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ANKARA: US Warship Sails Through Straits, Russia Suspicious

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  • ANKARA: US Warship Sails Through Straits, Russia Suspicious

    US WARSHIP SAILS THROUGH STRAITS, RUSSIA SUSPICIOUS

    Today's Zaman
    Aug 23 2008
    Turkey

    In a move likely to heat up tensions between the United States and
    Russia over a conflict in the troubled Caucasus, a US Navy warship
    sailed through the Turkish Straits yesterday to take relief supplies
    to Georgia.

    The guided missile destroyer USS McFaul passed through the Dardanelles
    and the Bosporus, and two other ships, the US Coast Guard cutter Dallas
    and the command ship USS Mount Whitney, will follow in the coming
    days. "The USS McFaul is under way now, having taken on humanitarian
    supplies for the people of Georgia," a spokes-man for the US Navy in
    Europe said.

    The two Navy ships and a US Coast Guard cutter are carrying relief
    supplies, including bottled water, blankets, hygiene kits, baby food,
    milk and nappies, said Cdr. Scott Miller, spokesman for the US 6th
    Fleet. He stated that the McFaul and the Dallas were expected to arrive
    in Georgia next week and the Mount Whitney around the end of the month.

    A Polish ship also passed through the Turkish Straits yesterday,
    but Turkish diplomatic sources emphasized that the ship was headed
    to the Black Sea to take part in a NATO task mission that sources
    said had been planned months ago.

    Russia, which occupied part of Georgia in response to a Georgian
    military offensive in the pro-Russia breakaway region of South Ossetia
    early this month, expressed concern over the US Navy ships' trip to
    the Black Sea. "From the Russian point of view ... the usefulness
    of this operation is extremely dubious," Anatoly Nogovitsyn, deputy
    chief of the Russian military's General Staff was quoted by Reuters as
    saying when asked about the US Navy mission to deliver aid to Georgia.

    The ships are part of a humanitarian mission, but observers say it
    is also a message of military deterrence by the United States to
    Russia. The US military had already begun delivering relief supplies
    by air a week ago.

    Turkey, which has close ties with neighboring Georgia and is a key
    strategic ally of Washington, has been walking a delicate diplomatic
    line during the Caucasus conflict in order not to antagonize
    Russia. Ankara, which has developed its trade ties with Russia and
    relies on imports from Russia to meet its natural gas needs, fears
    it could be caught in the middle of an undesired, Cold War-type
    confrontation between Russia and the United States if tensions rise
    further. Hoping for peaceful resolution of the crisis, Ankara has
    been floating a proposal for a regional cooperation platform that is
    planned to include Turkey, Russia, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    The US request to send warships to the Black Sea put Ankara in a
    difficult position as it insists all passages through the Turkish
    Straits, the only sea outlet to the Black Sea, must be in compliance
    with the international Montreux Convention. The US had initially
    planned to send two Navy hospital ships that each weigh 70,000 tons,
    far above the maximum weight allowed in the Montreux Convention. Ankara
    refused, prompting further negotiations with the United States to
    find a compromise. The three ships now headed to Georgia all meet
    the standards set by the Montreux Convention.

    There were concerns that the US could force Turkey to agree to changes
    to the convention to be able to give a military message to Russia
    by sending the two hospital ships. But Matt Bryza, deputy assistant
    secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, said earlier
    this week that the US had no intention of seeking revisions to the
    Montreux Convention.

    CHP questions policy

    The rising tensions have increased opposition pressure on the
    government at home. The main opposition Republican People's Party
    (CHP), which views government efforts to create a Caucasus regional
    platform to resolve regional crises with suspicion, yesterday formally
    requested a statement on whether the US ships transiting the Turkish
    Straits met Montreux standards.

    The CHP's Onur Oymen issued a formal inquiry to Foreign Minister
    Ali Babacan over whether the United States complied with Montreux
    requirements that all warship transits have to be declared to Turkish
    authorities eight days in advance.

    Foreign Ministry officials state that Ankara has not been forced to
    compromise, as the three ships meet the requirements stipulated by the
    Montreux Convention. "As has been the case for around seven decades,
    we haven't made any exception to the 1936 Montreux Convention, and
    we will never make such an exception. Turkey is extremely sensitive
    on this issue," an official told Today's Zaman on Thursday.

    The Foreign Ministry yesterday issued a written statement in which
    it reiterated that foreign-flagged military ships are passing through
    the Turkish Straits to the Black Sea in line with the notices conveyed
    to Turkish authorities and in compliance with the Montreux Convention.

    "In this context, four ships belonging to the Standing NATO Maritime
    Group 1 -- Spain (SPS Almirante Don Juan de Borbon), Germany
    (FGS Luebeck), Poland (ORP General Kazimierz Pulaski) and US (USS
    Taylor) -- will visit the ports of Constanza in Romania and Varna
    in Bulgaria in the west Black Sea and our country's Ä°stanbul ports
    for training and as part of NATO's planned activities approved in
    October 2007. Excluding this, passages of other foreign military ships
    including those of the US are being done in line with the Montreux
    Convention," the statement said.

    --Boundary_(ID_WUDjG10RugBDQep3VzM48A)--
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