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Nouvelle politique turque pour le Caucase

Publié 16 octobre 2009 - Mis à jour 31 août 2011
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Le processus de normalisation des relations Turquie-Arménie est l'élément le plus important de la nouvelle politique turque envers le Caucase, a écrit ce mois-ci Maciej Falkowski, un chercheur du centre pour les études de l'est basé à Varsovie.

"However, [this] process of normalisation […] has met with a number of serious impediments, which mean that it could be blocked at any moment," Falkowski says, recalling that the process has aroused controversies in both Armenia and Turkey.

"Most political forces in Armenia have raised serious objections to a rapprochement with Turkey," he explains, while "nationalist circles in Turkey do not want reconciliation with Armenia either".

Moreover, Azerbaijan has vehemently protested against the possible opening of the Turkish-Armenian border, insisting that the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh must be resolved first.

Armenia has controlled Nagorno-Karabakh, which lies wholly within Azerbaijan, since a war was fought over the landlocked region between 1988 and 1994, leaving at least 6,000 dead. A ceasefire brokered by Russia has held since 1994.

According to Falkowski, "as yet, little seems to indicate any likelihood of a breakthrough in the Karabakh conflict".

Moreover, "Turkish-Armenian relations can only be normalised if Moscow takes at least a neutral stance," the researcher adds. But "the previous Russian policy, and the signs received from Russia so far, seem to prove that Moscow is rather reluctant to accept the normalisation process," he writes.

Indeed, "Moscow, which still believes that Caucasus lies within its own zone of influence, will in principle object to any increase in other countries' presence in this region," he concludes. 

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