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  • ANKARA: Turkey rejects confrontation with Iranians

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    March 21 2009


    Turkey rejects confrontation with Iranians

    WASHINGTON - Turkey favors "economic interdependence" with Iran over
    energy-related sanctions on the neighboring country, a top adviser to
    the Turkish prime minister said after meetings with aides to President
    Barack Obama, according to report by Bloomberg.

    "We will not favor energy limitations," Ambassador Ahmet
    DavutoÄ?lu, who advises Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    ErdoÄ?an on foreign policy, told reporters in Washington on
    Friday after meeting with Obama's national security adviser, James
    Jones. DavutoÄ?lu, seen as the architect of the government's
    foreign policy, talked yesterday with top State Department officials
    as part of preparations for Obama's trip to Turkey in
    April.DavutoÄ?lu said the Nabucco natural-gas pipeline that
    Turkey is developing would need gas from several countries, including
    Iran.

    U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza said last week
    in Ankara that the U.S. does not want Iran to contribute gas to the
    pipeline.

    The United States is trying to maintain economic pressure on Iran to
    steer the country away from a nuclear weapons program. Iran, which has
    the world's second-largest gas reserves after Russia, has postponed
    field development plans as international sanctions hamper funding for
    its energy industry.

    Historic era in bilateral ties

    Obama's visit to Turkey so early in his administration, will
    underscore that relations with the United States are on strong
    footing, after difficulties tied to the Iraq War during the Bush
    administration, DavutoÄ?lu said.

    "We are in a historic era where our policies are almost identical on
    all issues," he said.

    DavutoÄ?lu said he was confident that relations would remain on
    "solid ground," when pressed on whether he thought Obama was likely to
    declare the World War I-era mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman
    Turkey as genocide in an annual statement next month.

    The issue should not "hijack the strategic vision of Turkish-American
    relations," DavutoÄ?lu said. DavutoÄ?lu also said Turkey
    was presently working on a set of measures to improve relations with
    Armenia, from which "everyone in the Caucasus would benefit," reported
    Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review's Ã`mit Enginsoy from
    Washington.

    At a separate meeting with Turkish journalists, DavutoÄ?lu said
    he hoped not to see a development in Washington that could derail this
    process.

    "On all matters, we have the impression that our positions are almost
    identical. Our counterparts appreciate our active policies in the
    Middle East, Afghanistan and the Caucasus," DavutoÄ?lu said.

    He recalled that former president Bill Clinton visited Turkey during
    his seventh year as president and Bush's visit came in his fourth
    year. "But Obama will be paying his first, very first, bilateral visit
    to Turkey. This shows the importance the U.S. attaches to Turkey," he
    said.

    He also praised an ongoing mechanism of cooperation among Turkey, the
    U.S., the Iraqi government and Iraqi Kurds to counter the terrorist
    Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, which attacks Turkish targets from
    bases in northern Iraq. DavutoÄ?lu said the Obama administration
    is now involved in a historic rapprochement process with Syria, which
    Turkey supports. He said Turkey and the Bush administration disagreed
    on how to approach Syria, with Turkey calling for engagement with
    Damascus and the former Washington administration seeking its
    isolation.

    10,000 cops for Obama's security

    Thousands of Turkish police will act as U.S. President Barack Obama's
    security while in Turkey, private channel NTV reported Friday. Any
    leave has been suspended for Ankara and Istanbul police due to the
    visit.

    Obama's program is about to be finalized but there are still some
    uncertainties that have not been disclosed due to security reasons,
    the report said. Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama are expected to
    arrive in Ankara on April 5, probably in the late afternoon.

    Obama will make his first visit to Anıtkabir on the morning of
    April 6 and then will proceed to the Presidential Palace for the
    official welcoming ceremony. President Abdullah Gül and Obama
    will first hold one on one talks and then preside over the
    delegations' meeting. Obama will also meet with Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an and will deliver a speech to the Turkish
    Parliament. Obama will go to Istanbul with ErdoÄ?an on the same
    plane. In Istanbul, Obama is expected to visit a university where he
    will meet with Turkish university students.

    On April 7, Obama will participate in the Alliance of
    Civilizations'summit, where U.N. General Secretary Ban Ki Moon and
    Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero will also be present.
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