Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: A Model Partnership

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: A Model Partnership

    A MODEL PARTNERSHIP
    By Ferai Tinc

    Turkish Press
    Dec 18 2009

    HURRIYET- Analyses of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's visit to
    the US earlier this month continue to come in. Ian Lesser has been an
    influential figure in US foreign policy since the 1990s. He focuses
    on the Middle East, Turkey and international security at the German
    Marshall Fund. In an article about Erdogan's visit, Lesser makes
    interesting conjectures about the future of Turkish-US relations.

    'Both sides are likely to have come away convinced that some
    potentially difficult issues have been managed,' he wrote. 'Yet,
    the visit did little to bridge substantial differences in perception
    and approach on key issues, above all, Iran, the Palestinian issue,
    and the complex of disputes in the Caucasus.'

    'Model partnership' is a concept developed to replace the US' post-9/11
    'model country' idea under its Greater Middle East Initiative. The
    idea that Turkey is a model for Muslim countries led to much debate
    and was rejected by many. In contrast, the model partnership concept
    has won widespread approval, as Erdogan showed by his references to
    it in Washington. On the concept, Lesser wrote, 'Presumably, it is
    meant to suggest that the range and character of cooperation, rather
    than the nature of the Turkish system itself, is the real measure of
    why Turkey matters.' He added, 'It might also suggest a more flexible
    standard of cooperation than the harder-edged notion of "strategic"
    partnership.' The model partnership will be determined by Turkey's
    cooperation with Washington on regional issues.

    It will also be tested when Turkey faces certain hurdles next year,
    including new sanctions on Iran, the Palestinian issue, and relations
    with Armenia.

    Lesser warned that the last issue might cause friction between
    Washington and Ankara. He wrote, 'The (Obama) administration pressed
    Turkey to complete the process of normalization envisioned in recent
    Turkish-Armenian accords. But the ratification of these accords by the
    Turkish Parliament is hardly assured, and Ankara is inclined to link
    their implementation to movement on the long-running Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute. Washington, strongly convinced of the wider regional value
    of an open border between Turkey and Armenia, prefers to decouple
    these issues. Failure to implement the accords could easily spell new
    friction in Turkish-American relations, and the Erdogan visit appears
    to have produced no new commitments on this score.' So Washington
    places more importance on the Armenian initiative than the government's
    democratic initiative. Turkey is going through a difficult time, both
    inside and out. Actually, these two have never been separate. I'm not
    saying this because I'm pessimistic, but in order to wake up the Alices
    who bury their heads in the Wonderland that they create in their minds.
Working...
X