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The Turkish-American Romance

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  • The Turkish-American Romance

    THE TURKISH-AMERICAN ROMANCE
    Stephen Kinzer

    guardian.co.uk
    Monday 6 April 2009 17.00 BST

    Obama is right to view Turkey as a key world power.

    But both sides still have issues they need to address

    President Barack Obama's decision to pay an official visit to Turkey on
    the 77th day of his presidency was a major step in Turkey's emergence
    as a regional power. This will be one of the big geopolitical stories
    of the coming decades.

    Obama came to Ankara with a short-term agenda. He would like to see
    Turkey contribute more to the Nato mission in Afghanistan and also
    wants to withdraw American soldiers and equipment from Iraq through
    Turkish territory. But that was not all he had on his mind. Larger
    reasons led him to make Turkey the first Muslim country he visited
    as president.

    Turkey is more democratic today than it has ever been, as last month's
    local elections showed. Its economy is strong, fuelled in part by
    money from Gulf state investors who consider it the safest place in
    the neighbourhood. Most intriguing of all, it is becoming a major
    diplomatic broker.

    Turkey has developed a remarkable ability to win the trust of
    governments and opposition groups across a wide and turbulent
    region. It has warm relations with both Russia and Georgia, with
    Israel and Hamas, with Iran and the United States. Its counsel is
    valued in countries as varied as Syria, Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

    Turks have found a positive approach to diplomacy in a region where
    not much is positive. They promote dialogue and conciliation, and
    reject threats, demands and bombing raids. Obama's visit suggests
    that he likes that approach.

    The newly invigorated Turkish-American relationship may take an
    interesting twist soon. Obama promised during his campaign that
    if elected, he would officially proclaim the slaughter of Ottoman
    Armenians in 1915 to have been an act of genocide. Such a proclamation
    would outrage many Turks and could choke off the Turkish-American
    romance he is kindling. Obama is now looking for a way to break his
    campaign promise.

    How could he honourably do that? With the help of his new Turkish
    friends.

    Political circles in Ankara and Istanbul are abuzz with speculation
    that the long-awaited breakthrough between Turkey to Armenia may be at
    hand. It would include a reopening of their land border, closed since
    1993, re-establishment of diplomatic relations and establishment of
    a scholarly commission to study the killings of 1915.

    If this happens before 24 April, when Obama is scheduled to issue his
    promised statement on the 1915 events, he would have every reason to
    avoid the inflammatory term "genocide". After all, he could argue,
    if these two longtime enemies have kissed and made up, why should an
    outside power sow discord between them?

    This breakthrough, if it happens, would be a decisive step toward
    reducing regional tension. It would also be another sign of Turkey's
    maturing diplomatic role. Turkey would finally have achieved its
    stated first goal in the region: zero problems with neighbours. That
    would place it in a good position to reach for more ambitious goals,
    for a grand regional strategy.

    In a new book, The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century,
    the strategic prognosticator George Friedman says Turkey is on its
    way to becoming one of the world's key powers. A map in the book
    captioned "Turkish sphere of influence 2050" looks strikingly like
    a map of the Ottoman empire.

    "Turkey is not isolated and tied down; it has multiple directions in
    which it can move," Friedman asserts. "Most important, it does not
    represent a challenge to American interests and is therefore not
    constantly confronted with an American threat. This means it does
    not have to devote resources to blocking the United States. With
    its economy surging, it will likely soon re-emerge in its old role,
    as the dominant force in the region."

    Resolving the long dispute with Armenia would bring Turkey an important
    step closer to this position of influence. The next step would be
    find a compromise with Kurdish nationalism. Turkey has emerged as
    such a deft broker on the international stage that its failure to
    resolve the Kurdish problem within its own borders seems increasingly
    paradoxical. If Turkey can meet these challenges and a few others, it
    is poised for a very good century. That makes it, as Obama evidently
    realises, an excellent partner for the United States.
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