Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: 'Bush Left Poor Legacy In Turkey-US Relations'

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

  • ANKARA: 'Bush Left Poor Legacy In Turkey-US Relations'

    'BUSH LEFT POOR LEGACY IN TURKEY-US RELATIONS'

    Today's Zaman
    Oct 28 2008
    Turkey

    Former US Ambassador to Turkey Mark R. Parris has said that outgoing
    US President George W. Bush will leave US relations with Turkey worse
    than he found them; however, he noted that "the next US president
    will get a bounce in terms of Turkish public opinion just by not
    being George W. Bush."

    Parris' remarks on Turkey-US relations appeared in an article titled
    "Common Values and Common Interests? The Bush Legacy in US-Turkish
    Relations," which he wrote for the latest edition of "Insight Turkey,"
    a quarterly journal published by the SETA Foundation for Political,
    Economic and Social Research. Parris, who also works as an advisor to
    the Brookings Institution's Turkey Project, served as US ambassador
    to Turkey from 1997-2000.

    "The burden of responsibility for what has been the most problematic
    six years in US-Turkish relations since the Cyprus crisis of the 1970s
    lies with Washington," said Parris. He omitted Bush's first two years
    in office from the list of problematic six years because relations
    were relatively better before the outbreak of the Iraq war in 2003.

    Parris suggested that the intensity of the negative images of the US in
    recent years is often counterpoised by nostalgia for an America more in
    tune with its "better angels." "This helps explain many Turks' strong
    attraction to Barack Obama's message of hope despite John McCain's
    much greater experience with Turkey, and from Ankara's standpoint, his
    'right' position on the emotional Armenian genocide issue," he said. At
    the end of his article, Parris made some recommendations to the next
    US administration to put relations with Turkey back on track. "If
    it is correct that US and Turkish strategic interests remain largely
    convergent and that each side may be prepared to give the other the
    benefit of the doubt in terms of values, the challenge for the next
    administration will be one of execution rather than reinvention,"
    he noted.
Working...
X