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  • ANKARA: Obama nominee defies senator's pressure to criticize Turkey

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 28 2009


    Obama nominee defies senator's pressure to criticize Turkey


    Philip Gordon, recently appointed by US President Barack Obama as
    assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, has
    refused to call Turkey's presence in Cyprus an "occupation" and
    insisted that any US move to back Armenian "genocide" claims would be
    counterproductive, despite pressure from a senator at a Senate
    committee.

    At his confirmation hearing at the Senate Committee on Foreign
    Relations on Thursday, Gordon was asked to comment on a pre-election
    statement by Obama outlining his foreign policy priorities in which he
    said "a negotiated political settlement on Cyprus would end the
    Turkish occupation of northern Cyprus and repair the island's tragic
    division while paving the way to prosperity and peace throughout the
    entire region." When asked if he agreed with the statement, Gordon
    said "yes," but when Sen. Robert Menendez pressed him to say if he
    considered the Turkish presence on the island an occupation, he only
    said the Greek Cypriot government and a number of experts considered
    it an occupation.
    Gordon was then criticized by Menendez for opposing past attempts in
    the US Congress to pass a resolution recognizing claims that Armenians
    were subjected to a genocide campaign at the hands of the Ottoman
    Empire in World War I. Menendez then said he was concerned over
    whether Gordon would act in a balanced manner regarding this
    matter. Gordon, for his part, insisted that congressional measures on
    the issue would provoke a "nationalist backlash" in Turkey. To prove
    that he would take a balanced approach, Gordon talked of the need to
    "recognize that terrible tragedy took place," and said "more than 1.5
    million people were driven from their homes and massacred."

    Congress has recently introduced a new resolution calling on the US
    president to describe the killings of Armenians as genocide. Turkey
    says any such move would both harm Turkish-US relations and undermine
    the efforts between Turkey and Armenia to normalize their relations,
    severed, among other reasons, due to the dispute over history. Ankara
    denies the genocide accusations and says the killings were a result of
    civil strife.

    In a sign of the importance attached to Turkey by the new US
    administration, Obama is expected to visit Ankara to discuss a wide
    range of issues including Iran's nuclear program, Iraq and
    Afghanistan.

    When asked why good relations with Turkey were important by
    Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, Gordon noted that the US image in Turkey had
    deteriorated badly in recent years and added that it was "hard to get
    work done in a democracy when there is such skepticism about our
    country." He added: "We have a lot of work to do with them. Turkey is
    critical for the energy routes between the Caspian, the Middle East
    and the West. Turkey is a country that has borders with Greece, the
    Black Sea, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Iraq, Syria and the
    Mediterranean. For that reason alone it's a critical strategic player
    in the world. And it is an aspirant to EU membership. The global
    symbolism of a majority Muslim country joining EU will be very
    powerful."

    "We have a compelling national interest in working with Turkey, which
    is not to say we agree with them on everything," he also said.

    Gordon, a senior fellow for US foreign policy at the Brookings
    Institution, was nominated to replace Daniel Fried on March 11.

    28 March 2009, Saturday
    ALÄ° H. ASLAN WASHINGTON
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