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Capitol Hill Hearing Testimony: US-Turkish Relations By Daniel Fried

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  • Capitol Hill Hearing Testimony: US-Turkish Relations By Daniel Fried

    CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY: US-TURKISH RELATIONS BY DANIEL FRIED FROM STATE DEPT.

    Congressional Quarterly
    CQ Congressional Testimony
    March 15, 2007 Thursday

    COMMITTEE: HOUSE FOREIGN AFFAIRS
    SUBCOMMITTEE: EUROPE
    HEADLINE: U.S.-TURKISH RELATIONS
    TESTIMONY-BY: DANIEL FRIED, ASSISTANT SECRETARY
    AFFILIATION: DEPARTMENT OF STATE

    Statement of Daniel Fried Assistant Secretary, European and Eurasian
    Affairs Department of State

    Committee on House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Europe

    Chairman Wexler, Ranking Member Gallegly, Members of the Sub-
    Committee, thank you for the opportunity to be here. I will speak to
    you today about how the United States and Turkey are working together
    closely to address our common challenges, particularly in the Middle
    East but also more globally.

    Secretary Rice has instructed me to shift the focus of the U.S.-
    Turkey relationship from one of simply managing challenges to
    one where the United States and Turkey are working cooperatively
    to advance a broad range of issues, putting in action our shared
    interests and common values. Our shared interests include stability
    and freedom in Iraq and Afghanistan, democratic reform in the broader
    Middle East, energy security across Eurasia, and Turkey's deeper
    anchoring in Europe. Our common values start from our two countries'
    deep commitment to democracy. Turkey, a majority Muslim state with
    a deepening democracy with a tradition of secular governance, is
    of strategic importance to the United States. Its 160-year legacy
    of modernizing reform, dating back to the late Ottoman period, can
    inspire people throughout the broader Middle East who thirst for
    democratic freedom and market- based prosperity.

    Turkey also has a rapidly growing market economy. Over the past five
    years it has had the highest GDP growth rate of any OECD country,
    averaging over seven percent a year. The Turkish authorities have
    tamed inflation from over 25 percent for a generation to under 10
    percent from 2004-2006.

    Washington and Ankara have developed a blueprint to reinvigorate
    our bilateral relations. It is the "Shared Vision" statement that
    Secretary Rice and Foreign Minister Gul concluded in Washington in
    July 2006. This document identifies ten key sectors for cooperation.

    It also establishes new diplomatic mechanisms to structure our
    engagements on the tactical, operational, and strategic levels. We
    have made significant progress in implementing the "Shared Vision"
    statement, as I'll discuss below. But much work remains, with
    anti-Americanism remaining at a historic high among the Turkish public
    and providing a context for Turkey's complex political dynamic.

    Iraq and Afghanistan

    We have made steady progress over the past two years in elevating
    bilateral U.S.-Turkish relations from their low point on March 1,
    2003, when the Turkish Grand National Assembly voted not to allow
    U.S. forces to deploy through Turkey to Iraq. Today, Turkey supports
    U.S. objectives in Iraq and has urged us not to abandon the Iraqi
    people. Coordination between our embassies in Baghdad is working
    well, with our Turkish ally offering us insights and support. Turkey
    actively encourages various Iraqi communities to participate in Iraq's
    political processes, and provides training to Iraqi political parties,
    diplomats, and security forces. Most recently, Turkey participated
    in the first Iraq Neighbors Conference in Baghdad, and has offered to
    host the ministerial meeting of the Iraq Neighbors group in Istanbul,
    as we pursue a shared goal of a stable, democratic, and unified Iraq.

    Turkey provides extensive logistical support to our troops in Iraq.

    This critical lifeline includes:

    The cargo hub at Incirlik Air Base, through which we ship 74 percent of
    all air cargo to Iraq, with six US military C-17 aircraft transporting
    the amount of cargo it took 9-10 aircraft to move from Germany,
    saving $160 million annually.

    The land border crossing at Habur Gate accounts for delivery to Iraq
    of approximately 25 percent of the fuel used by Coalition forces.

    Turkey's grant of blanket over-flight clearances to U.S. military
    aircraft is of critical importance to our military operations in both
    Iraq and Afghanistan. Additionally, KC-135 tankers operating out of
    Incirlik have flown 3,400 sorties and delivered 35 million gallons
    of fuel to U.S. fighter and transport aircraft on missions in Iraq
    and Afghanistan.

    More than military support, Turkey's technical and financial assistance
    has played a crucial role in the economic stability and development of
    Iraq, particularly of northern Iraq. Turkish businessmen were among
    the first to arrive in Iraq after U.S. forces, and have played a key
    role in rebuilding infrastructure and commerce.

