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Armenia row threatens US-Turkish ties

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  • Armenia row threatens US-Turkish ties

    Armenia row threatens US-Turkish ties

    By Jonathan Marcus
    BBC diplomatic correspondent
    2007/10/11

    This is not just a story about phantoms from the past.

    It speaks powerfully about the changing relationship between two key
    allies in a Middle East where the strategic landscape has been
    transformed by America's invasion of Iraq.

    The warnings from Turkey could not be clearer. If the full House of
    Representatives in Washington votes to back the labelling of the mass
    killing of Armenians as genocide, then serious consequences will
    follow.

    This could mean, for example, denying the US military the ability to
    ship crucial supplies through Turkish bases for operations in Iraq.

    The fact that President George Bush publicly urged Congress not to
    proceed with the issue seems to have had little impact either at home
    or abroad. And that this would be a non-binding resolution, implying
    no practical shift in US policy, seems to make little difference to
    Turkish opinion either.

    It is clear the Armenian massacres are a hugely sensitive issue for
    Turkey. Debate has raged on this issue, often prompting diplomatic
    strains. It has been a factor complicating ties, for example, between
    Ankara and Paris.

    Complicated relationship

    But the strains between the US and Turkey arise from the confluence of
    a number of factors.

    Things are made worse by the fact that this row is unfolding in a very
    different context from that which characterised the generally stable
    relationship between Washington and Ankara during the Cold War years.

    Then, Turkey anchored the Atlantic Alliance's southern flank against
    attack from the Soviet Union. In many ways the relationship was
    simple.

    Today, it is much more complex, not least because of the political
    transformation that has taken place inside Turkey. The country's
    secular-minded generals now play an important, but less central, role
    in day-to-day governance, and a moderate Islamist-rooted party has
    taken the democratic path to power.

    The initial crunch in US-Turkish ties came in the run-up to the US
    invasion of Iraq, when the Turkish parliament refused to allow Turkish
    territory to be the staging post for the operation to topple Saddam
    Hussein's regime.

    Since then both sides have tried to repair the damage, with the
    Americans, for example, applying huge diplomatic pressure to encourage
    some of its more reluctant allies to facilitate Turkey's membership of
    the European Union.

    The removal of a strong Iraq from the Middle East's political
    chessboard has, though, greatly changed the regional dynamics. It has
    served to accentuate Turkish aspirations of becoming a key diplomatic
    player.

    Feeling partially rebuffed by the Europeans, given the tortuous
    process of EU accession, Turkey is seeking new ties and new allies in
    the Middle East.

    Its overtures have not been hampered by the fact that it still
    maintains reasonably close ties with Israel. Indeed that country has
    helped Turkey to take on something of a mediating role.

    Kurdish factor

    But the collapse of strong central authority in Iraq has also provided
    another looming problem with Washington.

    The last thing that Turkey wants to see is an independent Kurdish
    state in northern Iraq which it believes would create wider
    instability. But it also wants something done about Kurdish guerrillas
    - PKK fighters - who continue to cross over the border to attack
    Turkish troops.

    In the wake of recent incidents there are now growing fears of a
    Turkish military incursion into northern Iraq to neutralise Kurdish
    separatist guerrillas who have their camps there.

    The pressures on the Turkish authorities to act are growing. The
    Turkish army has stepped up its bombardment of targets in northern
    Iraq.

    Officials in Baghdad and Washington are alarmed. This is a new element
    in the Iraqi drama that the Americans want to avoid at all costs.

    Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7039506.stm
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