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  • ANKARA: Turkish Official Says Foreign Policy Priorities Coincide Wit

    TURKISH OFFICIAL SAYS FOREIGN POLICY PRIORITIES COINCIDE WITH THOSE OF USA

    Anadolu Agency
    March 20, 2009
    Turkey

    Washington, 20 March: Ahmet Davutoglu, chief adviser to Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan on foreign policy, has said that differences
    existed between Turkey and the United States when former President
    George W Bush was in office but the US and Turkish preferences and
    priorities in foreign policy almost completely coincided when President
    Barack Obama came to power.

    Davutoglu held a press conference after the week-long talks he had
    in Washington with Ret Gen James Jones, President Obama's adviser on
    national security; Deputy State Secretary James Steinberg, who is the
    second highest ranking State Department official; George Mitchell,
    US special envoy to the Middle East; Dennis Ross, US special adviser
    on Iran, southwestern Asia, and the Gulf region; other high-ranking
    State Department officials; Howard Berman, head of the House Foreign
    Relations Committee, and other high-ranking congressmen.

    Stressing that a difference of views existed between Turkey and the
    United States on various issues when former President George W Bush
    was in office, Davutoglu gave Syria as an example. However, he noted
    that the policies of Turkey and the United States almost completely
    coincided after the Obama came to power.

    Davutoglu said, "My impression is that the stands of the two sides on
    almost all the issues coincide. All the officials I have talked with
    appreciated Turkey's foreign policy initiatives on the Middle East,
    Caucasus, and Afghanistan."

    Recalling that former President Bill Clinton visited Turkey in his
    seventh year in office and former President George W Bush visited in
    his fourth year in power, Davutoglu said that President Obama will
    arrive in Turkey after he visits Canada. He noted that his visit
    will show the importance the United States attaches to Turkey and
    its foreign policy. He said, "The relations between Turkey and the
    United States will be maintained on a favourable basis in the new era."

    Asked to comment on a possible rapprochement between Turkey and
    Armenia and the incidents in 1915, Davutoglu said, "We are working
    on a scenario for the Caucasus. Everyone will stand to gain from
    it. We hope that a negative development will not take place to harm
    the positive state of affairs. We also hope that a positive agenda
    will influence the relations between Turkey and the United States."

    Davutoglu was asked, "Can you comment on the role Turkey might be asked
    to play in the Middle East?" He responded by saying, "No-one can assign
    a task to us. We fulfil the historic role we have. Working together
    must not be taken to mean that we have been tasked to do something."

    Davutoglu said that the United States has not asked Turkey to dispatch
    additional troops to Afghanistan.

    Recalling that Turkey has been defending the view that non-military
    steps should be taken in addition to the military measures in
    Afghanistan, Davutoglu asserted that the United States began to
    consider the matter at the present time.

    Responding to a question, he said that the possibility of disarming
    the PKK [Kurdistan Workers' Party] was not on the agenda of his talks
    in Washington. He noted, "The way a struggle is waged against terror
    is quite clear." Davutoglu recalled the existence of a mechanism on
    the matter between Turkey, the United States, the Iraqi government
    and the administration in northern Iraq.

    Davutoglu said that the US government has launched a historic
    initiative related to Syria and noted that the US policy is in parallel
    with Turkey's approach.

    Davutoglu has rounded up his talks in Washington. He is expected to
    participate in the two-day conference on Turkey-US relations at the
    Princeton University in New Jersey today.
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