Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Hurricane on Turkey's horizon

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

  • ANKARA: Hurricane on Turkey's horizon

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    May 29 2006


    Hurricane on Turkey's horizon
    Recep Guvelioglu

    [email protected] May 2006


    Weather forecasts are very important not only for our daily lives but
    also in politics. This summer will be very hot in domestic and
    foreign affairs, and this fall I'm expecting a hurricane that will
    hit international affairs hardest. Turkey will be particularly
    vulnerable to enormous international waves. Let's take a quick look
    at our foreign relations situation.

    Cyprus and the EU

    The parliamentary elections in southern Cyprus ended with a victory
    for the Working People's Progressive Party (AKEL) and the centrist
    Democratic Rally Party (DISY). In another words, Greek Cypriots
    supported the current leftist coalition. Tassos Papadopoulos said
    that there will not be any change in their policy towards the Cyprus
    problem. The leftist mentality in Hellenic states like Greece and
    Cyprus is completely different than what the terminology of socialism
    dictates. Greek socialists are more nationalist than others. Andreas
    Papandreou's Panhellenic Socialist Movement Party (PASOK) in Greece
    was the perfect example of my view. Tassos Papadopoulos' government
    was, is and will be the same type. Even though European Union
    countries are irritated by the results of the elections, they will
    not alter their support for the Greek Cypriots.

    The Cyprus issue is currently dominating membership negotiations
    between the EU and Turkey. The EU Commission, which will gather in
    October, may suspend membership negotiations between the EU and
    Turkey. There are two reasons for this:

    1. The Turkish government has not ratified an additional protocol in
    its Parliament. This pertains to the recognition of southern Cyprus'
    Greek administration as the "Cypriot Republic."

    2. The Turkish government has so far not permitted Greek Cypriot
    vessels and planes to use Turkish ports and airports. That's why
    Michael Leigh, director general for enlargement with the European
    Commission, openly said that Turkey must fulfill its responsibilities
    as noted in the additional protocol. Leigh added that most of the
    arrangements that the EU has requested regarding Northern Cyprus have
    been realized. Ankara says that after the embargo of Turkish Republic
    of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) is lifted and the isolation policy is
    stopped, Turkey can recognize the Greek administration. The EU, on
    the other, claims that this should have been declared before the
    decision to start negotiations between Turkey and the EU.

    Representatives of the EU will go to the island and meet with Talat
    and Papadopoulos. Talat's attitude towards the Greek Cypriots and the
    EU has drastically changed. Now he is getting closer to Denktas.

    Negotiations between the Greek and Turkish sides of the island on
    "daily issues" have also reached a dead end. On the other hand United
    Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan's term is going to end in the
    near future. In short, the Cyprus issue is at a stalemate. There will
    not be any solution if it goes on like this. Since it dominates
    Turkish-EU relations, negotiations for membership are at a dead end
    as well. In October this issue will explode.

    Iraq

    There has been an undeclared civil war between Islamic sects (Sunnis
    and Shiites) in Iraq. But it may turn out to be a clash between
    ethnic groups. The process of establishing an independent Kurdish
    state is at a final stage. Technical details have been completed for
    this. If they put Kirkuk into their domination area they will declare
    the city their capital. The Turkmens are completely out of the
    picture. They will be mentioned as a minority like the 200,000
    Armenians. The future of Iraq will be clearer in the fall.

    Iran

    President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's Iran seems to have passed the stage
    of enrichment of uranium, and they are in a position to implement a
    missile system to deliver a nuclear bomb. It is at least an irritable
    situation for Turkey to have such an erratic neighbor with a nuclear
    capability. Israel, as the probable first target of this nuclear
    threat, is furious. The U.S. seems to be moving towards using force
    to stop the process. But due to Russian and Chinese objections, there
    is no chance of Washington getting a go-ahead to intervene in Iran
    from the UN Security Council. The council may adopt a decision
    backing a nuclear nonproliferation treaty in general, and Uncle Sam
    may interpret the council's general decision as a greenlight for
    armed intervention on Tehran's soil. It is probably easy to bomb
    Iran's nuclear facilities, but to stop their retaliation in terrorist
    activities is almost impossible and unpredictable.

    The question is when will it happen and what will Turkey do.
    We will see by the end of this summer.

    These are some of the sources for possible hurricanes that will
    affect Turkey.
Working...
X