Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Gul In Washington For Uphill Mission

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

  • ANKARA: Gul In Washington For Uphill Mission

    GUL IN WASHINGTON FOR UPHILL MISSION
    Ilnur Cevik

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Feb 8 2007

    Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul is in
    Washington with a tough mission to raise controversial issues with the
    American leadership ranging from the future of Iraq to the Armenian
    resolution pending in Congress that could pollute Turkey's relations
    with the United States.

    Gul is currently discussing Ankara's frustration with American
    inactivity against the terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in
    northern Iraq, the future of Kirkuk as well as the Armenian resolution
    against some political odds.

    He is dealing with a wounded American administration that got a beating
    in the mid-term congressional elections because of its current Iraq
    policy. So this is an administration that can hardly concentrate on
    the PKK holed up in the northern Iraqi mountains controlled by the
    Iraqi Kurds, the close regional allies of the U.S.

    It is also an administration that has to find a fine balance between
    Turkey's demands to wipe out the PKK in Iraq as well as delaying the
    referendum on Kirkuk and the American need to court and appease the
    Iraqi Kurds to recruit their backing to deal with the current mess
    in Baghdad.

    This is a dilemma for the Bush administration.

    American officials who are hosting Gul in Washington have said they
    fully understand the seriousness of the situation regarding the PKK in
    northern Iraq but they also confess that there is not much they can do
    to please Ankara by allowing it to launch a Turkish military operation
    into Iraq at the cost of alienating the Iraqi Kurdish administration.

    There are of course some positive developments where the Americans have
    displayed some sensitivity to Turkish concerns on the PKK but they
    are far from satisfactory for the Turkish public where people expect
    the Americans to help Turkey launch a military operation against the
    PKK in the Kandil Mountains and also apprehend PKK leaders and hand
    them over to Turkey. Turks say if the Americans can arrest Iranians
    in Erbil they can also do this with the PKK.

    Besides this there is the issue of Kirkuk where Turkey says it wants
    the referendum on the future of Kirkuk to be delayed while the Iraqi
    Kurds insist the ballot should be held by the end of the year as
    stipulated in the Iraqi constitution. Ankara fears the rights of the
    Turkmens in Kirkuk will be lost in a fait accompli.

    There too the Americans feel the issue is an internal matter for the
    Iraqis to decide and thus are not prepared to challenge the Kurds
    over the issue.

    So at the bottom line, while the American's cherish their strategic
    alliance with Turkey, they are reluctant to deliver on the PKK and
    on Kirkuk simply because they cannot afford to alienate the Iraqi
    Kurds at this crucial stage when they need their help more than ever.

    Gul should have realized that as he flew to Washington a long list of
    Americans were visiting Erbil to discuss the future of Iraq with the
    Kurdish leaders. There are rumors that the Americans are interested
    in building a major military base in the region.

    Besides all this, there is the Armenian issue that is sailing through
    troubled waters in the Democratic controlled Congress. The pro-Armenian
    lobby is pushing an anti-Turkish resolution in Congress and observers
    said there is a real threat that the document may pass.

    It is clear that while Gul has drawn American attention to the negative
    impact of such a resolution in Turkey the American congressional
    leaders are not too sensitive to these concerns. It is sad that Gul
    could not meet key people in the new congressional leadership.

    This is an uneasy trip for Gul not because Turkey's importance for
    the U.S. has diminished but because the Americans are sidetracked
    with other considerations which may well be a passing phase but can
    still damage Ankara-Washington ties.
Working...
X