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ANKARA: The New Turkish-American Scenario Could Bring Good Things!

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  • ANKARA: The New Turkish-American Scenario Could Bring Good Things!

    Milliyet, Turkey
    March 11 2009


    The New Turkish-American Scenario Could Bring Good Things!

    by Hasan Cemal


    A new scenario is being written in Turkish-American relations. If
    these scenarios are staged and acted out well it could be advantageous
    to both countries.

    In this regard, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit to Ankara
    was a positive one. Clearly, the role of leading man in the new
    Turkish-American screenplay will be played by President Obama. This
    may be stating the obvious but the US President's visit to Turkey in
    April is very important in many respects not least for its symbolic
    value.

    If Ankara and Washington can put the pieces in their proper places
    with this visit then a new era in relations between these two
    countries really could begin. This will bring common interests and
    regional stability.

    There are already signs bubbling to the surface that this new scenario
    is being written well even now and that some parts of it have already
    begun to be acted out.

    Turkey's and Israel's foreign ministers Babacan and Livni met in
    Brussels. President Gul is scheduled to go to Israel.

    There are signs of a normalization of relations between Turkey and
    Armenia. Turkey might reopen the border.

    It is very likely that the Armenian genocide issue is going to be
    relegated to the bottom of Washington's in-box.

    As Turkish-Armenian relations enter a process of normalization you
    will see one day that the genocide issue has relocated from
    Ankara-Washington to Ankara-Yerevan.

    In the meantime, President Gul's trip to Baghdad is part of this new
    scenario. The crux of this business:

    Ankara-Arbil relations.

    Ankara's relations with Mas'ud Barzani are considered a topic that the
    American administration is very fussy about because this directly
    concerns stability in Iraq. And these relations are still on track for
    improvement.

    This is a complex issue and includes the PKK as well.

    Washington, Ankara, Baghdad and Arbil. None of them want the PKK to be
    a pain in the neck any more.

    This is why one of the subtexts for this new screenplay for
    Turkish-American relations includes ejecting the PKK from northern
    Iraq, bringing them down off the mountains and surrendering their
    arms.

    A complex matter, no doubt.

    I wonder if Prime Minister Erdogan is going to demonstrate the
    political will and resolve that this topic requires once the elections
    are out of the way?

    We can say this:

    If certain practical steps can be taken in Ankara in the matters of
    the Kurdish problem and the Armenian issue...

    If the doors to normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia plus
    Turkey and the northern Iraqi Kurdish administration can be opened...

    If Washington and Ankara write the scenario for these topics well and
    act them out well then the pertinent countries will be winners, along
    with regional stability and peace as I just pointed out. Furthermore,
    America has certain expectations of Turkey with respect to Afghanistan
    and US withdrawal from Iraq.

    In addition, the roles that Turkey can play in the Israel-Syria field
    and concerning Hamas and Iran are definitely grabbing the Obama
    administration's interest.

    That is politics for you.

    To grasp shared points of interest and common balances is a fine art
    indeed. You need both political will and creative diplomacy.

    If the new screenplay is edited well it will also broaden Turkey's
    field of manoeuvre vis-Ã -vis the EU. The support of the new American
    administration could make it easier to navigate certain bottlenecks in
    Turkish-EU relations such as Cyprus.

    A Turkey that is on good terms with both the EU and the United States
    might be able to ride out the waves of the global economic crisis
    after singing a deal with the IMF following the elections.

    Yes, this is an optimistic column and this optimism is underpinned by
    the importance of the earlier-than-expected visit that Obama is going
    to make to Turkey.

    Concerning optimism, I have to point out that a team that really
    appreciates Turkey came to power in Washington when Obama became
    President.

    President Obama's administration does not want to see a Turkey that is
    moving away from Europe, embracing Eurasia and the Islamic world and
    that has a second-class democracy.

    On the contrary, the Obama administration is laden with people who
    think that it would be in America's best interests for a stable Turkey
    that has set EU membership as its goal by having a first-class
    democracy.

    Among these people are the pragmatic and realistic Secretary of State
    Clinton and Secretary of Defence Gates. President Obama's National
    Security Adviser at the White House is the retired General Jim Jones,
    a former Commander in Chief of NATO and someone who knows the Turkish
    military very well indeed.

    Even more interesting is Philip H Gordon, whom President Obama stated
    last Saturday he would make Assistant Secretary of State for Europe
    and Eurasia at the White House.

    It is our wish that this scenario is played out well and that
    President Obama's incredibly important visit to Turkey heralds a fine
    new era in relations.

    [translated from Turkish]
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