    Turkish truckers have risked their lives plying the roads of Iraq to
    deliver to Iraqis the necessities of everyday life.

    Turkey supplied a significant portion of Iraq's total fuel supply,
    primarily for consumers in the northern governorates. Billions of
    gallons of fuel have entered through Habur Gate in the past year
    despite occasional Iraqi arrears in payments.

    Turkey has the capacity to export 270 megawatts of electricity
    to northern Iraq, and averages around 220 megawatts, depending on
    the season.

    Turkey has played a vital role in Afghanistan in combating terrorism
    and promoting freedom and democracy. After commanding International
    Security Assistance Force (ISAF) II in 2002 and ISAF VII in 2005,
    Turkey is now sharing joint rotational command of ISAF Capital Regional
    Command for two years with France and Italy. Turkey opened a Provincial
    Reconstruction Team (PRT) in Wardak province last November. Turkey has
    also pledged $100 million in humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan's
    reconstruction and operation of schools and hospitals. We continue to
    press Turkey, a dependable NATO ally for almost 60 years, to contribute
    more troops in Afghanistan and to remove caveats to its deployment.

    Middle East

    Under Secretary Burns spoke to the House Foreign Affairs Committee
    last week regarding our comprehensive strategy for addressing the
    challenges posed by Iran. Turkey is part of the robust international
    coalition working to achieve a diplomatic solution to Iran's continuing
    noncompliance with its international nuclear obligations.

    Our cooperation with Turkey on these efforts is evidence of our close
    working relationship to promote international peace and security. It
    has stood firm with us and others to counter Iran's threat to
    regional stability. Turkey has committed itself to implement fully
    the provisions of UNSCR 1737, which imposes sanctions under Article
    41 of Chapter VII of the UN Charter on Iran's nuclear and ballistic
    missile programs.

    Additionally, Turkey is helping to apply targeted financial pressure on
    the Iranian regime by restricting banking transactions which support
    Iran's proliferation and terrorist activities. We will continue to
    discuss with Ankara how best to make clear to the Iranian regime the
    costs of its confrontational path. While we may occasionally differ
    somewhat over tactics, there is no disagreement between us as partners
    that an Iranian nuclear weapons capability is unacceptable.

    Turkey has been a partner in the efforts to achieve Israeli-
    Palestinian peace and, because of its close relations with both
    Israel and Arab states, has played a helpful role as honest broker
    in bridging some of the gaps. Turkey has a long history of close
    military and economic cooperation with Israel. Prime Minister Erdogan
    and Foreign Minister Gul have conducted their own shuttle diplomacy
    between Tel Aviv and Arab capitals to help advance peace, security,
    and stability in the Middle East. They have played a helpful role in
    encouraging the Palestinians to accept the Quartet principles.

    Another helpful Turkish initiative involves its desire to contribute
    to the economic development of the Palestinians by developing the Erez
    industrial zone, creating jobs and providing hope and opportunity
    for otherwise disillusioned individuals potentially vulnerable to
    recruitment by terrorists.

    One of the most tangible Turkish contributions has involved
    peacekeeping and safeguarding the integrity of Lebanon. Turkey has been
    actively engaged in Lebanon, notably by contributing about 900 troops
    to UNIFIL last fall, helping to bring stability to a violence-wracked
    region. During last summer's Israeli- Hezbollah clashes, Turkey helped
    evacuate almost 2000 American citizens from a war-torn Lebanon and
    assisted in their repatriation to the United States via safe haven
    in Turkey. In January, Turkey pledged $50 million in grants for
    reconstruction at the Lebanon international donors' conference, hosted
    by French President Chirac, which resulted in an overwhelming global
    response of $7.6 billion in pledges, including the Secretary's pledge
    of $770 million in humanitarian, reconstruction and security support.

    Turkey is also a key partner in our efforts to empower civil society
    and advance democratic freedom in the broader Middle East. No state
    is a model, and certainly no state is a perfect one. But Turkey's
    example of secular democracy with a Muslim majority population, a
    burgeoning open economy, worldwide commercial networks, and its long
    experience with modernizing reform, make it a crucial partner in the
    Forum for the Future. Turkey is a co-sponsor - along with Italy and
    Yemen - of the Forum's Democracy Assistance Dialogue, and is making
    important contributions to advance women's rights and develop non-
    governmental organizations in a wide range of Muslim societies
    stretching from North Africa to Central Asia.

