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The Future of the U.S.-Turkey Relationship

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  • The Future of the U.S.-Turkey Relationship

    The Future of the U.S.-Turkey Relationship
    Saturday, 15 September 2007, 2:49 am
    Speech: US State Department

    R. Nicholas Burns
    Under Secretary for Political Affairs
    Remarks at the Atlantic Council of the United States (ACUS)
    Washington, DC
    September 13, 2007
    The Future of the U.S.-Turkey Relationship - Remarks at the Atlantic
    Council of the United States
    As Prepared
    I am pleased to be back at the Atlantic Council to discuss what is one
    of the most critical relationships for America in the world today --
    the relationship between the United States and Turkey. Fred, thank you
    for hosting me tonight. I appreciate the invitation by Fred Kempe and
    the Atlantic Council Board to be here.
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    Thank you to Henry Catto, Chairman emeritus of the Atlantic
    Council. Thanks to Ambassador Marc Grossman for his warm
    introduction. It is a pleasure to see the Ambassador of Turkey, Nabi
    Sensoy, the Ambassador of Armenia, Tatoul Markarian, Ambassador Mark
    Parris and Jim Holmes here tonight.
    This is an important moment for the relationship between the United
    States and Turkey. Turkey has just elected a new government. Our
    countries now need to enter into a new era of our relationship and to
    commit to a revival of our very close friendship and alliance.
    I will visit Ankara and Istanbul soon to bring a strong and clear
    message from our leadership -- the United States is committed to
    revitalize this critical partnership. Restoring a sense of strategic
    partnership in the broad range of U.S.-Turkish relations -- extending
    beyond government-to-government cooperation to a flowering of private
    sector ties between our people -- will be a major priority for the
    United States in the coming months. It is indeed time to rejuvenate
    and restore America's relationship with Turkey.
    The Turkish people have just concluded important, even historic
    elections. These elections demonstrated the strong health of Turkey's
    democracy, the most impressive in the Moslem world. The result was a
    decisive and Turkey can now expect a period of renewal and growth at
    home and responsibility and challenge in its foreign policy. The
    United States government looks forward to a very close relationship
    with President Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister Erdogan.
    President Bush and Secretary Rice respect both of these men. We have
    worked very well and productively with them in years past and know
    that will continue in the years to come. We would like to agree with
    the newly-elected Turkish leadership on a period in the coming months
    of high-level visits, discussions and joint commitment to face
    together the challenges of stability and peace in the Middle East.
    Turkey, after all, has been one of our closest friends for over 50
    years, dating back to the Truman Doctrine and the Korean War, and
    anchored by our Alliance in NATO. Throughout this long period, Turkey
    has always been among the United States' most dependable and important
    allies in an otherwise turbulent region. We look to Turkey, with its
    160-year legacy of modernizing reform, as the most successful example
    in the world today of a secular democracy within a Muslim society that
    can inspire reformers in the greater Middle East and beyond.
    Turkey's importance to the United States is even more pronounced at a
    time when the Middle East in the 21st century has replaced Europe in
    the 20th century as the most critical region for America's core
    national security interests. Turkey is the only country in the region
    that can work effectively with all of the others in the Middle
    East. Turkey's influence is substantial and unique. In this very
    important sense, Turkey is an indispensable partner to the United
    States in the Middle East.
    Our history of close relations, shared interests, and common values
    makes Turkey one of the most important Allies of the United States
    anywhere in the world. That is not to say that our relationship has
    been perfect: we have certainly endured our share of difficulties,
    misunderstandings, and miscommunications in recent years.
    >From our perspective, 2002-2005 were particularly difficult, but we
    believe we have turned the corner together with the Turkish
    leadership. We now have a moment of opportunity to build stronger ties
    at all levels between our governments. For the past two years,
    especially, our leaders have worked with considerable energy to revive
    the relationship and to address more effectively the common challenges
    and opportunities before us.
    One glance at the map demonstrates why it is so important to
    strengthen the ties between our two countries. Turkey is influential
    in the Balkans, in the Black Sea, the Caucasus, and in the greater
    Middle East. In this vitally important arc of countries where so much
    of our foreign policy attention now lies, Turkey is the vital link for
    the United States and our European allies in addressing common
    economic, security, and political challenges and opportunities in
    these critical regions.
