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The Long Shadow Over Turkey

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  • The Long Shadow Over Turkey

    THE LONG SHADOW OVER TURKEY

    The Japan Times
    October 16, 2007, Tuesday

    Domestic politics once again threatens to roil U.S. relations with a
    key ally. This time the offended nation is Turkey, which is angered
    and insulted by a U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs
    Committee vote to label as genocide the deaths of Armenians killed
    in Turkey nearly a century ago. More troubling still, however, is
    the prospect of Ankara venting its anger by attacking rebel Kurds in
    northern Iraq and unleashing yet more violence on an already strained
    and unstable region.

    About 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks around
    the time of World War I. This horrific event remains shrouded in
    controversy, not least because the Turkish government insists that
    no such mass killing occurred.

    Rather, it claims the deaths were the result of chaos that accompanied
    the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and that the violence claimed the
    lives of many Turks as well. Armenians are not convinced by the Turkish
    claim and the issue has hung over relations between the two countries.

    Within the United States, the Armenian lobby has pushed for years for
    recognition of this injustice as well. Those hopes were frustrated
    by recognition that such a move would complicate, if not damage,
    Washington's relations with Ankara, a key ally in the Muslim world and
    one in a critical geostrategic location. However, relations between
    this White House and Congress have deteriorated to the point where
    legislators - especially those in the Democratic Party - are no longer
    inclined to afford President George W. Bush much deference.

    Neither a presidential statement that noted "We all deeply regret
    the tragic suffering of the Armenian people that began in 1915"
    - but omitted the word "genocide"- nor a warning by Mr. Bush that
    passage of the nonbinding resolution "would do great harm to our
    relations with a key ally in NATO and in the global war on terror"
    deterred lawmakers. The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 27-21
    to label the deaths of Armenians a century ago as genocide. The
    White House is still pressing to put off a vote by the full House,
    but that effort is unlikely to succeed.

    Turkey reacted as predicted. The country's ambassador to the
    U.S. was recalled, although the move is likely to be temporary. The
    U.S. ambassador to Turkey was told by the Foreign Ministry of Turkish
    "unease" over the resolution. Turkey's president, Mr. Abdullah Gul,
    criticized the decision to move toward a vote by the full House. The
    head of Turkey's navy canceled a trip to the U.S.

    Those reactions were just for starters. U.S. officials are now
    worried about two additional moves that could cause considerably
    more trouble. The first would be a decision to suspend or scale back
    cooperation with the U.S. in Iraq. Currently, about 70 percent of
    all air cargo sent to Iraq transits Turkey and its airspace, as does
    about one-third of all fuel used by the U.S. military. Much of the
    new equipment used by U.S. forces goes through Turkey, and U.S. bases
    get water and other supplies by land via Turkish truckers.

    While a decision to end that cooperation would squeeze U.S. forces -
    and make it more difficult for the coalition to help stabilize Iraq -
    a second decision could actively contribute to instability. Turkey
    has for three decades fought Kurdish rebels who have protested
    discrimination against their people. Those rebels seek to create an
    ethnic homeland for Kurds, and an estimated 30,000 lives have been
    lost in the fight. Kurds are spread across the Middle East, but there
    is a concentration in northern Iraq, where they have established a
    quasi-autonomous zone that they govern and which has been a relatively
    peaceful area during the disintegration of the rest of Iraq.

    Ankara claims the zone is also a safe haven for an estimated 3,000
    members of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which is fighting to
    set up a Kurdish homeland. Those rebels have become increasingly
    aggressive. Recently, they have launched several attacks against
    Turkish targets, killing 15 Turkish soldiers. Earlier, the PKK
    had attacked a civilian bus with automatic weapons fire, killing 13
    civilians, including a child. Turkey concluded an agreement last month
    with the Baghdad government to halt the attacks, but plainly that has
    failed. Now, the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    is prepared to take matters into its own hands. It will present
    a resolution to Parliament shortly that will authorize assaults
    into Iraq against the guerrillas. Fighting in northern Iraq could
    destabilize the one region that has been relatively peaceful.

    The House vote adds fuel to the Turkish fire, increasing anger and
    feelings of neglect by an ally. It certainly diminishes U.S. influence
    over decision making in Ankara. Such is the price to pay for trying
    to recognize a horrible tragedy of a century ago.
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