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  • ANKARA: Obama and Ankara

    Zaman Online, Turkey
    July 28 2008


    Obama and Ankara


    Ã-MER TAÅ?PINAR [email protected] Columnists


    Last week, as I was watching Barack Obama on TV, giving his Berlin
    speech in front of 200,000 people, a disturbing question came to
    mind. What would happen if Obama gave a speech in Turkey? Would the
    crowds be as large and enthusiastic? One side of me says, "Yes, we
    can!" I can't help but think that the Turkish people must be really
    excited about the prospect of radical change in the United States.
    After all, the Bush presidency will not be remembered with nostalgia
    among Turks. There is plenty of evidence illustrating this. For
    starters, according to global opinion polls, Turkey is consistently
    the number-one country in terms of dislike for the Bush
    administration's policies. Logically, in a country like Turkey, there
    must be a lot of sympathy for a new American president who represents
    by the sheer facts of his name, race, ideas and overall demeanor a
    mind-blowing contrast to everything that George W. Bush has come to
    symbolize. Add to this the fact that Turkey itself is a country where
    the power struggle is often defined as one between the "white elite"
    and the "black masses" of Anatolia. Wouldn't black Turks embrace their
    American brother? Think twice before getting carried away. Yes, under
    normal circumstances such parallels between Turkey and America would
    strike a chord and yes, under normal circumstances Obama would be the
    favorite of the Turkish people, mainly because he would be seen as the
    underdog defying the American system.

    Yet one needs to emphasize the term "under normal circumstances." An
    Obama visit to Turkey may not draw hundreds of thousands of cheering
    crowds to the street. The reason is simple and painful. Whenever
    Obama's presidency is discussed in Turkey, there is a big Turkish
    elephant in the room: the Armenian "genocide" issue. Obama's position
    is well known: He is committed to the Armenian cause and has promised
    the Armenian-American community that he will support recognition of
    the "genocide." Now that's a show-stopper for Turkey. The Turkish
    press picked up the story from day one and began to ring alarm
    bells. It did not take very long for Obama's name to become synonymous
    with the Armenian lobby in the eyes of Turks. Similarly, the
    Turkish-American community in the United States has become very
    uncomfortable with the prospect of an Obama presidency. A senior
    Democratic member from the US Congress who happens to be a major Obama
    supporter told me last week that his staffers are already getting an
    earful from the Turkish community in his district. No wonder most
    Turkish-American organizations lined up to support Hillary Clinton
    during the Democratic primaries.

    It is also no wonder that both the government in Ankara and the
    Turkish state apparatus (Note for dummies: government and state can
    mean different things in Turkish politics, especially these days¦)
    appear to be on the same page about Obama: They prefer his opponent
    Republican candidate Senator John McCain. There is no major surprise
    here. The Turkish establishment has always had a deeply rooted love
    affair with Republicans. The roots of this martial romance -- which
    appears to have survived the Bush years -- go back to the good old
    days of the Cold War era, when there was no daylight between the
    Turkish military and the Pentagon. Iraq was of course a major bump in
    the road. But there are still ongoing financial reasons for this
    marriage of convenience to continue. For some mysterious reason
    (!)Turkey's best friends in Washington are always the defense
    companies; and the best friends of the defense companies are the
    Republicans. You get the picture, right? (Note for dummies No. 2:
    Republicans never cut America's defense budget.) Anyways, I
    digress. The crux of the matter for Turkey is the following: Obama is
    a Democrat who supports the Armenian cause whereas McCain is a
    Republican who values Turkey's strategic importance much more than the
    votes of Armenian-Americans. This is how Ankara perceives the
    situation.

    As a result, Turkey is once again out of tune with the rest of the
    world. The whole world is going nuts about Obama while Ankara is stuck
    in history. Is there a way to remind Turkey that there are more
    important things in Turkish-American relations than the Armenian
    issue? This may be an uphill battle. But one way to do so is to focus
    on Obama's popularity in Europe. Imagine both McCain and Obama
    lobbying on Turkey's behalf with EU leaders. To whom do you think
    Europeans would prefer to listen? Take a second look at the crowd
    listening to Obama in Berlin.


    28.07.2008
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