    On perhaps the most dynamic international issue of 2007 -- energy --
    we share a common interest with the Turks. Turkey is the gateway for
    exports of oil and natural gas from the Caspian region and Iraq to
    Europe. Building on our successful cooperation in the 1990's to
    develop the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline and the South Caucasus
    gas pipeline, we now seek to expand this critical energy
    infrastructure into a Southern Corridor to help our European allies --
    Greece, Italy and into Western Europe -- create a free market for
    energy supplies in Europe.
    These efforts can also help Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan
    bolster their own independence by providing them access to European
    energy markets.
    We hope it will be possible for Turkey to arrive at a swift agreement
    with Azerbaijan on transit terms. Turkey should also strive to find a
    pricing formula for future exports to Turkey from the Caspian Sea
    natural gas field of Shah Deniz, a necessary step to complete the
    inter-governmental agreement for the Turkey-Greece-Italy gas
    pipeline. Over the longer term, Turkey should continue to cooperate
    with the United States and our friends in Iraq, Turkmenistan, and
    Kazakhstan to expand gas production and exports to Turkey and onward
    into Europe.
    In South Asia, Turkey is helping NATO to bolster regional security in
    Afghanistan, having twice commanded the International Security
    Assistance Force (ISAF) and now leading a Provincial Reconstruction
    Team (PRT) in Wardak Province. Turkey has been an important arbiter
    between Afghanistan and Pakistan, providing a welcoming, neutral venue
    for Presidents Karzai and Musharraf to discuss issues of mutual
    significance.
    It is in this area that we feel Turkey could make even more of an
    impact. Turkey could offer assistance to repatriated Afghan refugees
    from Pakistan, help both sides improve border management and customs
    collection, or support the emergence of Afghan-Pakistani
    Reconstruction Opportunity Zones, as the U.S. plans to do.
    Turkey has also played a key role in Kosovo, where it has 660
    personnel in KFOR and took over command of Multinational Task
    Force-South in May.
    The Turkish government is playing a similarly constructive role in the
    extended Black Sea region, where Turkey's Operation Black Sea Harmony
    cooperates with NATO's Operation Active Endeavor in the Mediterranean
    Sea to deter terrorism and bolster maritime security along NATO's
    southern and eastern flanks.
    Turkey should encourage its neighbors to undertake democratic reform,
    fight corruption and organized crime, as well as look for ways to
    improve market economies in the region. The U.S. would like to work
    with Turkey, Romania, and Bulgaria to take greater advantage of
    opportunities to expand NATO's activities in the Black Sea region.
    And, Turkey is playing a regional leadership role in the Middle
    East. Turkey's common borders with Iraq, Iran, and Syria provide an
    opportunity to advance peace and stability, fight proliferation of
    nuclear weapons, and defeat terrorists in a region that is now the
    epicenter of U.S. foreign policy. Turkey can help deepen our
    understanding of strategic trends in the Middle East, while
    reinforcing our efforts to advance political and economic freedom and
    fight terror to advance peace and prosperity.
    It is not only geography and common interests that make Turkey a key
    U.S. partner; it is our shared values of democracy, diversity, and
    tolerant faith that make us friends and allies. The United States and
    Turkey share a deep appreciation for the importance of separating
    civic and religious life.
    In Turkey, reform movements during the late Ottoman period aimed to
    balance the claims that religion makes on personal lives with the
    exigencies of a modern state. One of the most famous waves of reforms,
    the so-called "Tanzimat" movement of the mid-19th Century was an
    attempt to give all residents of the empire the same rights, whether
    they were Muslim, Christian or Jewish.
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk rejuvenated Turkey's modernizing reforms, as he
    granted political rights to women, laid the foundation for Turkey's
    industrial rise, and established the Turkish Republic as a secular
    democracy. Turkey's commitment to secular democracy makes it a natural
    ally for the United States.
    Turkey may now be at a new historical turning point, with a real
    opportunity to invigorate political and economic reforms that will
    anchor it in the European Union and bolster its ability to inspire
    reformers in the greater Middle East region. Parliamentary elections
    on July 22 and the election of Abdullah Gul as president on August 28
    demonstrated once again that Turkey is a robust and ever-maturing
    democracy, one that is defined by respect for constitutional
    processes, with the country's political future determined by
    elections.
    We welcome Mr. Gul's election as President. President Bush and
    Secretary Rice have good relationships with President Gul, and Prime
    Minister Erdogan, and look forward to developing these relationships.
