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Pence meets with Turkish officials to discuss Iran

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  • Pence meets with Turkish officials to discuss Iran

    Congressional Press Releases
    May 8, 2006 Monday

    PENCE MEETS WITH TURKISH OFFICIALS TO DISCUSS IRAN TEN MINUTES AFTER
    IRANIANS DEPART

    by MIKE PENCE, REPRESENTATIVE, HOUSE


    For Immediate Release

    Pence Meets With Turkish Officials To Discuss Iran Ten Minutes After
    Iranians Depart

    Contact: Matt Lloyd (202) 226-4379

    May 8, 2006

    WASHINGTON, DC - Congressman Mike Pence, a member of the House
    International Relations Committee, on a Congressional Delegation trip
    to the Middle East, met with the Foreign Minister of Turkey today.
    The following is his latest blog entry on the meeting:
    <http://mikepence.house.gov/blog/> http://mikepence.house.gov/blog/

    Turkey May 8, 2006

    Months ago, when we planned to visit Ankara, the capitol city of
    Turkey, on our way back from Iraq, little did we know that our visit
    would take place in the midst of swirling international developments
    regarding Iran.

    I did not imagine that our meetings with the Foreign Minister of
    Turkey, Abdullah Gul, would take place while the UN was debating
    sanctions against Iran.

    And I never imagined that our meeting with the General Secretary of
    Turkey's National Security Council would take place in the same
    building and in the same conference room where the National Security
    Advisor of Iran had just concluded a meeting ten minutes earlier. But
    that's just what happened.

    Our day began with a short drive to the palatial residence of the
    Foreign Minister of Turkey, Abdullah Gul. A pleasant and earnest man,
    the Foreign Minister ushered us into a large conference room and
    offered a perfunctory welcome.

    After I thanked our host for receiving us, I opened the meeting with
    reference to the fact that the United States values our relationship
    with Turkey, despite recent differences over our policy in Iraq. I
    reiterated the comments expressed by Secretary of State Rice in her
    visit to this country just two weeks ago and invited his comments on
    Iraq and Iran. Others expressed our concern over the recent meeting
    with Hamas in Turkey and urged a just resolution of the question of
    Armenian genocide.

    The Foreign Minister leaned forward on his elbows and went to work
    explaining the Turkish view of each of the issues in an intense but
    friendly manner.

    On Iraq, he expressed the long-standing position of Turkey that Iraq
    must remain a single country. He said the new government should
    "concentrate on Baghdad and should not think of separating the
    country." He urged a long view of the challenges we face in Iraq
    saying, "I believe for a long time, Iraq will keep us busy."

    On the subject of withdrawal, he was equally blunt: "We should not
    give up until we se a stable and democratic Iraq....a sudden or
    immediate withdrawal from Iraq by the United States would be a
    catastrophe."

    Of the root causes of the insurgency: "Iran's influence is
    deepening."

    On the subject of Iran's nuclear enrichment program, the Foreign
    Minister alluded to a meeting later in the day with a delegation from
    Iran that included Iran's National Security Advisor Larijani. He said
    he expected the Iranians to argue that they needed nuclear power to
    meet their energy needs but added, "They cannot convince us. They
    have enough energy sources." He assured us that he would deliver a
    "strong message" that "nuclear program is wrong" and closed saying
    that on the subject of Iran's nuclear program, "our policies are the
    same as United States."

    Later in the day we met with the civilian National Security Council
    headed by Ambassador Yigit Alpogan. Until very recently, this agency
    was the center of Turkey's national security and is still housed in
    an opulent building of long corridors, red carpets and ceremonial
    military displays. We entered the conference room and sat at a long
    table facing our Turkish counterparts and learned, to our surprise,
    that the Iranian delegation left that room just ten minutes before we
    arrived. The topic: Iran's nuclear enrichment program. We got right
    down to business.

    I asked the Ambassador what insights he might share about the
    situation in Iran since Turkey had shared a border with Iran and had
    close dealings since about the 15th century.

    That was the moment that he informed us that the Iranians had just
    left and that he had been meeting with them for the past four hours.

    He said that Iran had made its case: "they have complaints; they say
    they have been misunderstood...that they would like the right to have
    peaceful uses of nuclear energy." Interestingly, he said that the
    Iranians "are open to inspections and transparency" saying that they
    assured him "they don't have nothing to hide."

    When we asked how he had responded, flanked by two military generals,
    the civilian head of Turkey's national security said, "We are
    disturbed that they are intending to acquire nuclear weapons
    technology." Much later in the discussion, he would use this same
    phrase, "we told them we are disturbed."

    When one colleague asked, "What are they really up to?", the Foreign
    Minister replied in a nonchalant manner, "They want to develop a
    nuclear weapon as soon as possible."

    The Iranians apparently didn't make their case.

    Of solutions, the Foreign Minister stated emphatically that "the only
    way to solve the problem is through diplomatic matters." But he said
    he had made it clear to Iran that Turkey stand with the UN saying,
    "Turkey will abide by all means to any Security Council Resolution."
    In all, it was an encouraging meeting with a friend who was willing
    to speak truth to their neighbor.

    As we prepared to end the meeting, I told the Foreign Minister how
    grateful we were to be received on such a momentous day where he met
    with Iranian and American officials in the same day. To lighten the
    moment, I said, "I won't ask you which meeting was more tedious!" Our
    host burst into laughter adding, "And I will not answer this question
    anyway!" A meeting among friends should always end in a spirit of
    friendship.

    As we fly across Europe enroute to visit soldiers at our hospital in
    Germany, I am certain that while we are leaving Turkey behind, the
    topic of our attention in these high level meetings will be front and
    center for some time. I leave with a sense of the seriousness of this
    moment in contemporary world history. I also leave with a sense that,
    while we may differ from time to time with the government of Turkey,
    we have in this ancient land a friend of freedom and of the United
    States. And that will be an asset as the United States responds in
    Iraq and to Iran in the uncertain days that lie ahead.
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