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New Foreign Policy Direction For Turkey: Statement Of Ross Wilson Di

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  • New Foreign Policy Direction For Turkey: Statement Of Ross Wilson Di

    NEW FOREIGN POLICY DIRECTION FOR TURKEY; STATEMENT OF ROSS WILSON DIRECTOR, DINU PATRICIU EURASIA CENTER ATLANTIC COUNCIL OF THE UNITED STATES

    CQ Congressional Testimony
    July 28, 2010 Wednesday

    COMMITTEE: HOUSE FOREIGN AFFAIRS

    CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY

    TESTIMONY-BY: ROSS WILSON, DIRECTOR AFFILIATION: ATLANTIC COUNCIL OF
    THE UNITED STATES

    Committee on House Foreign Affairs

    Mr. Chairman, thank you very much for the honor of being invited to
    speak at this hearing on Turkey and U.S. Turkish relations.

    Turkey is a fascinating, sometimes frustrating, often confusing and
    very important country in a key part of the world for the United
    States. Figuring it out is a challenge. It is tempting, but always
    misleading, to see black and white where grays are the dominant
    colors. One of the most useful observations I heard while I had the
    honor to serve as American ambassador in Ankara came from a colleague
    who had been there many years and left shortly after I arrived. He
    said, "Turkey is one of those countries where the more you know, the
    less you understand." I hope that today's discussions will give me,
    and maybe others, more knowledge and understanding.

    The reasons for this hearing are self-evident. Questions are being
    asked about whether Turkey has changed its axis and reoriented its
    priorities, about whether it remains a friend and ally of the United
    States or is becoming, as Steven Cook of the Council on Foreign
    Relations recently suggested, a competitor or possibly a "frenemy."

    That this debate is happening ought to be disconcerting to Turks who
    argue - as many in the military, foreign ministry and government did
    to me - that the United States is Turkey's most important and only
    strategic partner. It frustrates the Obama Administration, which
    has invested heavily in U.S.-Turkish relations, including when the
    President visited Ankara in April 2009, when Prime Minister Erdogan
    came to Washington last December, and at the nuclear security summit
    here several months ago.

    Of course, there have always been ups and downs in U.S.-Turkish
    relations. Those who think they remember the halcyon days of yore
    should read their history. Looking at reports in the U.S. embassy's
    files put my problems into perspective while I was working there. Or
    consider a Turk's point of view. He or she might have thought the word
    frenemy (if it really is a word) applied to the United States when in
    2003-2007 we barred cross- border pursuits of terrorists fleeing back
    into northern Iraq after attacking police stations and school buses,
    or when the United States imposed an arms embargo after Turkish forces
    intervened in Cyprus in 1974, or when we accepted the brutal overthrow
    of Turkey's civilian government in 1980.

    But to stick with our own perceptions and priorities, a lot of
    mainstream observers think that it is different this time. Whether fair
    or not, or correct or not - and I think this is not an accurate image,
    Turkey's picture in many circles here is monochromatic in unflattering
    ways: friend to Ahmadinejad and supporter of Iran, friend to HAMAS,
    shrill critic of Israel, and defender of Sudan's Bashir. The flotilla
    incident and Turkey's no vote on UN sanctions against Iran sharpened
    the issue. Several weeks ago, a senior U.S. military officer and great
    friend of Turkey confided to me with exasperation, "What in the world
    are we going to do with Turkey?" Uncertainty about Turkey and how to
    proceed with it is widespread. And that is at least as much a problem
    for Turkey - for Turks who value its five decade-old alliance with
    the United States, to which I believe Turkey is committed - as it is
    for anyone here.

    One thing we have to do about our exasperation is fill out the
    picture. How Turkey does see things, and what are its leaders
    responding to and trying to accomplish? Picture Turkey on a map and
    go around it.

    Iran

    Turkey borders on Iran. For Ankara, it is a problematic country,
    a rival for hundreds of years. Most Turks I talked to believe the
    recent rise of Tehran's influence has been fueled in part by the U.S.

    invasion of Iraq and its consequences and by the unresolved
    Israel-Palestinian conflict. They regard Iranian actions as
    inconsistent with Turkey's interest in a stable, peaceful region,
    and I think their local geopolitical contest for influence is one we
    underestimate. But Turks also have to live next to Iran and do not
    want its enmity. So Ankara's approach has been nonconfrontational
    and continues to be so. It has worked indirectly to advance Turkey's
    interests, including by developing non-Iranian Caspian energy export
    routes, deploying troops to the UN Interim Force in Lebanon, supporting
    such moderates as Lebanese Prime Minister Hariri and Iraqi leader
    Ayad Allawi, and engaging Syrian President Asad, whom it apparently
    hopes to moderate by lessening his dependence upon - or prying him
    away from - Iran.

