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Turkish-Americans Lobby Washington

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  • Turkish-Americans Lobby Washington

    TURKISH-AMERICANS LOBBY WASHINGTON
    By Joshua Kucera

    ISN, Switzerland
    April 28 2008

    Turkish-Americans are taking increased steps to build their influence
    in Washington, Joshua Kucera writes for EurasiaNet.

    Turkish-American groups are making a bid to expand their political
    influence in the United States, expressly aiming to counter the
    considerable sway of their Armenian-American rivals on Capitol Hill.

    The coordinated effort includes strengthening Turkish-American
    grassroots organizations, improving relations with elected officials
    and the media and legal defense of those who advocate pro-Turkey
    positions. Representatives of several Turkish groups described the
    long-term strategy at the American Turkish Council's Conference on
    US Turkish Relations, at a 14 April session called "Empowering the
    Turkish-American Community."

    The representatives repeatedly stressed their intention to put forth
    a positive vision of Turkey, rather than in taking adversarial
    positions. But the effort is geared toward advancing the Turkish
    interpretation of the 1915 massacre of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire,
    which Armenians and most historians call genocide but which Turks
    call regrettable deaths in a messy war.

    "Our cause is not anti-Armenian, or anti-Greek, anti-Bulgarian or
    anti-Arab. It's to try to create a balance on issues that impact
    Turkey, Greece, Armenia and other countries in the Caucasus and
    Middle East," said Lincoln McCurdy, president of the Turkish Coalition
    of America.

    The goal, said Nurten Ural, president of the Assembly of Turkish
    American Organizations, is to strengthen the Turkish position ahead
    of the 100th anniversary of the 1915 events.

    The issue of the Armenian genocide comes up every year before Congress,
    as pro-Armenia members of Congress try to pass a resolution officially
    recognizing the genocide. But while Armenians rely on their large and
    well-organized diaspora in the US to advance their agenda, Turks have
    relied on high-priced lobbyists hired by Ankara, and on the Pentagon,
    which maintains a longtime military alliance with Turkey.

    Turks in America are significantly outnumbered by Armenians:
    according to Kaya Boztepe, president of the Federation of Turkish
    American Associations, there are 1.5 million Armenian-Americans
    and about 450,000 Turkish-Americans. But there are also 450,000
    Azerbaijani-Americans and 935,000 Americans of Azeri Iranian descent,
    along with smaller numbers of related groups like Uzbeks and Tatars,
    he said.

    "Sometimes people say 'there are so many people fighting against
    us.' There are 1.5 million Armenians, mostly in California. But less
    than half are really dedicated, less than half of that really follow
    up and only 50,000 of them make donations," he said.

    The presence of several veterans of pro-Turkey lobbying, however,
    suggests that at least so far the effort is somewhat more top-down
    than grassroots. McCurdy, a former US diplomat, is the former president
    and CEO of the American-Turkish Council, a group of heavyweight US and
    Turkish government and business leaders. Lydia Borland, who is helping
    the Turkish-American groups improve their relations with members of
    Congress, is currently on the council's executive committee, and was
    until last year a registered lobbyist for the Turkish-US Business
    Council, according to Senate records.

    "The biggest bar for Turkish Americans is the belief that they can't
    make a difference," Borland said at the conference.

    The Assembly of Turkish American Associations is holding seminars
    across the country for Turkish-Americans to learn about how to make
    their case to politicians, the media and the public. So far, the
    assembly has held 19 seminars and is planning 11 more.

    The goal is to foster a "Turkish-American community who is confident in
    themselves, assertive in public education and advocacy and comfortable
    with confrontation," said Nurten Ural, the assembly's president.

    The last 18 months have seen the formation of the first two
    Turkish-American political action committees, which raise money for
    pro-Turkey politicians. Since January of 2007 the two committees -
    Turkish Coalition USA PAC and Turkish-American Heritage PAC - have
    raised US$660,000 for congressional candidates, said McCurdy, who is
    also the treasurer of Turkish Coalition USA PAC.

    The groups are also trying to get a Turkish-American elected
    to Congress. "We have to get a Turk in Congress - actually two,
    a Democrat and a Republican," McCurdy said. "I'm confident we're
    going to see that in two years."

    In the meantime, Turkish groups have managed to increase the numbers
    in the Congressional Turkish Caucus; the caucus now numbers 77 members,
    having added 15 members just since the 2006 elections.

    Turkish lobbying groups have specifically targeted black members of
    Congress. Twelve members of the Congressional Black Caucus are also
    in the Turkish Caucus, according to Lydia Borland.

    Turkish groups are also looking to form alliances with other ethnic
    groups in the United States, in particular Bosnian Muslims, Macedonians
    and Albanians. "We believe there is a special bond to be created
    with communities with which Turkey shares a historical relationship
    and a cultural affinity," said Guler Koknar, vice president of the
    Turkish Coalition of America, which provides scholarships targeted to
    university students in each of those groups to study abroad in Turkey.

    The TCA is also targeting scholarships to US minorities. It provides
    a US$2,000 travel grant for any African-American college student
    who wants to study in Turkey. "This is the most underprivileged,
    underrepresented groups of study abroad students, and we think it's
    a shame that it is so. As you know, the African-American community is
    on the rise, its place in this society is growing by leaps and bounds
    and its effectiveness, too," Koknar said. That program has been so
    successful that it is being expanded to include Hispanic Americans
    and Native Americans, Koknar said.

    Joshua Kucera is a Washington, DC,-based freelance writer who
    specializes in security issues in Central Asia, the Caucasus and the
    Middle East.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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