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ANKARA: In The Aftermath Of An Election

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  • ANKARA: In The Aftermath Of An Election

    IN THE AFTERMATH OF AN ELECTION

    Cumhuriyet website
    Nov 6 2008
    Istanbul

    The United States has elected Barack Obama as its next president.

    We watched it live on television. When Obama rose to the podium to
    thank the hundreds of thousands of people flooding the square in
    Chicago, more whites applauded him than blacks.

    The people of the United States are essentially celebrating their
    deliverance from President Bush and the beginning of a hope-inspiring
    "era of change."

    The world is celebrating its deliverance from an incompetent president
    who started wars out of religious obsessions and using lies (e.g. Iraq)
    and who created an economic and financial crisis that has ruined the
    American people and virtually all countries of the world over the
    past four years.

    Will the black leader who is looking through a window of hope realize
    the hopes that are pinned on him?

    Or will Obama follow the lead of virtually all other US presidents
    and refuse to step out of the orbit defined by the deep state, which
    upholds US national interests above all political ideologies?

    All news and commentary broadcasts about Obama's election on virtually
    all [Turkish] television channels were marked by unbounded joy and
    excitement.

    Much praise was heaped on Obama, but there was not a single commentator
    or news report that could fully answer the question of how the new
    US president views Turkey.

    Narratives that raise suspicions but also inspire hope
    aâ~B¬Â¦. [Obama's] unequivocal promise that he will recognize the
    Armenian genocide casts a shadow on his view of Turkey [sentence
    as received].

    We are consoled, however, to hear that all presidential candidates
    promise to recognize the genocide in their election campaigns in
    order to win the support of Armenian voters.

    It has been underscored that Obama would not risk losing Turkey given
    that the Turkish economy is reportedly the sixth largest in Europe
    and the 15th largest in the world and in view of its critical location
    in the Middle East.

    However, Obama may not behave like his predecessors. If he will not
    risk losing Turkey, it will obviously not happen because of economics
    or the importance he attaches to Turkey's friendship. Unlike Bush,
    he may pursue a policy that may favour Turkey in practice - if this
    is what US interests require - but he might also recognize the alleged
    genocide by arguing that this is a time of change.

    We must not forget that Democrats perceive Turkey quite differently
    from the Republicans.

    Barack Obama finds that "restoring the strategic partnership with
    Turkey is an important interest," as pointed out on his campaign
    website.

    However, will he choose to use his strategic partner to attain his
    aims in the Middle East like Bush? Will he continue to see Turkey as
    a weapon that can be used as part of the Greater Middle East Project?

    Now let us turn to the question that stems from the real
    problem. President Bush help to undermine the foundations of the
    secular republic by citing the Turkish democracy as an exemplar to
    Islamic countries using the paradigm of moderate Islam. He contributed
    substantially to the RTE [Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan]
    government to realize this goal.

    The AKP [Justice and Development Party] has been able to survive
    and remain in government mainly because of President Bush's policies
    favouring moderate Islam and the support he has provided to the AKP
    along those lines.

    To what extent will [Obama] respect the tradition of a secular
    Turkey? In our opinion, this is the most sensitive aspect of the
    policies Obama will pursue.

    In view of these realities, we have to ask Obama questions that
    are of paramount interest to Turkey: Will he retain the "moderate
    Islam policy" current President Bush has applied to Turkey? Will he
    continue offering US support to the RTE government, which has acted
    out of religious instincts, which has paid lip service to secularism,
    and which has used every opportunity to eradicate the basic conditions
    of secularism?

    As long as President Obama does not demonstrate that he is pursuing
    a policy that can comfort Turkey on this basic concept, the "change"
    he has promised will at least not apply to us.

    --Boundary_(ID_4xjqIU0/FbUL5OtMlw7zZw)--
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