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Outside View: America's Turkey Problem

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  • Outside View: America's Turkey Problem

    Post Chronicle
    Feb 23 2007

    Outside View: America's Turkey Problem
    By F. Stephen Larrabee and Suat Kiniklioglu
    Feb 23, 2007

    As America struggles to stabilize Iraq while fighting rages, the last
    thing it needs is to become embroiled in a new crisis with Turkey.

    But that is where Washington appears headed if Congress passes a
    resolution recently introduced by U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. and
    several colleagues in the U.S. House of Representatives accusing
    Turkey of committing genocide against Armenians from 1915 to 1918.

    Turkey denies claims by Armenians that the Ottoman Empire, Turkey's
    predecessor government, caused the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians in
    a genocide. The Turkish government contends that far fewer Armenians
    died, and that Armenians were killed or displaced in civil unrest
    when the Ottoman Empire collapsed.

    Clarifying the events surrounding the tragic deaths of the Armenians
    is an important issue and deserves attention. But passage of the
    proposed congressional resolution would open a Pandora's box of new
    problems by aggravating U.S.-Turkish relations and seriously
    impairing the progress Turkey has made to address the Armenian issue
    -- all while failing to promote the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation
    that is most needed.

    The Bush administration has warned that even congressional debate of
    the resolution could damage U.S.-Turkish relations. And even Schiff
    has acknowledged that the resolution might harm relations between the
    two countries in the short term.

    The resolution comes at a particularly sensitive moment in Turkish
    domestic politics. Turkey is entering a volatile electoral period,
    with presidential elections in May and parliamentary elections in
    November.

    As these elections approach, Turkish politicians will be tempted to
    play to the galleries. Consequently, the passage of the genocide
    resolution could put the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan under strong domestic pressure to reduce cooperation with the
    United States.

    A new crisis in U.S.-Turkish relations would hurt America at a time
    when the two nations are beginning to overcome the strains caused by
    the U.S. invasion of Iraq, and could undercut President Bush's new
    strategy to stabilize Iraq.

    Some 60 percent of all U.S. military equipment destined for Iraq goes
    through the territory or airspace of Turkey, a Muslim ally and member
    of NATO. If this route to Iraq were restricted or closed entirely,
    the ability of the United States to effectively combat the insurgency
    and violent militias in Iraq would be impaired.

    The Erdogan government could also come under domestic pressure to
    restrict U.S. use of the air base at Incirlik in southern Turkey to
    re-supply American troops in Afghanistan.

    http://www.postchronicle.com/news/security/article _21265756.shtml
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