Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Erdogan urges Obama to heed Armenia, Iraq sensitivities

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Erdogan urges Obama to heed Armenia, Iraq sensitivities

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 15 2008



    ErdoÄ?an urges Obama to heed Armenia, Iraq sensitivities


    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an has asked US
    President-elect Barack Obama to support Turkey in its fight against
    terrorism and to refrain from backing Armenian claims of genocide at
    the hands of the Ottoman Empire once he takes over the post from
    George W. Bush.

    `I sincerely congratulate Barack Obama and his team who won the
    elections. Turkey and the United States, as two allies that have very
    strong relations, have been supporting each other for more than half a
    century,' the Turkish prime minister said Thursday during a speech at
    New York's Columbia University, which Obama graduated from. `Turkey is
    determined to continue the close cooperation with Obama's new US
    administration. Naturally, we expect the US administration to take
    into consideration our sensitivities on issues that are of vital
    importance to us.'

    During his campaign, Obama pledged to Armenian-American voters that he
    would support the genocide claims if he were elected president. Turkey
    denies genocide charges and says actions by third countries could hurt
    the thawed relations between Turkey and Armenia. The two neighbors
    have had no formal relationship since 1993, when Turkey severed its
    ties and closed its border with the landlocked country in protest of
    the Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh. Ankara says normalizing
    ties depends on Armenia's withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh and ending
    support for the Armenian diaspora's efforts to win international
    recognition for genocide claims.

    The US Congress has twice shelved resolutions calling for recognition
    of the genocide claims under pressure from the administration. The
    measure is expected to be brought to Congress when Obama takes office.

    ErdoÄ?an said US sensitivity over these issues is important for
    the future of Turkey-US relations. He welcomed the fact that Obama had
    already declared that US cooperation with Turkey regarding terrorism
    will continue.

    The prime minister recalled that Turkey has proposed a joint committee
    of historians to study Armenian claims and said it expected Armenia to
    respond positively to the offer. `Let's allow historians to do their
    job. We have opened our archives, and if the Armenians have their
    archives, let them open them to the public, too,' he said. `Let
    historians study the archives and decide. And we all will respect
    whatever the outcome is.'

    He said he hoped the US administration would also take the Turkish
    proposal into consideration while deciding on a policy over the
    issue. Relations with Washington hit a snag when the Turkish
    Parliament rejected a government motion in 2003 that would have
    allowed military cooperation with the United States in the Iraq
    war. Since then, tension grew as the US consistently turned down
    Turkish requests for action against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers'
    Party (PKK), which attacks Turkish targets from its bases in northern
    Iraq. In November 2005, Bush vowed intelligence cooperation against
    the PKK, after which the US military began to supply real-time
    intelligence on movements of the PKK in northern Iraq.

    In his speech, ErdoÄ?an also touched on the dispute over Iran's
    nuclear program and reiterated that Turkey opposed the proliferation
    of nuclear weapons while supporting countries' rights to acquire
    nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.

    UN Security Council victory

    In New York, ErdoÄ?an also hosted a dinner for UN
    representatives to thank them for electing Turkey to the Security
    Council for 2009-2010. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was among the
    dignitaries attending the dinner.

    Turkey was competing with Iceland and Austria for one of the two seats
    reserved for the Western Europe and Others Group in the UN. It won the
    vote by a wide margin in October, securing a seat in the influential
    world body after almost half a century of absence. Its growing
    influence in the Middle East, the Caucasus and the Balkans has boosted
    support for Turkey among the UN nations, observers said.

    ErdoÄ?an also addressed the UN General Assembly earlier on
    Thursday at a meeting on a Saudi Arabian initiative to promote
    dialogue between religions. ErdoÄ?an said the meeting was a
    response in a bid to tackle `the bi-polarization in the international
    community, lack of understanding and discrimination' that he said had
    reached `a threatening dimension.'

    `Terrorism, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, trafficking
    and organized crime have all gone global. An end should be put on
    so-called `good terrorist, bad terrorist,'' the prime minister said.

    While in New York, ErdoÄ?an briefly met with Bush and Pakistani
    President Asif Ali Zardari in UN General Assembly Hall. He also met
    with Israeli President Shimon Peres.


    ----------------------------------------- -----------------------

    Nalbandian to visit Ä°stanbul next month
    Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian will visit Ä°stanbul
    next month to attend a meeting of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation
    (BSEC), news reports said yesterday. Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said
    this week that Nalbandian would soon visit Turkey to build diplomatic
    contacts with Armenia, with which Turkey has no formal ties. Although
    Nalbandian's visit on Nov. 24 is for the BSEC meeting, he is expected
    to meet with Babacan on the sidelines of the gathering and discuss the
    normalization of ties, CNN Türk said. Armenia is the current
    holder of the BSEC's presidency. Babacan and Nalbandian had three-way
    talks together with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in
    September discussing the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. Earlier this month,
    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev hosted a summit with the Azerbaijani
    and Armenian presidents in Moscow. In a speech in New York on
    Thursday, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an said Turkey
    welcomed the Russian initiative and wanted to host a similar summit
    with the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents. Ä°stanbul Today's
    Zaman

    15 November 2008, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES Ä°STANBUL
Working...
X