Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Who's losing Turkey?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Who's losing Turkey?

    Washington Times, DC
    April 21 2007

    Embassy Row

    Who's losing Turkey?

    By James Morrison
    April 20, 2007

    With Iranian nukes, Iraqi chaos, Kurdish separatism, vast pipeline
    projects, a stalled European Union application, Cyprus and the
    global rise of militant Islam, Turkish officials should have plenty
    to talk about.

    But a delegation of top Turkish lawmakers in Washington this week
    devoted an hourlong interview with our correspondent David R. Sands to
    an entirely separate topic: a pending U.S. congressional resolution
    condemning the treatment of Armenians nearly a century ago by the
    Ottoman Empire as "genocide."

    "It is already a difficult time, but I can safely predict there
    would be very serious effects [to U.S.-Turkish relations] if this
    resolution passes," warned Mehmet Dulger, a member of the ruling
    Justice and Development Party and chairman of the Grand National
    Assembly's foreign affairs committee.

    Onur Oymen, a former top Foreign Ministry official now serving as an
    opposition lawmaker, noted that favorable attitudes in Turkey toward
    the United States have plummeted to single digits since the start of
    the Iraq war in 2003.

    "The political situation for good relations with the United States is
    really close to untenable," he said. "If there is another blow, such
    as this resolution, it will be so much more difficult to recuperate."

    In a long-running, bitter diplomatic war, Armenians have pressed
    countries to condemn as genocide the deaths of hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians in the former Ottoman-Turkish Empire in 1915. Rival studies
    put the death toll at anywhere from 200,000 to 1.8 million, and basic
    events and documents from the time are still bitterly contested.

    The Democratic takeover of the U.S. Congress has given hopes to
    Armenian-American groups that a new, nonbinding genocide resolution
    could pass this session, despite sharp opposition from the Bush
    administration.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, California Democrat, is on record in
    support of the motion.

    Erol Aslan Cebeci, a lawmaker with the governing Justice and
    Development Party, noted that Turkey faces a presidential vote
    next month and new parliamentary elections in November. He said
    Turkish politicians will be forced by voter outrage to respond
    "disproportionately" to a U.S. resolution, even if the reaction harms
    both countries' long-term interests.

    "Let's be frank: If Senegal or Bolivia were doing this, we could live
    with it," Mr. Cebeci said. "But this is supposedly our best and most
    important ally. If, God forbid, this passes, the next big debate you
    will be having in Washington is, 'Who lost Turkey?' "
Working...
X