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Obama Should Make A Turkey Trip

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  • Obama Should Make A Turkey Trip

    OBAMA SHOULD MAKE A TURKEY TRIP
    by Liam Hardy

    Just International
    http://www.just-international.org/ar ticle.cfm?newsid=20002962
    Feb 5 2009
    Malaysia

    Washington DC - During his election campaign, US President Barack
    Obama promised to make a trip to a Muslim country during his first
    100 days in office to demonstrate that he is serious about easing
    tensions between the United States and the Muslim world. If he decides
    to follow through with this promise, Obama should seriously think
    about making that visit to Turkey.

    The United States and Turkey have had a long partnership, which was
    based on mutual interest in containing communism during the Cold War
    and in strengthening regional security and democracy in the post-Cold
    War era. Recently, however, the relationship between the United
    States and Turkey has become strained, threatening the partnership
    at various levels.

    Philip Gordon and Omer Taspinar, two scholars at the Brookings
    Institution, describe in a recent publication that major policy
    differences over Iraq, Armenia, Cyprus and Israel have created serious
    stumbling blocks to US-Turkish relations.

    These differences have fuelled distrust of the United States within
    Turkey, which has ranked over the past few years at the very bottom
    of opinion polls, such as the Pew Global Attitudes Project, which
    measures individual countries' popular support for the United States
    and its policies. They have also contributed to heightened nationalism
    and isolationism, as well as scepticism of institutions perceived as
    close to the United States, which indirectly have a negative effect
    on popular support for Turkey's European Union reform process and
    membership application.

    Pressures stemming from the Iraq War have been paramount. In
    particular, the public perception in Turkey of US support for an
    autonomous Kurdish regional government in northern Iraq has created
    resentment and fear among Turks because the Kurdish Workers Party
    (PKK) has waged a violent separatist movement during the past several
    decades. Although relations improved when the Bush administration
    agreed to work with Turkey to fight terrorism stemming from the PKK
    within Iraq's borders in late 2007, public opinion still remains
    highly resentful toward the United States over the invasion of Iraq.

    In addition, domestic pressure within the United States to pass
    a resolution in Congress condemning Turkey for the killing of
    Armenians during World War I has further alienated Turks, most of whom
    admit that killings occurred but argue that the violence was also
    reciprocated. They seek an independent international commission to
    determine whether the events at the time actually constituted genocide,
    a claim that most Turks deny.

    Severe tension between the two countries has arisen most recently with
    regard to the conflict in Gaza. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan,
    who had previously tried to build a reputation as an honest broker in
    the Middle East by overseeing discussions between Israel and Syria,
    spoke out repeatedly against Israel's recent military action in
    Gaza. He even walked out of a panel discussion at the World Economic
    Forum in January when Erdogan felt the moderator did not allow him
    to respond to comments by Israeli President Shimon Peres.

    Turkish-Israeli relations, which have historically been good, are
    now being put to the test, creating another wedge between Turkey and
    the United States, whose House of Representatives passed a resolution
    supporting Israel during the recent conflict.

    Some in Turkey question whether the country should remain committed to
    its partnerships with the United States and Europe, instead preferring
    closer relations with other power players in the region. These
    sentiments are often found among those who are upset by US regional
    policy and perceive a lack of respect from the West in general.

    Despite these recent disagreements, the Obama administration should
    remember that Turkey's democracy, despite its flaws, has proven to be
    one of the most successful and enduring in the region. If he addresses
    the Muslim world from Turkey's Grand National Assembly in Ankara early
    on, Obama's administration would send a signal that the United States
    is committed to promoting democracy and compromise in the region.

    This could do much to reinvigorate the partnership between the United
    States and its longest-standing Muslim-majority ally. It would also
    send a positive message to fledgling democracies in the region that the
    United States, which is often described even today as an "experiment"
    in democratic rule, firmly supports free elections and representative
    governance as the most legitimate path to the law.

    Obama must show that he stands behind Turkey's quest for a deep and
    stable representative democracy, committed to prosperity and liberty
    for all citizens. Furthermore, addressing the rest of the Muslim
    world from this platform would signify the beginning of positive
    change between the United States and the region.

    * Liam Hardy is an independent researcher on issues related to Turkey
    and the region. This article was written for the Common Ground News
    Service (CGNews) and can be accessed at www.commongroundnews.org.
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