    Energy Security

    During the late 1990s, cooperation on energy security became
    a cornerstone of the U.S.-Turkey partnership. The Baku-Tbilisi-
    Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline grew from a vision of an energy corridor
    that would resurrect the Great Silk Road, articulated at that time
    by Turkey, Georgia, and Azerbaijan. Many were skeptical, but the
    United States offered strong support to help realize this vision,
    working with these governments and with companies to establish a
    public-private partnership that has resulted in one of the most complex
    and successful pipeline projects of all time. BTC was inaugurated in
    July. It will reach full capacity of one million barrels of oil per
    day over the next few years, and connect oil fields in the Caspian
    Sea with global markets reached from Turkey's Mediterranean Sea port
    of Ceyhan. A companion natural gas pipeline, the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum
    (BTE), is about to begin delivering Azerbaijani natural gas from the
    Shah Deniz field in the Caspian to Georgia and Turkey.

    There is also the Samsun-Ceyhan project, a Bosporus Bypass oil pipeline
    that takes oil from Turkey's Black Sea coast and delivers it to the
    Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. This particular project may be already
    on its way to commercial viability, something we would welcome.

    We now stand at the edge of a new generation of Caspian energy
    investments, which will build on BTC and BTE and help the Euroatlantic
    community strengthen its energy security. Oil producers in Kazakhstan
    are negotiating on ways to ship their product by barge across the
    Caspian Sea and into BTC, whose capacity could be expanded by as much
    as 80 percent. Perhaps of even greater strategic significance is the
    prospect for enlarging BTE with expanded gas production and exports
    from Azerbaijan. We are now working with governments and companies
    to help Azerbaijan increase its gas production sufficiently by 2012
    to 2014 to fill the emerging Turkey-Greece-Italy pipeline and the
    prospective Nabucco pipeline linking Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania,
    Hungary, and Austria. Over the next decade, we hope a trans-Caspian
    gas pipeline from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan will connect with
    BTE. We have also just launched trilateral discussions with Ankara
    and Baghdad on developing gas production in northern Iraq for export
    to Europe via Turkey.

    As these natural gas projects develop, they will emerge as a Southern
    Corridor of infrastructure that will offer fair and transparent
    competition to Gazprom's massive network of gas pipelines that is in
    place - and expanding - in Northern Europe. The Southern Corridor can
    change Eurasia's strategic map by offering Europe its best hope for
    large volumes of natural gas supplies that will allow diversification
    away from a deepening reliance on one supplier or network. Turkey,
    if it continues to act as a partner with its neighbors, including
    by reaching a commercially attractive gas transit agreement with
    Azerbaijan, will be the centerpiece of this grand strategic effort.

    Counterterrorism

    We are committed to eliminating the threat of PKK terrorism in northern
    Iraq, where this terrorist group is headquartered and from which it
    continues to launch deadly attacks in Turkey. We have made progress
    against PKK operatives and support networks in Europe. As a result of
    this close cooperation, France and Belgium recently arrested several
    PKK terror financiers linked to financing attacks against Turkey. But
    we also must achieve concrete results against the PKK in Iraq. The
    Secretary last August appointed General (ret) Joseph Ralston,
    formerly Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, as Special Envoy to
    Counter the PKK. General (ret) Ralston has been coordinating closely
    with his Turkish counterpart, General (ret) Edip Baser, and his Iraqi
    counterpart, Minister of State Shirwan al-Waili, to end the PKK threat.

    Turkey has also made major contributions to our own efforts to
    combat terror. I have already discussed Turkey's crucial efforts in
    Afghanistan. Additional counterterrorism support from Turkey came
    in mid-February when it hosted in Istanbul the Global Initiative to
    Combat Nuclear Terrorism, a U.S.-Russia led initiative, which will
    seek to prevent such particularly destructive acts.

    Domestic Politics: Elections, Trends of Nationalism, Liberalism,
    and Democracy

    Turkish-American partnership must rest on a foundation of Turkey's own
    democratic development. Turkey remains a secular, democratic state. But
    it is today a very different and a far more robust democracy than the
    Turkey of a generation ago. Former boundaries of expression and limits
    upon political opinions are gone or much widened. Basic freedoms are
    more respected.

    But with greater democratic freedoms has come increased volatility
    and deeper debate within Turkey about its strategic course, about
    its identity, and about the role of religion in public and political
    life. These debates within Turkey are taking place as the country
    enters a double-election year, with presidential elections in May
    and parliamentary elections in November.

