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ANKARA: Revitalizing Turkish-US Strategic Ties Depends On Solving So

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  • ANKARA: Revitalizing Turkish-US Strategic Ties Depends On Solving So

    REVITALIZING TURKISH-US STRATEGIC TIES DEPENDS ON SOLVING SOME STICKY ISSUES
    Ilnur Cevik

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    19 September 2007

    U.S. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns will
    hold talks with Turkish leaders today to seek ways to "revitalize"
    the strategic relationship between Ankara and Washington.

    The no.3 official of the State Department arrived in Istanbul Monday
    night and has spent Tuesday in Istanbul. He flew to Ankara later
    Tuesday.

    In Istanbul Burns met with members of the Parliament during an iftar,
    and with religious leaders, students, and civil society activists.

    The U.S. State Department has said Burns will discuss a range of
    strategic issues with the new Turkish government and reaffirm the
    great importance the U.S. attaches to its alliance with Turkey.

    This will be the first in a series of high-level meetings between
    the United States and the new Turkish government that will take place
    this autumn, stated the Department.

    In Ankara, Burns will meet with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    and senior members of the Foreign Ministry and Parliament.

    Burns has already given hints about the issues to be taken up with
    Turkish leaders during his address to the Atlantic Council of the
    United States in Washington last week.

    Iraq is a sticky issue between Turkey and the U.S.

    While Americans are happy to see Turkish efforts to keep Iraq intact
    Ankara is now questioning America's future plans about the Kurds
    of Iraq.

    The Kurdish puzzle -----------------------------ARA BASLIK

    Ankara is angered with the presence of the PKK terrorists in the
    northern mountains of Iraq in areas controlled by the autonomous
    Kurdish administration.

    PKK terrorists use the area to launch terrorist attacks into
    Turkey. Ankara says the Americans have not been able to help to
    convince the Iraqi Kurds not to allow the PKK to feel at home in the
    northern provinces.

    Some circles in Ankara see growing American favoritism towards
    the Kurdish administration in Erbil that governs the northern
    provinces. There are signs that the U.S. may turn a blind eye to
    Kurdish independence.

    Ankara is against Kurdish independence as it fears this could encourage
    secessionism among Turkey's Kurds living in the neighboring region
    of southeastern Turkey.

    Earlier this month, the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) announced
    that it had signed a production-sharing deal with Texas-based Hunt
    Oil. The move is an indication that Western oil companies, frustrated
    over the delay in the passage of a national oil law by the Iraqi
    government, are moving to make deals with regional bodies to get
    access to Iraq's vast oil reserves.

    As significant as the deal itself is the identity of the company
    involved. Ray Hunt, the CEO and president of privately held Hunt Oil,
    is a close confidant of President Bush and a prominent figure in the
    US political and intelligence establishment.

    To what extent the policy of the Bush administration is motivating
    the deal-and to what extent it is motivated by purely profit
    interests-cannot be determined. However, the announcement comes at
    a time of growing strains between the Iraqi federal government, led
    by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and the Bush administration. Many
    commentators have noted that the moves by Kurdish authorities to
    establish autonomy in the control of the region's oil resources could
    contribute to a fracturing of the Iraqi state along sectarian lines.

    Hussain al-Shahristani, the Iraqi oil minister in the Maliki cabinet,
    denounced the agreement, saying, "Any oil deal has no standing as
    far as the government of Iraq is concerned. All these contracts have
    to be approved by the Federal Authority before they are legal. This
    [contract] was not presented for approval.

    It has no standing."

    Turkey wants to know if Washington will sacrifice its strategic
    relations with Ankara for an independent Kurdish state. This will
    be one of the vital questions that Turks will seek an answer when
    Burns talks to Turkish officials and in the other high level meetings
    between the two countries.

    What to do with Iran? ---------------------- ARA BASLIK

    The other sticky issue that Ankara and Washington have to resolve
    is what to do with Iran. The Americans are visibly annoyed with
    Turkey's growing relations with the Iranians. Turkey and Iran have
    recently signed a major energy deal where Turkey will develop the
    rich Iranian natural gas fields and also build a pipeline to sell
    Iranian gas to Europe.

    The U.S. feels as long as Iran does not abandon its nuclear program
    it will remain a major "target."

    Recent events where Israelis allegedly made trial runs over Syria
    to hit Iranian nuclear facilities with allegedly the blessing of
    Washington and other statements coming out of the U.S. suggest that
    the Americans are considering a military option against Iran.

    Burns has told the Atlantic Council that in this area while
    U.S. appreciates Turkey's diplomatic efforts to tame Iran there is
    a difference of opinion on how to handle the Tehran file.

    Burns said "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."

    Other sticky issues --------------------------- ARA BASLIK

    Turkeys feels it has to face the realities in Cyprus and seek a
    solution that will also eliminate some of the serious obstacles for
    its European Union membership.

    The Greek Cypriots who are a member of the EU have been effectively
    blocking Turkey's accession process.

    Turkey has to open its ports and airfields to the Greek Cypriots,
    a move that would create havoc for the Erdogan government at home.

    Turkish and Greek Cypriot leaders have met to revive the July 8,
    2006 process but the impasse continues.

    The U.S. has moved to help the Turkish Cypriots and ease their
    international isolation while the EU has been reluctant to follow
    course. Ankara expects the Americans to put pressure on the Greek
    Cypriots to be more facilitating.

    A strong Greek Cypriot lobby is making life difficult for Turkey
    in Washington. But that is the least of Ankara's worries. There is
    even a stronger lobby in Washington that is seriously threatening
    Turkish-American ties: The Armenians.

    A move by the Armenians to legislate a congressional bill that will
    recognize the acts of 1915 as genocide committed by the Ottoman Turks
    against Armenians is pending. Turks are up in arms and the American
    administration has told the U.S. Congress such moves will seriously
    bilateral relations.

    But it is clear that the U.S. administration is really tired of having
    to contain a fire that erupts every April with the Armenians pushing
    for revenge and the Turks threatening the U.S. with serious damage
    to ties.

    Americans say Turkey should open its borders with Armenia is a move
    to reconciliation. But Turks feel such a move will not blunt the
    antagonism of the Armenian diasporas in northern America and Europe
    that are calling for revenge.

    Turkey and the U.S. also do not see eye to eye over the reek Orthodox
    Church in Istanbul. The Americans regard the church as ecumenical
    while Turkey says it is only a regional church.

    On the Middle East Turkey sees a major danger of new conflicts in the
    Middle East if Iraq is allowed to collapse. Turkey sees the danger
    of a major confrontation between the Iran inspired Shiites of the
    region and the Sunni Arab axis formed by Iraqi Arabs, Saudi Arabia,
    Egypt, Jordan, Yemen, Syria and Gulf Arabs.

    Turks feel they can help in the Middle East peace process with their
    special relationship with Israel and their close contacts with Syria
    and the Palestinians. But Turks feel the confrontation between Shiites
    and the Arab axis could be a nightmare.

    Americans also have to understand that the Arabs reject the Turkish
    version of moderate Islam where a party with Islamic roots can support
    secularism and modernization. So while Turkey remains a unique Islamic
    model that can blend into the western civilization there are clear
    indications that this model will not be adopted by the Arabs.

    Turkish and American leaders will have to address these issues as
    they set the stage for rejuvenating the strategic relationship.
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