Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Vying for a comeback, Turkey talks to an old foe

Judy Dempsey
Wednesday, September 17, 2008

BERLIN: When Russian tanks rolled deep into Georgia last month, the security architecture of this volatile part of the Caucasus changed. By using force, Russia made a bid to reassert its power in a region it regards as its backyard.

But it has a competitor: Turkey. Once the major player in the Caucasus during the 19th century, when the Ottoman Empire stretched across a vast area, Turkey today is using quiet diplomacy to re-establish its influence.

This process could remake Turkey's ties with Europe, and re-order the complex energy and strategic equations of an increasingly important region.

Turkey's president, Abdullah Gul, has reversed the policies of previous administrations by engaging Iran, much to the annoyance of the United States and Israel. Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was given full honors when he recently visited Ankara. In the Middle East, Turkey has taken on the role as mediator between Syria and Israel.

But Ankara is also involved in another, even more ambitious diplomatic endeavor. It has started to talk to its neighbor Armenia, with whom Turkey cut all diplomatic relations in 1993 and closed the border. Then, Turkey had supported Azerbaijan, a Turkic-speaking nation, in its brutal war with Armenia over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian region deep in Azerbaijan's territory.

Despite the immense damage caused by the border closure for Armenian businesses, the authorities in the capital, Yerevan, will not restore diplomatic relations until Turkey acknowledges that crimes committed in 1915 against Armenians in the Ottoman Empire were genocide.

So far, Turkey has refused to do so. Remarkably, that has not stopped Gul and his Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sargsian, from trying to repair relations.

If they succeed, it could have profound repercussions for the Caucasus, said Zeyno Baran, director of the Center for Eurasian Policy at the Hudson Institute in Washington.

It could, for example, set in motion a diplomatic track to resolve the status of Nagorno-Karabakh which until now has prevented Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey from forging otherwise logical economic, trade, transport and political links. The future of hundreds of thousands of refugees caught up in the war could be resolved. Above all, this part of the Caucasus could become stable.

"The region is already changing because of the Georgia-Russia crisis," said Alexander Iskandaryan, director of the Caucasus Institute in Yerevan. "Just think what would happen if Turkey and Armenia had normal relations."

Turkish and Armenian diplomats started exploring such possibilities when they secretly met in the Swiss capital, Bern, in July. As a result of those talks, Gul, who belongs to the pro-Islamist governing Justice and Development Party, made several overtures to Armenia, a predominantly Christian country.

In late July, he made a symbolic visit to medieval Armenian church ruins in the Turkish province of Kars, on the border with Armenia. After repeated requests by Yerevan, the Turks have begun restoration works.

Then this month, Gul made a historic journey to Yerevan, where he attended the qualifying match for the World Cup between Turkey and Armenia (which Turkey won 2-0). There, the presidents and foreign ministers of both countries held talks.

While it is too early to speak of any successful rapprochement, the talks prove that Turkey, a leading member of the NATO military alliance and candidate member of the EU, is not prepared to leave the Caucasus to fester.

Nor does it want a new "Great Game," this time with American and Russian domination that would replay the 19th century rivalries between the Russian, British and Ottoman Empires. But Ankara's attempts to reach out to Armenia will test the skills and staying power of its leaders - and Russia's intentions.

Russia has substantial economic and political interests in Armenia - interests fostered by Yerevan in order to alleviate the effects of Turkey's blockade and the standoff with Azerbaijan.

Russia gained control of pipelines, energy distribution networks and other lucrative assets, pre-empting Western, especially American, companies in the process.

In addition, Russia, adept at playing off sides in ethnic and regional conflicts, has tacitly supported Armenia's claims to Nagorno-Karabakh, adding to any wariness on Azerbaijan's part about using its well-equipped army to regain that territory.

But with Turkey now making overtures to Armenia, analysts say Russia is looking at developments very carefully. "Russia still has all the cards in its hands," said Fatih Birol, chief economist at the International Energy Agency in Paris. "Over 76 per cent of Turkey's trade with Russia is mostly oil and gas. Turkey must diversify its energy sources. It would give it more room for maneuver."

For now, Russia still relies on Turkey as a transit country for its gas exports to Europe. It is trying to weaken that dependence by building the South Stream pipeline under the Black Sea that would link Russia to Bulgaria and bypass Turkey. That would mean Turkey losing much of its power as a transit country to negotiate with Russia over gas supplies and costs, while remaining dependent on Russia for its energy.

So as Turkey tries to become a player in the Caucasus, alongside Russia, Birol says that the EU must start understanding the geopolitical importance of Turkey and Russia's role in the security of Turkey's energy supply.

"The EU must help Turkey diversify its energy supplies by building Nabucco," Birol said, referring to the EU's much-delayed plans to build a gas pipeline that would bypass Russia and so help reduce Europe's, and Turkey's dependence on Russia.

The delays in Nabucco are not going to deter Ankara from pursuing a rapprochement with Armenia. But sooner or later, if those talks are to move ahead, both sides will have to confront the Armenian massacres.

Armenian and Turkish analysts say that dealing with this highly charged issue will require the utmost diplomatic skills. "We can't ignore the genocide," said Iskandaryan from the Caucasus Institute. "It is part of our history. But it does not mean you cannot have normal relations with Turkey once your neighbor recognizes your past."

Nationalists in both countries and the powerful Armenian diaspora in America already oppose the Gul-Sargsian talks and are waiting for an opportunity to sabotage them. "Any reconciliation would undermine the hard-liners and ultranationalists," said Bahadir Kaleagasi, European director of the Turkish Industrialists' and Businessmen's Association in Brussels. Nevertheless, both leaders continue to walk a tightrope. So far, they have kept their nerve.

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