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Turkey Can Bridge The US-Iran Divide

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  • Turkey Can Bridge The US-Iran Divide

    TURKEY CAN BRIDGE THE US-IRAN DIVIDE
    By Manik Mehta

    Gulf News
    http://www.gulfnews.com/opinion/columns/world /10234111.html
    Aug 4 2008
    United Arab Emirates

    Turkey's relations with the US went through a rollercoaster,
    last October, when the US Congress passed a resolution on Armenia,
    describing the killings of Armenians during the First World War in
    the Ottoman empire as "genocide". This had angered Istanbul which
    was already riled by the war in Iraq from where the Kurdish Workers'
    Party (PKK) launched attacks on Turkey.

    However, US-Turkish relations considerably improved, particularly after
    the warm welcome to Turkish President Abdullah Gul during his visit
    to Washington earlier this year. The ensuing strategic cooperation
    between the two sides is a manifestation of what Gul called a "new
    chapter" in bilateral relations.

    Although Turkish public opinion is unfavourable against the US, the
    strategic cooperation has, meanwhile, resuscitated the relationship
    between the two Nato partners. Kurdish nationalism is Ankara's
    Achilles' heel; it has brought Turkey closer to Iran which has its own
    Kurdish problem and has found a common cause with Turkey. Additionally,
    both sides have a vibrant trading and economic relationship.

    While critics fear that closer Turkish-Iranian ties will
    have ramifications for US-Turkish relations, others see an
    opportunity. Turkey's close ties with Iran should be used to persuade
    the latter to renounce its nuclear programme which is causing a lot of
    concern to the US and, particularly, Israel which has been the target
    of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's belligerent outbursts.

    US-Turkish contacts have recently intensified on Iran's nuclear
    programme. President George W. Bush's National Security Adviser,
    Stephen Hadley, met Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan in July
    in Ankara - just before Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki
    arrived in Turkey - to send, apparently, a carrot-and-stick message on
    Iran's nuclear programme. Subsequently, US and Iranian representatives
    met, for the first time in three decades, at the six-nation meeting
    in Geneva to discuss Iran's nuclear programme.

    Indeed, Mottaki sounded unusually conciliatory, even calling
    the presence of Undersecretary of State William Burns, the third
    senior-most American diplomat, at the talks as "a new positive
    approach". Turkey has apparently played a quiet role in Mottaki's
    moderate reaction which was a far cry from Ahmadinejad's fiery
    rhetoric. Though glaring fundamental differences between the two
    will persist, an atmospheric improvement, with some help from Turkey,
    could bring both sides on "talking terms".

    Iran's testing of two separate rounds of long-range ballistic missiles
    in early July has also unnerved not only the United States and Israel,
    but also the Gulf Arab states. The missile firing was intended to send
    different messages to different audiences. The missile tests warn the
    West that Iran, which has strengthened its presence in the Strait of
    Hormuz, could target oil shipments from the Arabian Gulf ports and deal
    a crippling blow to the Western and also the oil-driven Arab economies.

    They were also aimed to silence Iran's domestic critics, frustrated
    with the regime's ruinous economic policies, by whipping up nationalist
    fervour and take the wind out of the critics' sail.

    Rapprochement

    According to some American strategists, Turkey would be willing
    to bring about the rapprochement between the US and Iran, and thus
    prevent a military conflict. On the other hand, the hardcore Iranian
    leadership would prefer making concessions on the nuclear issue to
    Muslim Turkey rather than directly to the US.

    Indeed, some Americans argue that by allowing it a face-saving
    withdrawal, Iran could be persuaded to eventually abandon its
    nuclear programme. The Iranian people desperately want an end to the
    West-backed sanctions against their country which is treated like a
    pariah at every international venue because of their unpopular regime.

    Indeed, the regime knows this and also the fact that it will not
    be able to stop for long the tide of public disenchantment with its
    dogmatic attitude. This is a good time for the US to take more Turkish
    help and resolve the stalemate with Iran.
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