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Easing Turkey-US Tensions Faces A Catch

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  • Easing Turkey-US Tensions Faces A Catch

    EASING TURKEY-US TENSIONS FACES A CATCH
    By Desmond Butler - Associated Press Writer

    AP
    Tuesday August 7, 2007 8:31 AM

    WASHINGTON (AP) - Bush administration officials see Turkey's recent
    election as an opportunity to improve strained relations with an
    important ally, but they face obstacles that may be beyond their
    control.

    One issue is in the hands of Congress, led by opposition Democrats:
    a proposed resolution recognizing World War I-era killings of Armenians
    as genocide - a view Turkey adamantly rejects.

    The other issue is in the hands of the Iraqi government: a possible
    referendum on incorporating the oil-rich city of Kirkuk into the
    autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq. Turkey opposes the
    referendum, fearing it could boost Kurdish separatists in Turkey,
    and sees it as another example of U.S. policy gone awry in neighboring
    Iraq.

    "Turks would blame the U.S. for its failure to prevent the referendum
    because they believe they hold sway as the occupying power,"
    said Bulent Aliriza, the director of the Center for Strategic and
    International Studies' Turkey research program.

    The United States wants to strengthen ties with Turkey, a strategically
    important NATO ally located at the crossroads of Europe, the Middle
    East and Central Asia. U.S. officials view Turkey, a secular democracy
    with a majority Muslim population, as a model for other nations.

    But relations have been strained, largely over the Iraq war. Turkey
    refused to allow U.S. troops use its territory to invade Iraq in
    2003, and Turks continue to oppose the war. A recent poll by the Pew
    Research Center found the United States had only 9 percent favorable
    rating in Turkey.

    In particular, Turkey has criticized the United States for failing to
    stop Kurdish guerrillas from the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK,
    in northern Iraq from carrying out attacks in Turkey. Some analysts
    had feared that Turkey might invade northern Iraq ahead of the July 22
    elections, to boost Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's nationalist
    credentials.

    Turkey did not invade and Erdogan's Justice and Development Party,
    or AKP, won an overwhelming victory.

    The United States says this provides an opportunity for boosting ties.

    Despite the party's Islamic roots, Erdogan and other leaders are
    seen as open to closer integration with the West and improving
    U.S. relations.

    "This is an optimal outcome," U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of
    State Matt Bryza said in an interview. "The AKP is a known quantity."

    Some critics of the administration say the White House needs to move
    urgently to repair relations with Turkey.

    "There has been massive policy neglect," said Richard Holbrooke, former
    U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under the Clinton administration.

    Holbrooke, who is now supporting Sen. Hillary Clinton's Democratic
    presidential bid, said that Turkey should be treated as the most
    important strategic ally in the region.

    But some of the difficulties come from congressional Democrats,
    who are pushing for the Armenian genocide resolution.

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
    Ottoman Turks, an event widely viewed by scholars as genocide. Turkey
    denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been
    inflated, and that those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

    Turkish officials warn that if the resolution is approved, they will
    shut down routes to Iraq from Turkey that the U.S. uses to bring in
    most of its military supplies.

    The resolution has strong support in the House, but will hinge on
    whether Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Foreign Relations Committee Chairman
    Tom Lantos, D-Calif., bring up the measure for votes. Both Lantos and
    Pelosi have previously supported it, but are under intense pressure
    from both sides.

    They agreed to delay action on the referendum until after Turkey's
    election, congressional aides say. But the expectation in Congress
    is that it will likely pass this year.

    The other source of tensions is the Kirkuk referendum, which the
    Iraqi constitution says must be held by the end of the year.

    Turkey fears it would be a step toward an independent Kurdistan and
    could endanger ethnic Turks who live in the region.

    But Iraqi Kurds have been adamant. Last week, the leader of Iraq's
    Kurdish region, Massoud Barzani, warned of a "real civil war" if the
    central government does not hold the referendum.

    The U.S. says the decision is for the Iraqi government.

    Analysts say that the United States could achieve goodwill in Turkey
    by ordering military action against PKK fighters holed up in remote
    mountainous territory. But U.S. officials are reluctant to widen the
    Iraq conflict, taking on new combatants and increasing violence in
    what has been Iraq's most stable region.

    Democratic Rep. Robert Wexler of Florida, who advocates close ties
    with Turkey, said that U.S. military officials have told him the
    United States is closer to moving against the PKK.

    "American and Turkish forces are cooperating to counter the
    PKK in a more concrete way than they were six months ago,"
    he said. "Counterterrorism operations and strategies are being
    employed." He declined to elaborate.
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