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ANKARA: What Edwards Means

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  • ANKARA: What Edwards Means

    Turkish Press, Turkey
    July 12 2004

    What Edwards Means
    BYEGM: 7/12/2004
    BY ASLI AYDINTASBAS

    SABAH- Does everybody really want George W. Bush to lose the coming
    US presidential elections? Will a new administration led by
    Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry really manage to turn a
    new page on US foreign policy?

    For Turkey, the situation is quite complicated. As a matter of fact,
    Ankara doesn't willingly support the Bush doctrine of pre-emptive
    strikes whose ultimate aim is to expand American military and
    economic power in the Islamic world. However, on the other hand,
    neither does Ankara oppose the `star' role Washington has set for
    Turkey in its Greater Middle East Initiative (GME), which is why
    certain domestic circles were extremely pleased with Bush's speech at
    Galatasaray University at the closing of NATO's recent Istanbul
    summit. Having seen Turkey's critical importance in the wake of Sept.
    11 attacks, the Bush administration is now lending its full support
    to Ankara on both its EU membership bid and relations with the
    International Monetary Fund. Bush somehow knows and likes our
    country.

    Therefore, Ankara foreign policy circles believe that the devil we
    know is better than the one we don't. Let's recall that Kerry is one
    of the supporters of the so-called Armenian genocide bills. In
    addition, he is a member of US leftist circles, which are known for
    their harsh criticisms of Turkey. Unlike Bush, Kerry won't be willing
    to pressure EU countries for Turkey's EU membership.

    However, Turkey shouldn't let itself get worried. Let's not forget
    the Clinton administration, once very close to the leftist and Greek
    lobbies in the US, and how Clinton's term was one of the golden eras
    for Turkish-US relations. What I'd like to stress here is no matter
    what the US president thinks about our country, Turkey is a sine qua
    non for US foreign policy. There are fixed, inevitable parameters in
    Washington's foreign policy which no leader can alter. Moreover,
    would a Kerry administration be able to ignore the nuclear power
    plant that Iran is currently building in Natanz? Kerry certainly
    doesn't have any magic wand with which to change the world.

    Kerry and his charismatic running mate John Edwards so far seem very
    clumsy in their campaigning, as Edwards is voicing a very leftist
    rhetoric which means little to the US nation. The specter of `class
    war' which Edwards often raises in his speeches is not a popular
    theme for Americans. This duo must prove to their country that they
    are capable of correcting things inside and outside the homeland.
    Otherwise, Americans too might opt to stick with the devil they know.
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