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The Obama Visit To Turkey: The Broader Context

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  • The Obama Visit To Turkey: The Broader Context

    THE OBAMA VISIT TO TURKEY: THE BROADER CONTEXT

    www.noravank.am/en/?page=analitics&ni d=1743
    14 April 2009

    Richard Giragosian is the director of the Yerevan-based Armenian
    Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS).

    While Armenia views today's Barack Obama-Abdullah Gul meetings through
    the prism of border relations and genocide recognition, from the
    broader perspective of US national interests, Turkey is seen to now
    hold particular strategic significance, for three main reasons.

    First, the Obama Administration recognizes Turkey's more recent role as
    a resurgent regional actor, with influence and access in the broader
    Middle East, the Black Sea and the Caucasus. Within this context,
    the Obama Administration is now seeking to leverage Turkey as a
    mediator or facilitator to deal with Syria and Israel and possibly
    even Afghanistan and Pakistan. Washington is also now considering a
    new Turkish role in supporting the US approach toward Iran as well.

    Secondly, for the US, especially in the wake of the August 2008 war in
    Georgia, there is a new need for stability and security in the South
    Caucasus region. And for American interests, the possible breakthrough
    in Turkish-Armenian relations, and the resulting benefits of open
    borders and at least normal diplomatic relations between Ankara and
    Yerevan, offers a dynamic opportunity for greater regional stability.

    Third, from the American perspective, Turkish cooperation is
    an essential requirement for US military needs in Iraq and even
    Afghanistan, as Turkey serves as a vital center for logistics and
    military operations in both theaters. In light of this broader context,
    the issues of the Armenian Genocide, and even Cyprus, are actually
    now seen as secondary considerations.

    Yet as the aura of the Obama visit will soon start to fade, the
    limits of US-Turkish relations will become clearer, and even more
    considerable. The inherent limits of Turkey's role in support of the
    US strategic agenda are rooted in the reverse of the very same three
    factor outlined above.

    First, no matter how attractive Turkey's new effort to reassert its
    role in the broader regions of the Middle East, Black Sea and the
    Caucasus, this is very much a Turkish initiative-based on Turkish
    interests and not designed to please or support either the US or the
    European Union. In fact, there is now clear evidence to the contrary,
    as Turkish leaders have strongly condemned Israel for its actions in
    Gaza, imposed strict new limits on NATO activities in the Black Sea
    and have even made it clear that the Turkish initiative in the Caucasus
    has more in common with Russian interests than with American goals. And
    judging by past Turkish efforts, such as inviting the leaders of both
    Iran and Sudan to Turkey, it does not seem very likely that Ankara
    will be too anxious to support Washington's foreign policy agenda,
    no matter how much they may like Obama (or his wife).

    Second, Turkey was still the only NATO member to adopt a position of
    "neutrality" during the Russia-Georgia war, and actually imposed
    limits on US Navy ships attempting to reach Georgia during the
    crisis - each move reflecting its now close relationship with Russia,
    not Washington. And for the Caucasus, Turkey not only announced its
    "Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform" without even informing
    the US (or NATO) in advance, it even withheld support for the US bid
    to obtain "observer" status in the Black Sea Economic Cooperation
    (BSEC) organization.

    And third, in light of the Turkish perception of a threat from the
    emergence of the Kurds in northern Iraq, the only real ally for the
    Americans in Iraq, it is also unlikely that Turkey will assist or
    support US military operations in Iraq in any sincere or meaningful
    way. Rather, the Iraq and Kurdish issues only promise to remain
    fundamental obstacles in US-Turkish military relations for some time to
    come.Although the Obama visit can be seen as an important and symbolic
    event, Turkish and US interests seem likely to only diverge even
    further, while Turkey and Russia become closer. Such a more realistic
    assessment also affirms that the real burden for Turkish-Armenian
    relations rests with Ankara, not Yerevan or Washington.

    For these reasons, President Obama seems unlikely to offer any clear or
    coherent recognition of the Armenian Genocide on this April 24. Beyond
    the immediacy of "will he/won't he" speculation of using the g-word,
    Turkish-American relations over the coming months may actually serve
    to bolster, not weaken, Obama's campaign promises to pursuing a strong
    and sincere recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
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