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  • China, Turkey Angry At US Moves

    CHINA, TURKEY ANGRY AT US MOVES
    By Jennifer Loven

    The Associated Press
    Oct 17 2007

    WASHINGTON (AP) - The Democratic Congress, a thorn in President
    Bush's side from the get-go on Iraq, now is contributing to diplomatic
    headaches for the White House in other parts of the world.

    A Capitol Hill ceremony on Wednesday was to confer the prestigious
    Congressional Gold Medal on the Dalai Lama. The reaction from China,
    which reviles the exiled spiritual leader of Tibet's Buddhists as a
    separatist, was swift and angry.

    Beijing pulled out of an international strategy session on Iran - a
    subtle reminder to the Bush administration that China's vote will be
    the key to winning the new United Nations sanctions on Tehran sought
    by the United States.

    Turkey, meanwhile, is considering retaliation for a House resolution
    labeling as genocide the World War I-era killing of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians in the final years of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey denies
    the deaths were a systematic campaign to eliminate Armenians and
    considers a committee's passage of the resolution last week an affront.

    Both actions amount to a sharp poke in the eye to countries whose
    cooperation is sorely needed by the United States on big issues
    including the Iraq war and the fights to contain Iran and North Korea's
    nuclear ambitions. They lessen Bush's ability to wheel and deal abroad,
    where leaders and the people make little or no distinction between
    U.S. policy that originates in Congress or at the White House.

    And these are only the latest examples of Congress, in Democratic
    hands since January, doing what it pleases on foreign policy with
    little ability for the White House to change the outcome.

    In April, for instance, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi made a high-profile
    visit to Syria, a diplomatic overture that was at odds with White
    House policy and sharply criticized by Bush.

    The House also this summer passed a resolution that urged Japan to
    more clearly and formally apologize for forcing thousands of Asian
    women into sex slavery during World War II, increasing tensions with
    Tokyo and contributing to a rise in anti-American sentiment in Japan.

    And lawmakers are blocking approval of a pending free-trade deal
    with South Korea because of barriers erected by Seoul to keep out
    U.S. autos and beef.

    "It entirely weakens the administration's leverage in these countries,"
    said Mike Green, who worked on Bush's National Security Council and
    is now with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a
    Washington think tank. "It looks like a gratuitous political attack
    on an ally."

    The accolades for the Dalai Lama in Washington this week have provoked
    an unusually blunt response from Beijing, which particularly resents
    Bush's role. To be sure, Congress had a Republican majority last year
    when it approved adding the Dalai Lama to the list of those given its
    highest civilian honor. Yet, it wasn't until Democrats took over that
    the decision was made to stage a public presentation ceremony.

    But unlike the vote that angered Turkey, Bush supports the move
    to honor the Tibetan leader and will deliver brief remarks at the
    festivities in the Capitol Rotunda.

    He had little choice; he's only missed other Congressional Gold Medal
    ceremonies because of travel. Skipping one for the Dalai Lama could
    have produced worse consequences than following precedent.

    But Bush also chose to host the spiritual leader for a private
    meeting on Tuesday in the White House residence - again following
    precedent, but one that mightily displeased China. In one small nod
    to Beijing's concerns, the White House decided against following the
    previous practice of publicly releasing a photo of Bush and the Dalai
    Lama together.

    Bush argued during a Wednesday news conference that "I don't think
    it's going to damage - severely damage" the Washington-Beijing
    relationship. The issue of religious freedom in China, and particularly
    Tibet, has long been on the U.S.-China agenda, and Bush informed
    Chinese President Hu Jintao in September that he would participate
    in Wednesday's ceremony, at the same time that he promised to attend
    the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.

    Turkey, meanwhile, is a full-on ally, a NATO member and a key Muslim
    partner for Washington even more critical now because of the many
    supply lines to troops in Iraq that go through and over the country.

    The United States also is working to keep Turkey from launching an
    offensive against Kurdish rebels across the border in northern Iraq,
    fearing it would destabilize one of Iraq's most stable areas.

    Turkey's Parliament on Wednesday overwhelmingly approved such a
    military action.

    "Congress has more important work to do than antagonizing a democratic
    ally in the Muslim world, especially one that's providing vital
    support for our military every day," Bush told reporters Wednesday.

    EDITOR'S NOTE _ Jennifer Loven covers the White House for The
    Associated Press.
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