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NPR: Making Good On His Promise, Obama Visits Turkey

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  • NPR: Making Good On His Promise, Obama Visits Turkey

    MAKING GOOD ON HIS PROMISE, OBAMA VISITS TURKEY
    Linda Wertheimer

    National Public Radio (NPR)
    April 5, 2009 Sunday

    >From NPR News, this is WEEKEND EDITION. I'm Linda Wertheimer. Liane
    Hansen is away. This morning President Barack Obama condemned North
    Korea for launching a missile, which apparently landed in the Pacific
    Ocean. The President called on the U.N. Security Council to take
    action. Mr. Obama spoke of the dangers of nuclear proliferation from
    Prague while on his weeklong trip to Europe. His final scheduled
    stop is a two-day visit to Turkey and he will address the Turkish
    parliament tomorrow. NPR's Peter Kenyon reports from Ankara.

    PETER KENYON: There may be no better example than Turkey if you're
    looking for evidence that President Obama's foreign policy message of
    more diplomacy and less force has dramatically resurrected America's
    image abroad. Serkan Demirtas, Ankara bureau chief of the Hurriyet
    Daily News and Economic Review, says it's hard to overstate the depth
    of anti-American feelings during the Bush years. A poll a few years
    ago ranked Bush at the bottom of the list of trusted foreign leaders,
    well below Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    Mr. SERKAN DEMIRTAS (Ankara Bureau Chief, Hurriyet Daily News and
    Economic Review): After the elections in the States, Obama, now he's
    the most trusted foreign leader for Turks. This even shows how the
    feelings in this country have changed.

    KENYON: When President Obama addresses Turkish lawmakers tomorrow,
    he will be reminding them of the last president to speak here, Bill
    Clinton. Again, the contrast with the Bush administration resonates
    with the Turks. Former ambassador to the U.S., Faruk Logoglu, says
    during the Bush years Washington seemed intent on holding Turkey up
    as the model of a moderate Muslim state, especially after the Islamic
    AK Party was elected here.

    Many Turks passionately insist that's not accurate, that Turkey is a
    secular democratic state that happens to be 90 percent Muslim. It's
    a distinction that the Obama administration seems sensitive to, says
    Logoglu, which may be why the president is coming here at the tail
    end of a European trip and not as part of a Mideast swing.

    Mr. FARUK LOGOGLU (Former Turkish Ambassador To U.S.): He will make
    a major address to the Turkish parliament. In that address, like
    President Clinton did some years ago, he will, I think, galvanize
    Turkish public opinion. This is going to be the greatest value. I
    think President Obama wants to see Turkey firmly anchored in the
    U.S. as a member of NATO, as a future member of the European Union.

    KENYON: A rejuvenated U.S.-Turkey relationship holds promise on a
    number of fronts. Turkey hosted indirect Syria-Israeli talks last
    year. It has long- standing ties with Afghanistan and Pakistan, two
    of the most critical geopolitical areas in the world today. Turkey
    also has important commerce with Iran and Russia. So it's clear what
    the west has to gain from a more engaged Turkey, but what does Turkey
    want? One thing Ankara wants is a stable Iraq, especially Kurdish
    northern Iraq, from where separatist PKK militants have staged their
    attacks into southern Turkey.

    There's also a potential controversy, the long-running Armenian
    genocide dispute. Turkey refuses to call the World War I era violence
    by Arab and Turks against Armenians a genocide, although historians
    say up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed. It's not clear that
    it will come up tomorrow in the address to parliament, but Armenian
    Independence Day is coming on April 24th.

    Professor Meliha Altunisik at Ankara's Mideast Technical University
    says, considering that Obama called it genocide during the campaign,
    much attention will be paid to how the White House describes it now.

    Professor MELIHA ALTUNISIK (Mideast Technical University): Right,
    definitely. I mean, this is one of the stumbling blocks, I think, in
    the relationship, whether President Obama will refer to these events as
    a genocide. There would be a reaction in Turkey, definitely. It would
    flare up nationalist sentiments and it would affect Turkish-American
    relations.

    KENYON: No doubt more political minefields await, but for now Turkey
    is thrilled to welcome the new American president and his message of
    diplomacy, dialogue and engagement - and is eager to regain to its
    role as a political, as well as geographical crossroads.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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