    Turkey does not want a nuclear-armed Iran. Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice and others worked in 2006-2007 to get Turkish
    buy-in for the approach taken by the five permanent members of the
    UN Security Council and Germany - the P5+1. They were successful. I
    believe that Turkish leaders took a tough line on Tehran's need to
    reassure the world by complying with its Non- Proliferation Treaty and
    International Atomic Energy Agency obligations. But the legacy of the
    Iraq weapons of mass destruction intelligence failures was that most
    Turks, including in the military and throughout the political elite,
    doubt the accuracy of Western intelligence on Iran's nuclear efforts
    and fear the implications of war more than they fear the possibility
    of an Iranian bomb. Hence the Turks insistence on negotiations -
    an insistence on which the Turks are not alone, including among
    our allies.

    Administration officials can speak more authoritatively than I can
    about how we came to crosspurposes on the Iran nuclear issue this
    spring. Suffice it for me to say that at the outset Ankara believed,
    with good reason, that the Obama Administration shared its objectives
    on the uranium swap proposal and backed its efforts. There were
    problems of timing, delivery and coordination, but this was not a
    rogue Turkey heading off in a new foreign policy direction with which
    the United States disagreed.

    Obviously, Turkey's no vote in the UN Security Council was unhelpful.

    In figuring out how we proceed on Iran with Turkey now, my overriding
    priority would be to comport ourselves in such a way as to ensure
    Ankara is with us in the next acts of the drama. I think the political,
    defense and security implications of what Iran is doing are very
    serious. Whatever the future brings, the situation requires us to have
    the fullest possible support of all our NATO allies, and geography
    puts Turkey at the top of that of that list. We can accomplish this
    through the fullest possible information sharing on what we know
    (and don't know) and involving Ankara in the diplomacy - not as
    mediator probably, but also not as a bystander. It is a partner;
    we expect it to act like one, and we should treat it as one.

    Iraq

    Turkey borders on Iraq, where we have poured so much treasure and
    youth. Over 90 percent of the Turkish public opposed the U.S. invasion
    in 2003, and a greater percentage opposes our presence there now.

    Despite this, Turkish authorities want us to stay. They fear, and I
    think the public at some level shares this fear, that we will walk
    away too early and then Turkey will face a chronic crisis. Or, worse,
    that Iraq might be taken over by some dangerous new tyrant, fall under
    the control of another neighboring power, break up, or become a home
    to anti-Turkish terrorists. The PKK problem along the northern Iraq
    border is especially serious, but at least 2-3 years ago, so were anti-
    Turkish al-Qaeda elements in Iraq. Since 2005 and especially after
    March 2008, Turkey has been a constructive player on Iraq. We asked it
    to help draw Sunni rejectionists out of violence and into politics, and
    it did. At our request, Turkey helped facilitate the U.S. engagement
    with Iraq's neighbors that the Baker-Hamilton Commission recommended.

    We asked it to deal with Kurdistan Regional Government leader Masoud
    Barzani. It has done so, getting help on the PKK problem and making
    itself a more effective player in supporting the Iraqi political
    process, which will be important as our own role declines. Turkey's
    role in Iraq is important and positive. To be frank, it got to be
    that way because American and Turkish leaders decided to overlook the
    March 1, 2003 disagreement at the start of the war and found common
    ground in helping Iraq stand back up. While it did not seem so simple
    at the time, in effect we dusted ourselves off and moved on. That is
    not a bad model for policymakers now.

    Middle East

    Turkey borders on Syria and the Middle East. Even before I left for
    Turkey, I heard people wonder what it was doing mucking about in
    Middle Eastern affairs. In the U.S. government, the people dealing
    with the Middle East are generally not responsible for Turkey, which
    is handled out of offices dealing with European affairs. But Ankara
    is far closer to Jerusalem than Riyadh is. (For comparison, Ankara is
    only a little farther from Jerusalem than Washington is from Atlanta.)
    There is Ottoman baggage with Arab populations that modern-day Turks do
    not talk much about, but Turkey is a Middle Eastern country. It is not
    surprising that Prime Minister Erdogan is popular there - of course,
    his populist rhetoric adds to that, as he intends. In any case, we
    should forgive Turks for thinking that they have a role there or that
    they are entitled to their own perspective. This seems especially the
    case when on the most important issues - Israel's right to exist,
    the goal of two democratic states, Israeli and Palestinian, living
    side by side in peace and security, and the need for a negotiated
    (not imposed) solution - Turkey's perspective is the same as ours.

