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  • Why Turks no longer love the U.S.

    November 01, 2007
    Christian Science Monitor

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/1101/p06s02 -wome.html

    Why Turks no longer love the U.S.


    US Secretary Rice arrives Friday to defuse tensions over Kurdish
    rebels in Iraq.


    By Yigal Schleifer | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

    Istanbul, Turkey


    The US has hailed Turkey as moderate Islamic democracy, the kind it
    would like to see develop elsewhere. It's a key NATO ally, with US
    aircraft stationed here.

    Yet, as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrives in Ankara Friday
    to defuse tensions over Kurdish rebels operating in Iraq, she faces a
    nation that is now the most anti-American in the world, according to
    one survey. In the meetings with Ms. Rice, and next Monday in
    Washington with President Bush, Turkey's prime minister is expected to
    press the US to take steps against the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
    rebels in Iraq.

    That might help soften attitudes here toward the US. But given the
    depth of anti-American feeling that has developed in just the past few
    years, few expect Turkish public opinion to turn quickly.

    In a recent global survey by the Pew Research Center, only 9 percent
    of Turks held a favorable view of the United States (down from 52
    percent in 2000), a figure that placed Turkey at the rock bottom of
    the 46 countries surveyed.

    "People have become accustomed to this plot line of America being a
    threat to Turkish national security. This was inconceivable five years
    ago, but now it has come to be the prevailing view," says Ihsan Dagi,
    a professor of international relations at Ankara's Middle East
    Technical University.

    That perception has been reinforced in the past two years by some of
    Turkey's most popular books and films which portray the US and Turkey
    at odds - if not at war. Turkey's all-time box office champ, 2006's
    "Valley of the Wolves," saw a ragtag Turkish force square off
    heroically against a whole division of bloodthirsty American soldiers
    in northern Iraq.

    "Metal Storm," a bestselling political fantasy book from the year
    before, went even further, describing an all out war between Ankara
    and Washington in the not so distant future (the year 2007, to be
    exact), in which Turkey ultimately prevails with the help of Russia
    and the European Union.

    Analysts say the public's mood represents a trend that has worrying
    implications for the future health of the ties between the two NATO
    allies.

    "The public is really convinced that the United States is no longer a
    friend and ally. That is really frustrating," says Professor Dagi.

    Real life events have also done little to improve America's image in
    Turkey. The recent passage by a US congressional committee of a
    resolution recognizing the mass killing of Armenians in the final days
    of the Ottoman Empire as a genocide - something Turkey strongly
    rejects - set public opinion aflame.

    At the same time, the renewed attacks on Turkish forces by PKK
    guerrillas have only strengthened the widespread belief that
    Washington is doing little to get rid of the PKK in northern
    Iraq. Ankara has been building up its troops on the Iraqi border and
    threatening an invasion, something Washington strongly opposes.

    "The clearest fact is that the real threats against Turkey come not
    from its neighbors, but from its 'allies' and each new development
    brings Turkey face to face with its Western allies," Ali Bulac, a
    columnist for the liberal-Islamic Zaman newspaper, recently
    wrote. "The United States ... is taking its place on the stage as the
    force behind the PKK."

    Says Gunduz Aktan, a former Turkish ambassador who is currently a
    parliamentarian with the right-wing Nationalist Action Party (MHP):
    "The entire Turkish public opinion now is one of frustration and
    exasperation and a kind of acute expectation of the US to do something
    meaningful and concrete [on the PKK issue] and to understand the
    problem that we have in Turkey."

    But experts say Turkey's growing anti-Americanism also has a domestic
    element. The success of the Islamic-rooted ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) has forced Turkey to confront the issue of how
    to reconcile secularism with Islam, while the renewal of PKK violence
    has again brought to the surface the decades-long struggle to square a
    strong national Turkish identity with the country's diverse ethnic
    identities.

    "Turkey is caught right now between East and West, between Islam and
    secularism, between Kurdish and Turkish nationalism," says Omer
    Taspinar, director of the Turkey program at the Brookings Institution,
    a Washington think tank. "Since the cold war ended, we are living in
    an era where all the problems that defined the Turkish Republic in the
    early years are back, and Turkey is blaming the West for this."

    The Rice visit and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's trip
    to the White House on Nov. 5 are part of an effort to stave off any
    further deterioration in US-Turkish relations. "I will openly tell him
    [President George Bush] that we expect concrete, immediate steps
    against the terrorists," Mr. Erdogan recently told parliamentarians
    from his party. "The problem of the PKK terrorist organization is a
    test of sincerity for everybody," he said. "This test carries great
    importance for the region and in determining the fate of our future
    relations."

    Observers inside and outside Turkey say Ankara could play a role in
    easing regional tensions by dropping its objections to speaking
    directly with the Kurdish Regional Government in northern Iraq and its
    leader, Massoud Barzani.

    But METU's Dagi says that without American action on the PKK front,
    there is little Ankara can do to defuse the public's growing dislike
    of the US.

    "The government has somehow been taken hostage by this public mood,"
    he says. "The first thing is to deal with this mood, and in that
    America has to contribute something."

    Most Anti-American Nations

    Percentage surveyed with an unfavorable view of the US

    1. Turkey - 83 percent
    2. Pakistan - 68
    3. Morocco - 56
    4. Argentina - 72
    5. Jordan - 78
    6. Egypt - 78
    7. Malaysia - 69
    8. Indonesia - 66
    9. Germany - 66
    10. Spain - 60

    Source: June 2007 Pew Global Attitudes Project (Pewglobal.org)

    Copyright © 2007 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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