Los Angeles Times
May 3, 2005
Turkey OKs Expanded U.S. Use of Key Air Base
* The arrangement, in principle, would allow the facility to serve as
a hub for nonlethal cargo deliveries to Iraq and Afghanistan.
By Amberin Zaman, Special to The Times
ANKARA, Turkey ' After months of hesitation, Turkey has agreed in
principle to allow the U.S. expanded use of a strategic air base as a
major hub for nonlethal cargo deliveries to Iraq and Afghanistan,
Turkish and U.S. officials confirmed today.
"We have reached agreement for the cargo hub on mutually acceptable
terms," said a senior Turkish official who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said, "Turkish and U.S. military officials
have almost completed work on the technical details of the arrangement."
Under the agreement, U.S. cargo would be flown to the Incirlik air base
near the southern Turkish city of Adana on civilian charter planes and
then transferred to military cargo planes for delivery to Iraq and
Afghanistan.
That would make delivery of supplies to both countries less costly and
more efficient, the U.S. official said.
The base has been used during and since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq to
refuel U.S. Air Force jets en route to Turkey's southern neighbor. The
U.S. sees Turkish approval for expanded facilities as a positive if
inadequate step toward improving ties between the two North Atlantic
Treaty Organization allies. Although the request was made in June 2004,
Turkey "did not respond until now," the U.S. official said.
Hopes for a deal rose last week when Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, a strong critic of U.S. policy in Iraq, told parliament that
"the United States is the main axis of our foreign policy."
In his warmest description of relations with the U.S. since taking power
more than two years ago, Erdogan added: "We can never forget America's
support" for Turkey's efforts to join the European Union.
Erdogan does not need permission from parliament to allow U.S. use of
the air base.
Relations have been rocky since the lead-up to the U.S.-led invasion of
Iraq in 2003. At that time, parliament rejected a bill authorizing
thousands of U.S. troops to use Turkish territory to open a second front
against Saddam Hussein's forces in northern Iraq.
The U.S. later rebuffed an offer by Turkey to send troops to help police
Sunni Muslim strongholds in central Iraq after Baghdad's interim
government voiced strong opposition to any Turkish military presence.
Relations further deteriorated last year when Erdogan called Iraqi
insurgents "martyrs" and members of his party described U.S. actions in
Iraq as "genocide."
Analysts say the government's rhetoric was aimed at appeasing
unprecedented anti-American sentiment in Turkey fueled in part by
Turkish media coverage of U.S. military behavior in Iraq. "The
government sees itself squeezed between the U.S. and the Islamic world,"
said Cuneyt Ulsever, a liberal commentator for the Hurriyet daily
newspaper.
Washington's continued reluctance to take military action against
separatist Kurdish rebels based in northern Iraq is another constant
thorn. Turkish anger has deepened amid escalating violence between
Turkish forces and the rebels, who say they have killed 50 Turkish
soldiers in the last 10 days and claimed responsibility for two bomb
attacks last week in Istanbul and the Aegean tourist resort of Kusadasi,
which killed a policeman.
But some Western diplomats also blame members of Erdogan's circle of
advisors for the chill. "There are those who are trying to persuade
Erdogan that Turkey would be better off leading the Muslim world than
being part of the European Union or a U.S. ally," said a European
diplomat.
Hilmi Ozkok, Turkey's determinedly pro-Western chief of general staff,
and Abdullah Gul, the country's moderate foreign minister, have played
key roles behind the scenes in securing approval for the cargo hub,
Turkish officials close to the negotiations confirmed.
U.S. threats to establish the military logistics center either in
neighboring Bulgaria or the Mediterranean island of Cyprus also jolted
Turkey into a decision, said Murat Yetkin, a veteran observer of
Turkish-American relations.
Others believe that Erdogan approved the deal to help stave off a U.S.
congressional resolution recognizing the mass killings of Armenians in
Turkey during World War I as genocide and to secure a meeting with
President Bush when he travels to the United States next month.
The president is now expected to receive Erdogan, a Turkish official
said.
