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Obama's Turkish dilemma

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  • Obama's Turkish dilemma

    CNN
    http://ac360.blogs.cnn.com/2009/04/06/obamas-t urkish-dilemma/

    F. Stephen Larrabee, RAND

    President Obama's visit to Ankara this week highlights Turkey's
    growing strategic importance to the United States ' and a high stakes
    dilemma for the President and for U.S. strategic interests.

    Turkey today plays an increasingly important role in Central Asia, the
    Caucasus and the Middle East, and its cooperation is critical to
    achieving U.S. objectives in all three areas. Turkey also enjoys
    strong ties to Iran and Syria, which could be helpful as Washington
    seeks to establish a dialogue with both countries.

    Turkish cooperation could be important in facilitating the withdrawal
    of U.S. troops from Iraq and promoting stability once they
    leave. Turkey is even emerging as an important transit route for the
    transport of Caspian oil and gas.

    However, the administration's efforts to repair relations with Turkey
    could be derailed by a Congressional resolution introduced last month
    condemning Turkey for the mass deportation and death of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians in 1915.

    The fate of the Armenians killed in 1915 is a major tragedy and an
    important moral and political issue. However, the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution is not the way to address it. Passage of the resolution
    would precipitate a crisis in U.S.-Turkish relations, and damage
    broader U.S. interests in the region.

    The genocide resolution is a highly emotional issue in Turkish
    domestic politics and has been a source of deep discord in
    U.S.-Turkish relations. In the fall of 2007, the Bush administration
    narrowly averted a serious crisis with Ankara only by a last minute
    all-out lobbying campaign that prevented the resolution (HR-106) from
    coming to a vote in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    But the genocide resolution is far from dead. The Armenian lobby was
    encouraged by its near success in 2007.. And the proposal has strong
    support among Democrats, who traditionally are more concerned about
    human rights issues than are Republicans. The Speaker of the House,
    Nancy Pelosi, is from California, which has a large ' an on and
    President Obama both supported the resolution during the presidential
    campaign. In office, they could change their minds, as a number of
    their predecessors have done. They might have trouble, however,
    persuading some of their colleagues.

    If the resolution is passed, the Turkish government could come under
    strong domestic pressure to take retaliatory actions. Anti-American
    sentiment there is already high. US-Turkish relations seriously
    deteriorated during the Bush administration as a result of the US
    invasion of Iraq and the unwillingness of the Bush administration to
    assist Turkey in combating cross-border attacks by the Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK), a terrorist group located in the Kandil
    mountains in northern Iraq. Clearly President Obama is working to
    rebuild relations with his visit there..

    If the genocide resolution is passed, however, Turkish leaders might
    be pressured to retaliate by, for example, denying the United States
    use of Incirlik air base in southern Turkey. Incirlik plays a critical
    role in the transport of people and materials to Iraq and
    Afghanistan. Moreover, with the recent loss of U.S. access to the base
    at Manas in Kyrgyzstan, Incirlik could become a crucial hub for
    U.S. efforts in Afghanistan. Loss of access to Incirlik could also
    complicate the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq.

    The Armenian conflict remains sensitive because it was key to Turkey's
    emergence as a nation. Recalling the conflict conjures fears of
    separatist conflict, and fuels Turkish nationalism. However, Turkey
    has shown a greater willingness to address the issue more openly in
    recent years. At the end of 2008, more than 26,000 Turks signed a
    letter apologizing for the deaths of the Armenians who died at the
    hands of the Ottoman authorities in 1915.

    Passage of the genocide resolution could seriously set back the
    process of Turkish-Armenian reconciliation currently underway between
    Ankara and Yerevan, the capital of Armenia. This process has gained
    important momentum since President Abdullah Gul's hist ia ' the first
    visit to Armenia ever by a Turkish president ' in September
    2008. Recent statements by Turkish and Armenian officials suggest that
    the two countries are close to normalizing relations.

    A normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations would have important
    implications for stability in the Caucasus and enable Armenia to
    reduce its political and military dependence on Russia - an important
    U.S. policy objective. It would also remove a major obstacle to
    Armenia's ability to join regional energy schemes, from which Armenia
    has been so far excluded. This process risks being derailed, however,
    if the genocide resolution is passed.

    The Obama administration thus needs to pursue a two track
    policy. First, it should seek to bolster strategic ties to Turkey and
    continue to actively support the Erdogan government's struggle to
    combat terrorist attacks by the Kurdistan Workers Party. This is
    regarded by Ankara as the litmus test of the U.S.-Turkish security
    relationship. Second, the administration needs to work with the
    Congressional leadership, especially Pelosi, to head off passage of
    the genocide resolution.

    Instead of passing the Genocide resolution Congress should encourage
    the process of Turkish-Armenian reconciliation, particularly the
    opening of the Turkish-Armenian border (closed since 1993), which
    would have an important economic impact on Armenia and decrease
    Armenia's economic isolation.

    In return for heading off the resolution, Turkey should pursue
    reconciliation with Yerevan and continue the effort to promote greater
    internal openness in addressing the Armenian issue that has been
    evident in recent years.

    This would represent a win-win situation for all sides and avoid a
    crisis that could do untold damage to U.S.-Turkish relations and
    broader U.S. interests in the Middle East and Caucasus.
    ---------------------

    Editors Note: F. Stephen Larrabee holds the Corporate Chair in
    European Security at the RAND Corporation, a nonprofit institution
    that helps improve policy and decision-making t

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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