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ANKARA: Babacan Set To Have High-Level Talks In US Visit

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  • ANKARA: Babacan Set To Have High-Level Talks In US Visit

    BABACAN SET TO HAVE HIGH-LEVEL TALKS IN US VISIT

    Today's Zaman
    June 3 2008
    Turkey

    During a bilateral working visit to the United States to last over a
    week, Foreign Minister Ali Babacan is expected to meet with a number
    of senior US officials, including Vice President Dick Cheney and
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

    Babacan was scheduled to depart from Ankara for Washington, D.C.,
    late last night after Today's Zaman went to print. In addition to
    Cheney and Rice, the minister is also expected to meet with Treasury
    Secretary Henry Paulson and Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman, diplomatic
    sources said yesterday, although work was still under way to finalize
    the program.

    While in Washington Babacan will also meet with members of the US
    Congress, opinion leaders and media representatives. Before departing
    for New York next week, he will also deliver a speech at the Atlantic
    Council of the United States.

    Babacan's visit will be the first senior-level visit from Ankara to
    Washington after Turkey's chief prosecutor presented a case to the
    Constitutional Court in March to shut down the ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party) and ban its leaders from politics on
    charges of it being a "focal point of anti-secular activities." Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and former AK Party member President
    Abdullah Gul are among those the prosecutor seeks to ban from politics.

    Ongoing cooperation between Ankara and Washington against activities
    of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in northern Iraq as
    well as a resolution calling World War I-era killings of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks "genocide" and passed by a US congressional committee
    in October 2007 are among key topics to be covered in Babacan's talks
    in the US capital.

    The United States has toughened its stance against the PKK, and
    President George W. Bush declared the group a "common enemy" for
    the United States, Turkey and Iraq at a meeting with Erdogan in
    November. The Turkish military has been launching aerial strikes on
    PKK targets in northern Iraq since Dec. 17, and the United States
    supports Turkey's anti-PKK efforts, providing intelligence about the
    group and airspace clearance for Turkish jet fighters taking part
    in the aerial operations. Troops were also sent to northern Iraq in
    a major ground offensive against the PKK in February. In parallel
    to the US-Turkish cooperation against the PKK, relations between
    Ankara and the Iraqi Kurds, accused in the past by Turkish officials
    of supporting the terrorist group, have also improved recently. Two
    senior officials met with senior Iraqi Kurdish official Nechirvan
    Barzani in May in the first direct high-level contact. Barzani recently
    returned to northern Iraq from a key visit to Washington last month,
    during which he met with Bush, Rice, Defense Secretary Robert Gates
    and other senior administration officials.

    While in New York, the minister will represent Turkey at a high-level
    meeting hosted at United Nations headquarters on June 10-11. The
    meeting will review progress made in implementing the 2001 Declaration
    of Commitment on HIV/AIDS and the 2006 Political Declaration on
    HIV/AIDS.

    Babacan's next stop after New York will be the French capital, where
    he will participate in an international conference aimed at raising
    funds for Afghanistan and reviewing that strategy.

    According to Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
    (OECD) figures released earlier this year, Afghanistan is among
    countries receiving the most aid from Turkey in 2006, with Official
    Development Assistance (ODA) of $43 million. International donors have
    pledged some $24 billion at three donor conferences since 2002, but the
    level of aid to Afghanistan is still many times lower per head than to
    other countries emerging from conflict, such as Kosovo or East Timor.
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