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Ankara's diplomacy in Muslim world pays US dividends

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  • Ankara's diplomacy in Muslim world pays US dividends

    Ankara's diplomacy in Muslim world pays US dividends
    By Delphine Strauss

    FT
    April 9 2009 03:00

    Ankara's efforts to cultivate good relations with its neighbours and
    play a more active role in regional diplomacy paid off handsomely this
    week when Turkey became the first country to host a formal state visit
    from Barack Obama.

    In a two-day charm offensive, the US president praised Turkey's "strong
    and secular democracy" to parliamentarians, took questions from
    wide-eyed students, admired Istanbul's Blue Mosque and left a
    handwritten tribute at the mausoleum of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the
    republic's founder.

    "This is the first overseas visit - the first bilateral visit - of the
    new US president. The fact that he has chosen Turkey and has chosen to
    address the Islamic world from the Turkish parliament made us very
    happy," Abdullah Gul, Turkey's president, told the Financial Times in
    an interview.

    The display of friendship will help Turkey's government, which has
    roots in political Islam, counter claims that it has been promoting
    ties with Muslim states at the expense of its traditional western
    alignment.

    Mr Obama said Turkey's new popularity in the Muslim world made it the
    ally he needed in a region suspicious of US intentions.

    Mr Gul is proud of the fact that he and Turkish ministers have been
    able to travel relatively freely in Iraq and Afghanistan recently, in
    contrast with western leaders' high-security dashes.

    He passed on to Mr Obama the views expressed by Afghan and Pakistani
    presidents and military chiefs in recent trilateral meetings.

    "We are not leaders who go to Afghanistan to visit our troops there in
    an isolated manner and then come back. So Turkey's ability to
    contribute in these matters is very large," said Mr Gul.

    Turkey put more emphasis on civilian activities in Afghanistan, Mr Gul
    said, reeling off lists of girls' schools opened and roads surfaced,
    but he said Ankara would also send more non-combat troops when it took
    command of Nato forces in Kabul later this year.

    Mr Gul is far more guarded when questioned about Armenia, the neighbour
    with which Turkey has no formal diplomatic relations. Mr Obama used his
    visit to convene Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers in Istanbul and
    urge rapid progress in talks to open their border, which was closed by
    Turkey in 1993 to support Azerbaijan over the disputed territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Azerbaijan shunned the talks, alarmed that Turkey might reach a deal it
    had previously linked to resolving the dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "The major problem in the Caucasus is the Karabakh question between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan," said Mr Gul. "I believe that 2009 is a year of
    opportunity in that respect."

    But he did not rule out the possibility of Turkey normalising relations
    with Armenia before any progress is made over the disputed territory.

    Turkey's new profile in regional politics appears, if anything, to have
    helped to revive its partnership with the US. Both sides will hope that
    Mr Obama's visit helps stem a rising tide of anti-US sentiment in
    Turkey.

    But Ankara's growing assertiveness - whether berating Israel's policies
    in Gaza, holding out for better terms over the planned Nabucco gas
    pipelineacross Turkey, or voicing loud objections to Europe's favoured
    candidate for Nato's leadership - is doing nothing to further its
    flagging efforts to join the European Union.

    Bernard Kouchner, one of the few French politicians to have backed
    Turkey's EU ambitions, expressed shock at Turkey's objection - later
    withdrawn - to the Danish premier Anders Fogh Rasmussen's nomination as
    Nato secretary-general.

    Mr Gul, who as foreign minister led Turkey's drive to begin EU
    membership talks, does not hide his frustration at obstacles placed in
    Turkey's EU path - by Greek Cypriots and others - blaming them for
    sapping public support for reform.

    Certain countries "are in conflict with their own signatures; their own
    commitments", he said, maintaining that Turkey, in contrast, remained
    intensely serious about supporting talks to end divisions on Cyprus.

    As foreign minister, he said, he had told Nato and EU colleagues "time
    and again that we have to solve this problem on time, as soon as
    possible, because in the future it is likely to poison some more
    important and strategic issues.

    "In the meantime, the negotiation process is going on and Turkey is
    amending its laws and constitution to harmonise with the community
    acquis [accumulated EU law]. . . In any case, we are going to continue
    our reform process, because these are our reforms and we want to do
    them ourselves."

    Keeping distance from party politics

    Multilingual and diplomatic, 58-year-old Abdullah Gul was often seen as
    a foil to his blunter and more confrontational colleague in the Justice
    and Development party - Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister.

    The two men split from more overtly Islamist politics to found the AKP,
    and Mr Gul's nomination to the presidency in 2007 led to a storm of
    secular protest, a clumsy attempt by the military to intervene and snap
    elections.

    Since his elevation to the presidency, Mr Gul has carefully kept his
    distance from party politics, and has limited ability to press for
    domestic economic and political reforms.

    However, an earlier career in the Islamic Development Bank has left him
    well placed to front Turkey's diplomatic and economic overtures in the
    region.
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