Erdogan in January 2009 during World Economic Forum in Davos, indicated the
political will of both sides about proceeding with rapprochement. The next meeting of Armenian and
Turkish Presidents in
Since mid 1990s
US has worked intensively on establishing a dialogue between Turks and
Armenians through meetings among Civil society actors. Both of these two nations
entertained big hopes with President-elect Obama. The recent visit to Ankara of US President made
obvious that US fully supports the started dialogue between Ankara and Yerevan.
“An open border would return the Turkish and Armenian people to a peaceful and
prosperous coexistence that would serve both of your nations. That is why the
United States strongly supports the full normalization of relations between
Turkey and Armenia.”- President Obama stated in the Turkish Parliament. Back
then both Turks and Armenians were impatient to observe president Obama’s
annual April 24 statement, the day when the world’s Armenians
commemorate the historical tragedy. Barrack Obama’s campaign promise was to
call the mass slaughter of Ottoman Armenians in 1915 a “Genocide”.
The US State Department
welcomed the agreement. "It has long been and remains the position of the United
States that normalization should take place without preconditions and within a
reasonable timeframe," said spokesman Robert Wood. It was obvious that the
“road-map” was one of the achievements of Obama’s policy in the Caucasus. It
essentially refreshed the US traditional position in Turkish-Armenian dialogue
process and balanced the recently activated Russian influence over it.
Baku is
distressed about Turkish-Armenian rapprochement as it has always had Turkey's
sympathy over Azerbaijan regarding the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. The road-map
alarmed the possible end of “one nation-two states” Azeri-Turkish concept as no mention of the Karabakh
precondition was there in the agreement. Yet the philosophy of Obama’s
security policy considers the opening of Armenian-Turkish borders as a “clue” of
re-establishing “Trust” in the region and a stimulus to settle the Karabakh
conflict. The "positive mood" created by the Turkish-Armenian
roadmap, "gives a new energy to accelerate our work to help resolve the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict" said Matthew Bryza, US Co-Chair of the OSCE
Minsk Group.
Turkish-Armenian intimacy will also destroy
the “century wall” between US and Russia. Armenia is the only country bordering Turkey, a
NATO member, where Russia has troops, the only Russian military
presence in the Caucasus. After the borders open and diplomatic
relations establish, there will be no need of Russian troops presence. It will assist NATO’s
enlargement towards the East, and US could see
Therefore, this will have a regional
re-balancing role on the Russia dimension. The latter though, meets several
challenges.
It should be noted that the Turkey’s recently
activated “eastern initiative” has formed a new environment for Turkish-Russian
rapprochement. US should take into consideration the recent actions by Turkey;
the fact that Turkey, being a NATO member, kept a neutral position in Russian-Georgian
war and the “Security Platform in Caucasus” offered by Turkey without the
consent of the United States. However, Obama’s opposition on the war in Iraq,
which caused Turkey to
turn away from the US, has created a good atmosphere to re-evaluate the
American-Turkish partnership. The recent visit of president
Obama to Turkey was a big boost towards this end. The US full support on
Turkish-Armenian dialogue adds on to the reconsideration of the Turkish role in
key energy pipelines. In this case, if