    Within Turkey, in Israel and in the West, Prime Minister Erdogan has
    been criticized for his shrill rhetoric toward Israel, especially on
    Gaza. Turks do not, of course, universally support his government,
    but they do almost universally share his underlying view that
    Israeli-Palestinian stalemate has persisted too long, that what is
    happening to Palestinians is unfair, and that they need help. I was
    in Turkey shortly after the "flotilla incident." I heard many views
    about whether the government's backing of the Mavi Marmara was wise,
    properly done or in Turkey's interest; no one I talked to, and as far
    as I could tell none of the people they talked with, thought that it
    was wrong.

    I don't know what the way forward on Middle East peace issues is.

    Clearly, Turkey's estrangement from Israel limits any role it can play
    for the foreseeable future. At no time soon will Ankara again be able
    to mediate between Syria and Israel -an effort that showed its value
    in keeping channels open after Israel's September 2007 destruction
    of the Deir ez-Zor nuclear site in Syria. It is constructive that
    Senator Mitchell has included Turkey among the regional powers that
    he consults with from time to time, and I hope that continues.

    Caucasus

    Turkey borders on the Caucasus - Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. I
    know that you, Mr. Chairman, other members of this committee and many
    Americans have strong views about the Turkey-Armenia piece and about
    history that has not been entirely accommodated. The South Caucasus is
    a volatile and fragile part of the world, as Georgia 2008 reminded us.

    That conflict gave impetus to reconciliation between Turkey and
    Armenia. When President Sarksian and President Gul stood together in
    Yerevan a month after the Russian invasion of Georgia, the two leaders
    seemed symbolically to say, 'we have a vision of the Caucasus, it's
    not what just happened in Georgia, and we're determined to take on the
    most difficult issues between us to try to achieve it.' Unfortunately,
    Armenian and Turkish leaders concluded that they could not go forward
    now to ratify the protocols that called for normalizing relations
    and opening the border.

    I think doing so can still build the confidence needed for resolving
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan and
    for Turks and Armenians to deal with their past, present and future
    together in a forthright manner. I hope that Congress can support that
    effort. In the interest of brevity, I have omitted mention of Cyprus,
    Greece, the Balkans and the Black Sea, and such other active items in
    U.S.-Turkish relations as energy, terrorism, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

    Suffice it to say that, in my view, on each of these we want
    fundamentally the same things, there are of course differences of view,
    and the United States and Turkey cooperate pretty well.

    Change in Turkey

    I noted earlier the rhetorical question of what other American ally
    borders on so many problems of such high priority to U.S. foreign
    policy. Looked at another way, is there another ally that has such
    a large stake in how so many problems that are so important to us
    get addressed?

    A Turkey that is stronger than at any time in a couple hundred
    years is now inclined to try to influence events on its periphery
    in ways that it was not in the past. It does so partly because it
    can, but also because it is good politics. This reflects important
    and positive changes in Turkey. When it comes to foreign policy,
    public opinion matters in a way it did not even just a few years
    ago. Decades of pro-market policies have made Turkey's the 16th
    largest economy in the world. Migration from rural areas to the
    cities and an expanding middle class are two other trends with huge
    political implications. In this more prosperous and confident Turkey,
    voters do not want their country to be a subject of others' diplomacy
    or a bystander on regional issues. They want to see their country
    acting. They expect their government to do so. They expect it to act
    wisely, and I think one of our jobs is to help it do so.

    My answer to my military friend's exasperated question, "what in
    the world are we going to do with Turkey," is that we have no choice
    but to work with it and work with it and work with it. It is hard,
    it is frustrating, and maybe it is messy. It is harder now with a
    democratic ally in which power resides in several places - and that
    is in general a good thing. It is the only way to go forward and the
    only way not to go back into recrimination and anger that ultimately
    could put American interests in the region at risk. It requires steady
    senior-level engagement, visits to Turkey by members of Congress such
    as you, Mr. Chairman, and not letting differences that are mostly
    tactical overwhelm our strategic interests. I thought it was highly
    important that President Obama met with Prime Minister Erdogan on the
    margins of the recent G-20 Summit in Toronto a month ago. According
    to the account I heard, the meeting was long, and the President was
    very direct, tough and critical. That is what it will take.

    Thank you.




    From: A. Papazian
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