    The Justice and Development Party, or AKP, now controls the
    government, parliament, and presidency. At the same time, Turkish
    voters sent a message of moderation during the recent elections. While
    the AKP won a resounding victory, opposition parties received over 50
    percent of the vote, and with more parties crossing the 10 percent
    electoral threshold the new parliament is more representative of
    Turkey's diverse voter sentiment. Turkey's voters thus appear to have
    signaled their desire for Prime Minister Erdogan and President Gul to
    deepen Turkey's secular democracy by rejuvenating political and
    economic reforms, but in the context of Turkey's Muslim society.
    As Turkey's democratic institutions strengthen and as its reforms
    proceed, Turkey grows in importance to the U.S. as a strategic
    partner. Realizing the full potential of this partnership poses
    several immediate challenges to both of our countries. In the Middle
    East, Turkey can play a regional leadership role that could help the
    U.S. achieve some of its most pressing foreign policy goals, but which
    will require careful coordination to prevent our two countries from
    operating at cross-purposes.
    At the top of the list is Iraq. Our decision to liberate Iraq from
    Saddam Hussein's brutality triggered an unprecedented wave of
    anti-Americanism in Turkey. Our official relations have recovered from
    the low-point of the Turkish Parliament's vote on March 1, 2003 to
    reject our request to move U.S. forces into Iraq via Turkey. Since
    then, Ankara has been a strong supporter of our efforts to stabilize
    Iraq, and has asked us not to abandon our goals, particularly
    safeguarding Iraq's territorial integrity. Turkey represents a
    critical logistical lifeline for our troops in Iraq and has made
    important contributions to Coalition operations there.
    Turkey is similarly helpful in diplomatic efforts to bolster support
    for Iraq among its neighbors. The United States appreciates Turkey's
    willingness to host the next Extended neighbors ministerial in
    October, an important follow-up to the work begun at Sharm el-Sheikh
    last May. Secretary Rice announced this week that she plans to attend
    this meeting in Istanbul.
    Turkey's willingness to help the international community address Iraq
    is all the more appreciated given the difficulties it is suffering as
    a result of attacks from PKK terrorists in Iraq. Let me assure you,
    the United States condemns the PKK as a vicious terrorist group. We
    mourn the loss of innocent Turkish lives in these attacks.
    We remain fully committed to working with the Governments of Turkey
    and Iraq to counter PKK terrorists, who are headquartered in northern
    Iraq. We are making progress in putting in place the mechanisms
    required to produce such concrete results against the PKK. We will
    also follow up our success in working with Turkey and our other
    European partners to interdict PKK terror financiers in Europe and
    bring them to justice.
    Turkey and the United States also face a challenge in Iran. We have
    worked well together to support of the clear international consensus
    demanding that Iran cease its nuclear weapons development
    programs. Turkey has also proven to be strong partner in countering
    Iran's support for terrorists in the Middle East.
    But the United States and Turkey still need to work out some tactical
    differences in handling Iran. We understand that Iran is a neighbor of
    Turkey and key trading partner, which sends over a million tourists to
    Turkey each year. Turkey's recent conclusion of a memorandum on energy
    cooperation with Iran, however, is troubling. Now is not the time for
    business as usual with Iran. We urge all of our friends and allies,
    including Turkey, to not reward Iran by investing in its oil and gas
    sector, while Iran continues to defy the United Nations Security
    Council by continuing its nuclear research for a weapons capability
    The United States and Turkey share a common interest in working toward
    a comprehensive peace in the Middle East. President Bush's vision is
    of two democratic states, Israel and Palestine, living side-by-side in
    peace and security. The Palestinian Authority under President Mahmoud
    Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad is the most capable Palestinian
    government since Oslo and is committed to being a partner for peace.
    As we work to develop the economy and institutions of governance that
    will form the foundation of a Palestinian state, Turkey understandably
    can see opportunities to draw on its historical experience from the
    Ottoman era and its modern economic might to help restore prosperity
    to the Palestinian people, while drawing on its more recent experience
    in forging a close security partnership with Israel.
    Turkey is unique in its dual identity as both a Middle Eastern and
    European country. We thus face important challenges in U.S.-Turkish
    relations with regard to deepening Turkey's integration in
    Euroatlantic institutions.
    We are among the strongest supporters of Turkey's EU aspirations. We
    call on Europe's leaders to signal clearly and unambiguously that
    Turkey will have a voice in the European Union in the future. We
    believe both Turkey and the Euroatlantic community will benefit as
    Turkey advances toward EU membership. We wish to see an even more
    democratic and prosperous Turkey, which will make Turkey a stronger
    partner for the United States in Europe. The prospect of full
    membership in the EU is the right goal for Turkey and the future of
    the European Union.
