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  • US keeps low profile as Turkey simmers in crisis

    Middle East Times, Egypt
    May 11 2007


    US keeps low profile as Turkey simmers in crisis
    AFP

    May 11, 2007


    WASHINGTON -- The United States is lying low as a political crisis
    unfolds in Turkey, a pivotal military ally that the administration
    sees as a democratic bridge between Islam and Europe.

    Washington has given only a muted response to veiled threats of
    intervention from the Turkish military to prevent the election of an
    Islamist figure as the staunchly secular country's president.

    "There's a lack of trust in Ankara, so wise counsel to the generals
    to keep to their barracks wouldn't do much good in this situation,"
    said Steven Cook, an expert on Turkey at the Council on Foreign
    Relations in New York.

    "America's standing in Turkey is quite low, so probably the best
    thing for the administration is to continue to keep a low profile and
    say it supports democracy in Turkey," he said.

    The prospect of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), which
    has its roots in Islam, taking the presidency has touched off mass
    protests in Turkey by opponents who want no mix between the state and
    religion.

    The AKP Thursday rushed a package of constitutional reforms through
    parliament, including one that would permit Turkey's president to be
    elected directly by the people, instead of by lawmakers.

    But the bill has to be approved by outgoing President Ahmet Necdet
    Sezer, who, like the army, is a fierce defender of Turkey's secular
    traditions, and who has often clashed with the AKP.

    "It's very important that we support their democratic processes," US
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Thursday, after the AKP
    failed twice to get its candidate for president elected by deputies.

    Instability in Turkey would hardly be welcome in Washington, where
    the country is viewed as a democratic bulwark and North Atlantic
    Treaty Organization ally that straddles Europe and the Middle East.

    But recent events have undermined the relationship. Tensions have
    simmered since 2003, when Turkey refused to allow the US military to
    transit its territory to open a northern front in the invasion of
    Iraq.

    Iraq continues to fuel those tensions. Turkey's army chief last month
    called for an incursion into northern Iraq, to hunt down PKK Kurdish
    rebels who have been launching cross-border strikes from the Kurdish
    zone of Iraq.

    Turkey is meanwhile fuming over Kurdish plans to hold a referendum in
    the oil-rich northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, suspecting a plot to
    build up a viable, independent Kurdistan that could seep into its own
    Kurdish region.

    The secretary of state, however, said Turkey had shown "stronger
    support ... for the new democracy in Iraq than one might have
    expected."

    And Rice noted that the AKP-led government had pushed through major
    reforms to bolster its case for membership of the European Union,
    adding that Washington remained "very supportive" of Turkey's entry
    into the EU.

    However, public support in Turkey for EU membership has slumped as
    accession talks drag on at a snail's pace, while French
    president-elect Nicolas Sarkozy says that Turkey "does not have a
    place" in the European club.

    Analysts said that given the delicate backdrop in Iraq and Europe,
    there was little the US administration could do to help ease the
    political tensions in Turkey.

    Michael Rubin at Washington's American Enterprise Institute said the
    US government would be "all talk and no actions" if the Turkish armed
    forces were to push into northern Iraq against the PKK.

    "There is a perfect storm looming this year, with two elections in
    Turkey amplifying the political debate, the Kirkuk referendum, and
    the possibility, still, of an Armenian genocide resolution in the US
    Congress," Rubin added.

    Any such resolution would infuriate Turkey, which rejects the
    "genocide" label for the 1915 mass killings of ethnic Armenians in
    the Ottoman Empire.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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