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  • Talking With Turkey

    TALKING WITH TURKEY

    Ottawa Citizen
    November 28, 2006 Tuesday
    Final Edition

    Some 25,000 Turks hit the streets of Istanbul this weekend to protest
    the visit of Pope Benedict XVI. That's good news. Not the protest
    itself, but the fact that only 25,000 people took part in a city
    of 10 million. The Turkish "street" is perhaps more reasonable than
    people think.

    True, other protests are planned and Benedict will be under a massive
    security blanket during his four-day trip. But the pontiff is working
    hard to improve Christian-Muslim relations. On Sunday he sent "cordial
    greetings" of "esteem and sincere friendship" to "the dear Turkish
    people." As a welcome show of good will, Benedict will visit the Blue
    Mosque in Istanbul, becoming only the second pope to set foot in a
    mosque, after John Paul II in 2001.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, for his part, has been
    able to "find time" to meet the Pope today at Ankara airport.

    Otherwise, Mr. Erdogan, en route to a NATO summit in Latvia, will
    be absent for the duration of the Pope's trip. The prime minister
    insisted his absence was no snub and that the Pope was welcome in
    Turkey, though he cautioned that "whoever comes here must show respect
    for the Prophet Muhammad."

    Mr. Erdogan's awkward, somewhat conflicted attitude toward the
    Pope's visit is suggestive of Turkey's general ambivalence about the
    non-Muslim world. Turkey, though, is country of sufficient strategic
    interest that the West needs very much to nurture this relationship.

    Sometimes this is hard to do. Turkey's human-rights record is shaky.

    The country's refusal to admit the Armenian genocide is unfortunate.

    The stubborn demand for an end to the isolation of Northern Cyprus,
    the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state that only Turkey recognizes, is
    putting the country's accession into full membership in the European
    Union on hold yet again.

    Yet we need Turkey on our side. Turkey is a strong counterpoint to the
    geopolitical ambitions of Iran and Syria. As a Muslim country committed
    to the separation of mosque and state, Turkey is a buttress against
    religious fundamentalism in the region. Turkey has its flaws to be
    sure, but it remains a functioning democracy built upon a population
    that is mainly Muslim.

    Western leaders should never surrender their prerogative to speak
    plainly to the Turkish government on matters of conscience. But as
    with any mature relationship, and we see this in the dialogue with
    countries such as Russia and China, the criticism ought to be balanced
    with positive and constructive incentives.

    The pope has chosen the right path by visiting the Blue Mosque. It
    is a gesture of respect. Talking with Turkey about its place in the
    European Union must continue. At the end of the day, the benefits of
    having Turkey firmly within the western orbit justify the efforts
    needed to keep the relationship healthy. If there is one country
    that can demonstrate the compatibility of Islam and democracy, it
    will be Turkey.
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