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    Obama in Turkey
    By Gideon Rachman

    FT
    April 8 2009 03:00

    Gideon Rachman's blog: Somebody seems to have forgotten to tell the
    Turkish parliament that it is traditional to greet speeches by Barack
    Obama with regular standing ovations and whoops of approval. It was
    rather strange and unsettling to listen to an Obama speech on Monday
    that was not interrupted in this way. It forced you actually to listen
    to what he was saying.

    Of course, there were a few rounds of applause punctuating the speech.
    Obama got clapped for using a Turkish word, for mentioning some
    successful Turkish basketball players, for condemning the PKK as
    terrorists and for asserting that "the US is not and never will be at
    war with Islam".

    The passage of his speech on the Armenian issue was greeted with
    studious silence. But given that Obama has, in the past, called for
    official US recognition of the massacres of 1915 as genocide, this was
    probably about as good as he could have hoped for. I wouldn't have been
    surprised if there had been some walk-outs. As it is, Obama is
    obviously trying to edge away from a commitment on the genocide issue
    that was convenient during the election (there is a powerful Armenian
    lobby in the US), but that is distinctly inconvenient now. He has got
    the cover he needs because Turkey and Armenia are, in fact, edging
    closer towards reconciliation. That allowed him to avoid using the
    G-word20in his address to the Turkish parliament and to speak, in
    generalised terms, about the virtues of countries coming to terms with
    their past.

    On Tuesday, Obama is scheduled to do a town-hall meeting in Istanbul
    with Turkish students. That should be interesting. Certainly, his
    session with French and German students at a similar event in
    Strasbourg has been one of the highlights of the tour so far. It
    allowed him to showcase all his charm and quickness - and to send a
    subliminal message to European leaders. Obama may be more popular in
    their own countries than they are.

    And yet, perhaps one shouldn't over-interpret. A warm response to Obama
    as a person does not necessarily signal agreement with his policies.
    Before Obama's town-hall meeting in Strasbourg, the students were
    treated to a warm-up debate - featuring me and other "thinkers", such
    as Bernard-Henri Lévy and Ahmed Rashid. A lot of the participants were
    students at ENA, the elite French college, which is now based in
    Strasbourg. The real radicals were, of course, busy rioting on the
    outskirts of the city.

    And yet, I couldn't help noticing what got the students going: a
    question that condemned American "double standards" on human rights was
    greeted with sustained applause. An attack on globalisation was also
    cheered. Obama is popular in Europe. But American foreign policy is
    still treated with suspicion.

    www.ft.com/rachmanblog
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