    Moreover, Europe's full embrace of a reformed Turkey will send a
    powerful signal to Europe's other Muslim populations that Islam and
    democracy are compatible, and that integration into mainstream
    European society is possible without surrendering one's Islamic
    identity.
    This could be a crucial factor in defeating Europe's extremist
    recruiters, who prey on alienated Europe's Muslim populations. Those
    Europeans who oppose Turkish membership in the EU should keep in mind
    that it is not the Turkey of today, but an even more democratic Turkey
    of tomorrow that would that would join the EU after several more years
    of reform.
    To reach this transcendent strategic objective, we hope Turkey will
    repeal Article 301 of the Penal Code, which restricts freedom of
    expression and has led to outlandish legal cases against private
    citizens and global figures such as Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk. We
    also hope Turkey will help make its own case with the EU by allowing
    the Ecumenical Patriarch's religious school at Halki in Istanbul to
    reopen decades after it closed.
    We must also work with Turkey to strengthen NATO. Turkey has been a
    cornerstone of the Alliance since the 1952, serving as a barrier to
    Soviet expansion throughout the Cold War. Several generations of
    Turkish military officers enjoyed formative professional experiences
    while serving in NATO commands. Today, Turkey is a key NATO partner in
    Afghanistan and Kosovo, and is emerging as a critical potential
    partner in the vast majority of NATO's future contingencies, which lie
    to the southeast of Europe.
    An important focus of Euroatlantic security cooperation is developing
    ways for the EU and NATO to work together in bringing their respective
    capacities to bear in strengthening stability and security in Kosovo,
    Bosnia, Afghanistan and elsewhere. We appreciate the difficulties that
    such cooperation poses for Turkey given the still-evolving Turkey-EU
    relationship, the circumstances of Turkey's participation in
    activities within the European Security and Defense Policy, as well as
    the complications resulting from the lack of a Cyprus settlement.
    Yet it is vital for all of us, including Turkey, that NATO and the EU
    are indeed able to work together in crisis areas around the world. For
    this and many other reasons, we call on all relevant parties to
    reinvigorate UN-brokered efforts to reach a comprehensive Cyprus
    settlement that reunifies the island into a bi-zonal, bi-communal
    federation. We welcome last week's meeting of President Papadopoulos
    and Mehmet Ali Talat, and look forward to future such meetings to
    implement last year's July 8 agreement.
    I intend to travel to Cyprus this autumn and will communicate to the
    Cypriot government leadership and the Turkish leadership, as well, the
    strong wish of the United States that we might all contribute to a
    breakthrough for peace after decades of crisis. The time has come for
    the United Nations and all of us to achieve a just solution to the
    long-festering problem of Cyprus.
    Finally, the U.S. and Turkey face a serious challenge with regard to
    Armenia. Each year on April 24, Armenian Remembrance Day, President
    Bush has issued a public statement lamenting the mass killings and
    forced deportations of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman
    authorities at the end of World War I.
    The United States condemnation of this tragedy is not at issue; the
    question is how best to facilitate reconciliation of all concerned
    parties with each other and with their painful and shared past. We
    believe passage of the U.S. House of Representative's Resolution 106,
    which would make a political determination that the tragedy of 1915
    constituted genocide, would undercut voices emerging in Turkey for
    dialogue and reconciliations concerning these horrific events. We
    therefore have recommended to Congress that it not pass such a
    resolution.
    We strongly encourage Turkey to normalize its relations and reopen its
    border with Armenia, steps that will help bring peace, prosperity and
    cooperation to the Caucasus. Now, in the wake of the AKP's resounding
    electoral victories, is the time for Ankara to make a bold opening
    toward Armenia. And we hope that Armenia will respond in kind.
    In conclusion, the United States and Turkey have enjoyed a
    relationship of Allied friendship for over half a century of enormous
    complexity, success, and promise. We have weathered a difficult period
    over the past four years. We now stand at the edge of a potentially
    new era in Turkish politics that offers a chance to restore a sense of
    strategic partnership in U.S.-Turkish relations.
    I will be traveling to Ankara soon to bring this message to the new
    government personally. The United States is determined to seize this
    opportunity to renew and strengthen our strategic partnership with
    Turkey. We look forward to working together with Turkish leaders who
    share this vision and determination to build this strong, vital and
    irreplaceable Turkish-American alliance for the 21st century.
    Thank you.
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