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  • Obama Statement Has Turks Fuming

    OBAMA STATEMENT HAS TURKS FUMING
    Thomas Seibert

    The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/article/2009042 8/FOREIGN/704279916/-1/NEWS
    April 28 2009
    UAE

    "The dream is over" was how one Turkish newspaper put it yesterday.

    Just three weeks after hosting the US president, Barack Obama, in a
    visit that many saw as the confirmation of a strong and strategic
    partnership between Ankara and Washington, Turkey's political
    leaders and media are up in arms after a statement by the president
    commemorating the massacres committed against Armenians in the dying
    days of the Ottoman Empire in 1915.

    "Turkey is not a country that can be first pampered and then deceived,"
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a speech last weekend,
    in reference to the praise showered on Turkey by Mr Obama during
    his visit.

    When Mr Obama issued his first statement on the Armenian question as
    president last week, he avoided the term "genocide" that is strongly
    rejected by Turkey. But even without using the word and choosing the
    Armenian term meds yeghern - great catastrophe - instead, the president
    made sure everyone understood that he is convinced that a genocide took
    place in 1915, as he had said during his election campaign last year.

    "I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915 and my
    view of that history has not changed," the president said. "My interest
    remains the achievement of a full, frank and just acknowledgement of
    the facts."

    Mr Erdogan called the president's statement "unacceptable" and repeated
    Turkey's position that the question of what happened in 1915 should
    be left to historians.

    Armenia and many international scholars say that up to 1.5 million
    Armenians became victims of a genocide ordered by the Ottoman
    government against the Christian minority, but Turkey rejects that
    label and says that Armenians died in the course of a relocation
    campaign under wartime conditions.

    Turkey's president, Abdullah Gul, criticised Mr Obama for failing
    to mention that many Ottoman Muslims also lost their lives at the
    time. The parliamentary speaker, Koksal Toptan, said Mr Obama's
    statement would have a "serious negative effect" on efforts to
    normalise relations between Turkey and Armenia.

    A cautious rapprochement between the two countries started last year
    when Mr Gul became the first Turkish head of state to visit Yerevan.

    Shortly before Mr Obama's statement last week, Turkey and Armenia
    said they had agreed on a road map for the normalisation of their
    ties. The two neighbours have no diplomatic relations and the border
    between the two countries has been closed for more than a decade.

    Mr Obama said he supported efforts by Turkey and Armenia to "forge
    a relationship that is peaceful, productive and prosperous".

    Few observers in Turkey had expected Mr Obama to use the term genocide
    after he had praised the reconciliation efforts during his visit to
    Turkey earlier this month.

    "There has been courageous and important dialogue among Armenians and
    Turks and within Turkey itself," the president said in his statement.

    But even though the president did not use the "g-word", as some Turkish
    newspapers call the term genocide, the way he described the Ottomans'
    actions against the Armenians was so damning for Turkey that the one
    word that was missing did not really matter in the end, observers said.

    "Obama did not say 'genocide', but it was as if he had said
    it," the columnist Semih Idiz wrote in yesterday's Milliyet
    newspaper. Washington may be of the opinion that Mr Obama had
    "technically" followed Turkey's wish to avoid the term, but Ankara's
    reaction was still strong, Idiz wrote.

    One reason why Turkey does not want the US to officially use the term
    genocide for events that took place several years before today's
    Turkish republic was founded in 1923 is the fear that such a move
    will trigger an avalanche of political consequences.

    "This year Obama only went so far, next year he will say 'genocide,'
    and then all other countries will recognise it, and they will say
    'recognition by Turkey is a precondition for EU entry,'" wrote another
    columnist, Ruha Mengi in the Vatan newspaper. "Then territorial and
    compensation demands will come."

    Mr Erdogan is already under pressure from ally Azerbaijan, a long-time
    foe of Armenia, and from his opposition at home who have warned
    against opening the Turkish-Armenian border without a solution of the
    conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the disputed region of
    Nagorny-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan.

    But the anger expressed by Turkey's leaders and media about Mr Obama's
    statement does not mean that Ankara will put talks with Armenia on
    hold. Turkey's foreign minister, Ali Babacan, acknowledged last week
    that it would be difficult to reach the goal of full normalisation
    in Turkish-Armenian relations.

    "It is not easy, it is very complicated, but we go forward step by
    step like in a game of chess."

    Murat Yetkin, a columnist of the Radikal newspaper, wrote that
    Mr Obama's statement had avoided a full-scale collapse of the
    process. "The ship continues to float, it has been saved from hitting
    the ground."

    Turkey may also draw consolation from the fact that the much-criticised
    statement of Mr Obama did not fully live up to Armenian expectations
    either.

    "Obama's statement made nobody happy," Yetkin wrote. "Sometimes
    the common denominator of politics is not everybody's happiness,
    but everybody's unhappiness."
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