    The volatility of debate has given rise to and coincided with an
    undercurrent of popular nationalism, frustration with Europe, and
    even anti-Americanism. One cause of these trends is Turkish citizens'
    frustration with PKK terrorism from Iraq, and a popular belief that the
    United States could do more to combat the PKK terrorists, whom Turks
    view as the greatest threat to their national security. Another cause
    is the identity crisis dominating Turkish society as Turkey strives
    for admission in the European Union. Many Turks feel humiliated by
    what they perceive as the shifting of accession requirements by the
    EU even as Turkey advanced serious constitutional and market economic
    reforms, and made significant compromises on the Cyprus question. While
    it is up to the Turks to meet the EU's requirements for accession,
    many Turks believe that some in Europe use the complex EU accession
    process to mask a bias against Turkey.

    This political turmoil and the widening boundaries of democratic
    expression have propelled a new nationalism as one factor common
    across Turkey's political spectrum. At the same time, a growing and
    sophisticated middle class also supports the emergence of progressive
    and liberal ideas in Turkey. The ruling Justice and Development (AK)
    Party, with its foundation in Turkey's traditional Islamic culture
    but also including progressive and liberal elements, is one expression
    of the different strains in Turkish political life today.

    Turkey's secular elite, rooted in the civilian and military
    bureaucracies that play a key role in Turkey's democracy, also reflects
    these trends. And these two diverse political camps are in competition
    with each other.

    As political tension heightens with the advance of Turkey's election
    campaigns, additional political strains can undermine our ability
    to sustain our improvement in U.S.-Turkish relations and continue
    to reap the benefits in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Middle East, and the
    Caspian region that I have described above.

    Turkey-Armenia Relations

    Against this complex background of shared interests, common values,
    and political turbulence, Turkey now faces the possibility of a U.S.

    Congressional resolution defining as genocide the mass killings and
    forced exile of as many as 1.5 million Armenians in the final years of
    the Ottoman Empire. The Administration has never denied - nor does it
    dispute or minimize - the historical facts of these mass murders and
    ethnic cleansing. Each year, the President issues a solemn statement
    on April 24, Armenian Remembrance Day, recognizing these atrocities
    and the suffering inflicted on Armenians. The Administration's goal
    is to stimulate a candid exploration within Turkish society of these
    horrific events in an effort to help Turkey reconcile with its painful
    past and with Armenia. This is not easy.

    It was not easy for the United States to address its own historical
    dark spots, including slavery and the internment of U.S. citizens
    of Japanese descent during WWII. We will have to be persistent and
    thoughtful.

    But after a long silence, Turkey is making progress. The terrible
    murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink by an ultra-
    nationalist accelerated an intellectual opening in Turkish society,
    with more than 100,000 Turkish citizens of all political, confessional,
    and ethnic backgrounds demonstrating at Dink's funeral in support of
    tolerance and a candid exploration of Turkey's past.

    Their shouts of "We are all Hrant Dink; we are all Armenian" resonate
    in the ears of millions of people in Turkey and the world over who
    believe in freedom of speech, freedom of expression, and human dignity
    for all of Turkey's citizens.

    Political leaders across the political spectrum in Turkey condemned
    the killing. President Sezer said the murder was "ugly and shameful."

    Turkish Chief of General Staff General Buyukanit called the killing a
    "heinous act" and said the "shots fired on Hrant Dink were . . . . .

    fired on Turkey." We are seeing growing calls, including from Prime
    Minister Erdogan and Foreign Minister Gul, for changes to Article 301
    of the Constitution, which, in criminalizing "insulting Turkishness,"
    stifles Turkey's ability to discuss openly the events of 1915. We
    welcome Turkish leaders' and opinion makers' calls to amend or repeal
    Article 301.

    Against this backdrop, we believe that H.Res. 106 would undercut
    those voices emerging in Turkey who call for a truthful exploration of
    these events in pursuit of Turkey's reconciliation with its own past
    and with Armenia. We hear from members of the 60,000-70,000 strong
    Armenian-Turkish community that any such resolution would raise popular
    emotions so dramatically as to threaten their personal security.

    This Administration, like the previous Administration before it,
    opposes any resolution that attempts to define how free-thinking
    people should term the horrific tragedy of 1915. We believe this
    question, which is of such enormous human significance, should be
    resolved not by politicians, but through heartfelt introspection by
    historians, philosophers, and common people. Our goal is an opening
    of the Turkish mind and the Turkish heart. Our fear is that passage
    of any such resolution would close minds and harden hearts.

    Secretary Rice has an ambitious agenda with Turkey over the next two
    years, and we hope to work with Congress to achieve success in these
    goals. We look forward to close consultation with the Subcommittee,
    Committee and other Members interested in our agenda with Turkey.

    Mr. Chairman, Congressman Gallegly, members of the Committee, I am
    grateful for the opportunity to speak before you, and I look forward
    to your questions.
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