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ANKARA: Ex-US Official Hails Turkey, Armenia For Talks

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  • ANKARA: Ex-US Official Hails Turkey, Armenia For Talks

    EX-US OFFICIAL HAILS TURKEY, ARMENIA FOR TALKS

    Hurriyet
    Feb 18 2010
    Turkey

    Both the Turkish and Armenian leadership deserve great credit for
    taking enormous political and domestic risks, a former U.S.

    congressman has said in reference to the recent normalization talks
    between Yerevan and Ankara.

    Former Rep. Robert Wexler, who served as chair of the U.S. Congress'
    Caucus on U.S.-Turkish Relations, recently resigned from his
    congressional seat to lead the Center for Middle East Peace, a think
    tank. He spoke at the SETA Foundation as part of a Washington, D.C.,
    event called "Model Partnership: Creative Approaches to U.S.-Turkey
    Relations."

    In his remarks, Wexler explained how little attention was being paid
    to the American-Turkish relationship when he was first elected to
    Congress in the late '90s, then added that he defined the current
    relationship between the two countries as good.

    The better relationship between Turkey and the U.S. was obvious,
    Wexler said, when he received "arguably the most positive briefing in
    years" at the U.S. State Department before his last visit to Turkey
    in January. "It was positive because American-Turkish relations are
    at a point of honesty - based on real, mutual interest and, at times,
    differences in perspective," Wexler added.

    Ratification process

    Responding to a question about the ratification process of the
    protocols signed between Turkey and Armenia, the former congressman
    said he would like to advise Turkish leaders to stay one step, or
    even a half step, ahead in this process. Such an attitude, he said,
    would serve Turkey's interests.

    While accepting the importance of the U.S. administration's reaction
    in terms of making a difference on the ground, Wexler said he still
    expects the State Department and the Pentagon to oppose the Armenian
    "genocide resolution," which will be put to a vote in early March
    in the House Foreign Relations Committee, as they did under past
    administrations.

    The U.S. administration's attitude toward the resolution "remains to
    be seen," he added.

    Though some say Turkey's foreign policy is shifting away from the West,
    Wexler said that he finds little convincing evidence that Turkey is
    moving to the East rather than staying anchored in the West.

    Even though he disagrees with many foreign policies of the current
    Turkish administration, Wexler added, he finds Turkey more democratic
    and freer than it has been in decades, although he stressed that some
    issues, such as the situation of the media, are cause for alarm.

    Turkish-Israeli ties

    Wexler also discussed the strained relationship between Turkey and
    Israel and urged both governments to consider the importance of this
    relationship. "The Israelis ought to give strong consideration to
    a role Turkey can play on humanitarian efforts in Gaza. Though I
    don't agree with Prime Minister [Recep Tayyip] Erdogan's narrative,
    his views in respect to Hamas, and with respect to what occurred
    in Gaza - I fundamentally disagree - but he is a passionate man on
    humanitarian issues in Gaza," he said. "This could be a significant
    element of bridging the divide between Turkey and Israel."

    Responding to a question about the prospects of the Turkish mediation
    role between Syria and Israel, Wexler stated that for Turkey to take
    up that role again, the trust issues between Turkey and Israel need to
    be resolved and the parties have to work hard to regain each other's
    confidence. Working toward this end, he added, is a two-way street.
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