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ANKARA: Iran Mediation Prospects Gain Momentum With Key Visits

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  • ANKARA: Iran Mediation Prospects Gain Momentum With Key Visits

    IRAN MEDIATION PROSPECTS GAIN MOMENTUM WITH KEY VISITS

    Zaman Online
    July 17 2008
    Turkey

    Babacan met Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on the sidelines
    of a summit of eight Muslim nations in Malaysia earlier this month.

    Ankara is preparing to host senior Iranian and US officials this week
    as prospects increase that Turkey may take up a mediation role to
    help resolve an international conflict over Tehran's nuclear program,
    which the West suspects is intended to develop nuclear weapons.

    Stephen Hadley, national security advisor for US President George
    W. Bush, will meet with President Abdullah Gul, Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan on a number of what
    US Embassy officials described as "routine" issues, including Iran's
    nuclear program, today in Ankara. Tomorrow Ankara will host Iranian
    Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki to discuss regional issues. The
    visits by two senior officials come as prospects emerge for Turkish
    mediation between Iran and the international community, which is
    urging the Islamic republic to halt its contentious nuclear program.

    "We are in touch with all parties involved. They tell us that we
    should also be in the picture," Foreign Minister Babacan said in
    televised remarks on the Iran row yesterday. He told NTV that Turkey is
    playing a defined role in efforts for peace between Syria and Israel,
    referring to Ankara's mediation in indirect talks between the two
    mutually hostile states, while on Iran, it is playing an "unnamed"
    role, without elaborating.

    Iran's nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, will meet with European Union
    foreign policy chief Javier Solana and envoys from China, Russia,
    France, Britain and Germany in Geneva on Saturday. In a major policy
    shift, the United States said it was also sending a representative,
    Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs William Burns, to
    the talks.

    They will discuss Iran's response to an offer made by world powers
    last month to encourage it to give up sensitive nuclear work that the
    West believes is aimed at building a nuclear bomb and Tehran says is
    for peaceful power-generation purposes.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said last week that Ankara might
    be asked to play a role in the Iran nuclear row similar to the role
    it is playing in Syria-Israel peace efforts. Turkey has hosted three
    rounds of indirect talks between Syrian and Israeli representatives
    in recent months, and a fourth round is expected to take place in
    the next few weeks, according to Babacan.

    Babacan, who had closed-door talks with Iranian President Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad on the sidelines of a summit of eight Muslim nations in
    Malaysia earlier this month, described the lack of trust between Iran
    and the international community as a main reason why the conflict
    cannot be resolved. "We, as Turkey, believe that dialogue is the
    main means for reaching a settlement in this dispute," he said,
    emphasizing that he has explained this to US officials in his past
    contacts as well.

    Babacan is expected to visit Tehran between July 28 and 31 to attend
    a ministerial conference of the Non-Aligned Movement. Officials said
    the visit was not directly related to efforts to find a solution to
    the nuclear row.

    Ankara opposes nuclear weapons in its region but says any country
    must have the right to make use of nuclear energy for peaceful
    purposes. Ties with Iran, once strained over Turkish suspicions
    that Iran wanted to export its Islamic regime to Turkey, improved
    dramatically after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party) first came to power in 2002. The two
    countries are now cooperating, despite US opposition, in the fields
    of energy and security.

    Turkish diplomatic sources told Today's Zaman that Ankara will
    reiterate in talks with Hadley and Mottaki that the problems must
    be resolved in peaceful ways and urge Iran to pursue transparency in
    its nuclear program.

    Mottaki will visit Turkey on a regional tour that also includes Oman
    and Syria. Iranian sources said the talks will focus on regional
    issues and the upcoming meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement.

    In June, EU foreign policy chief Solana presented Tehran with a
    package of incentives proposed by world powers to coax Iran to halt
    its nuclear work. Tension increased last week after Iran test-fired
    missiles in the Gulf and the United States reminded Tehran that it
    was ready to defend its allies. Fears of conflict helped push oil
    prices to new record highs.

    Armenian resolution to harm US ties

    When Hadley visits Ankara, Turkish concerns over the possible passage
    of a resolution by the US Congress recognizing Armenian claims of
    genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire will also be on the
    agenda. US presidential presumptive nominee Barack Obama caused
    concern in Ankara when he said during his election campaign that he
    would endorse the genocide claims if elected president.

    "There will be serious damage to ties if such a resolution is
    passed," Babacan told NTV. "Relations cannot continue as if nothing
    happened." The outgoing Bush administration has worked successfully
    to block a vote in the House of Representatives on the "genocide"
    resolution. Babacan suggested that President Gul may attend a soccer
    match in Armenia, a move that would mark a shift in relations between
    the two states, which have no diplomatic ties.

    Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan has invited Gul to visit Yerevan
    for a soccer match in September. "Such participation would depend on
    developments ahead of the match," Babacan said. Armenia and Turkey
    will play against each other in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on
    Sept. 6 in a qualifying match for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, scheduled
    to be held in South Africa. The foreign minister also insisted on his
    argument that the Muslim majority in Turkey also faces problems in
    terms of religious freedoms and accused his critics in the opposition
    and the media of denying the existence of serious problems.
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