May 3, 2005
Turkey OKs Expanded U.S. Use of Key Air Base
* The arrangement, in principle, would allow the facility to serve as
a hub for nonlethal cargo deliveries to Iraq and Afghanistan.
By Amberin Zaman, Special to The Times
ANKARA, Turkey ' After months of hesitation, Turkey has agreed in
principle to allow the U.S. expanded use of a strategic air base as a
major hub for nonlethal cargo deliveries to Iraq and Afghanistan,
Turkish and U.S. officials confirmed today.
"We have reached agreement for the cargo hub on mutually acceptable
terms," said a senior Turkish official who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said, "Turkish and U.S. military officials
have almost completed work on the technical details of the arrangement."
Under the agreement, U.S. cargo would be flown to the Incirlik air base
near the southern Turkish city of Adana on civilian charter planes and
then transferred to military cargo planes for delivery to Iraq and
Afghanistan.
That would make delivery of supplies to both countries less costly and
more efficient, the U.S. official said.
The base has been used during and since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq to
refuel U.S. Air Force jets en route to Turkey's southern neighbor. The
U.S. sees Turkish approval for expanded facilities as a positive if
inadequate step toward improving ties between the two North Atlantic
Treaty Organization allies. Although the request was made in June 2004,
Turkey "did not respond until now," the U.S. official said.
Hopes for a deal rose last week when Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, a strong critic of U.S. policy in Iraq, told parliament that
"the United States is the main axis of our foreign policy."
In his warmest description of relations with the U.S. since taking power
more than two years ago, Erdogan added: "We can never forget America's
support" for Turkey's efforts to join the European Union.
Erdogan does not need permission from parliament to allow U.S. use of
the air base.
Relations have been rocky since the lead-up to the U.S.-led invasion of
Iraq in 2003. At that time, parliament rejected a bill authorizing
thousands of U.S. troops to use Turkish territory to open a second front
against Saddam Hussein's forces in northern Iraq.
The U.S. later rebuffed an offer by Turkey to send troops to help police
Sunni Muslim strongholds in central Iraq after Baghdad's interim
government voiced strong opposition to any Turkish military presence.
Relations further deteriorated last year when Erdogan called Iraqi
insurgents "martyrs" and members of his party described U.S. actions in
Iraq as "genocide."
Analysts say the government's rhetoric was aimed at appeasing
unprecedented anti-American sentiment in Turkey fueled in part by
Turkish media coverage of U.S. military behavior in Iraq. "The
government sees itself squeezed between the U.S. and the Islamic world,"
said Cuneyt Ulsever, a liberal commentator for the Hurriyet daily
newspaper.
Washington's continued reluctance to take military action against
separatist Kurdish rebels based in northern Iraq is another constant
thorn. Turkish anger has deepened amid escalating violence between
Turkish forces and the rebels, who say they have killed 50 Turkish
soldiers in the last 10 days and claimed responsibility for two bomb
attacks last week in Istanbul and the Aegean tourist resort of Kusadasi,
which killed a policeman.
But some Western diplomats also blame members of Erdogan's circle of
advisors for the chill. "There are those who are trying to persuade
Erdogan that Turkey would be better off leading the Muslim world than
being part of the European Union or a U.S. ally," said a European
diplomat.
Hilmi Ozkok, Turkey's determinedly pro-Western chief of general staff,
and Abdullah Gul, the country's moderate foreign minister, have played
key roles behind the scenes in securing approval for the cargo hub,
Turkish officials close to the negotiations confirmed.
U.S. threats to establish the military logistics center either in
neighboring Bulgaria or the Mediterranean island of Cyprus also jolted
Turkey into a decision, said Murat Yetkin, a veteran observer of
Turkish-American relations.
Others believe that Erdogan approved the deal to help stave off a U.S.
congressional resolution recognizing the mass killings of Armenians in
Turkey during World War I as genocide and to secure a meeting with
President Bush when he travels to the United States next month.
The president is now expected to receive Erdogan, a Turkish official
said.