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Turkey's Erdogan to meet Obama on Afghanistan, Kurdish conflict

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  • Turkey's Erdogan to meet Obama on Afghanistan, Kurdish conflict

    Agence France Press, France
    Dec 5 2009


    Turkey's Erdogan to meet Obama on Afghanistan, Kurdish conflict
    By Sibel Utku Bila (AFP)

    ANKARA ' Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan meets Monday with
    US President Barack Obama for talks expected to focus on NATO
    reinforcements in Afghanistan and Ankara's efforts to curb Kurdish
    rebels based in Iraq.

    Iran's nuclear programme, which Erdogan has defended much to the
    dismay of Turkey's Western allies, is also likely to be high on the
    agenda.

    Erdogan, whose country is a key Muslim ally of the US, visits
    Washington after Obama announced that 30,000 more soldiers would be
    sent to Afghanistan and US allies followed suit Friday by pledging at
    least 7,000 more troops to help defeat the Taliban and al-Qaeda.

    Even though it has NATO's second largest standing army, Turkey insists
    it will not engage in combat missions and offered only three teams to
    train Afghan security personnel, according to NATO sources.

    Some 1,700 Turkish soldiers are currently deployed in Afghanistan, but
    their mandate is limited to patroling Kabul and training Afghan
    forces.

    "The contribution that Turkey has made to the Afghan mission has been
    tremendously important for many, many years," James Jones, Obama's
    national security advisor, said Friday.

    "We appreciate any contribution Turkey will be able to make in order
    to fulfil its very important mission in the capital region of Kabul,"
    he said.

    Turkey refuses to fight Islamist insurgents and drug traffickers, wary
    of confronting fellow Muslims in a country with which it has close
    historic ties.

    It says more should be done for reconstruction and improving public
    services to win over the Afghan people and argues its army is already
    under strain, fighting a bloody 25-year Kurdish insurgency in the
    southeast.

    A recent drive by Erdogan's government to expand Kurdish freedoms and
    encourage the rebels to lay down arms is also expected to be discussed
    at the White House.

    US and Iraqi support is crucial against the rebels as an estimated
    2,000 of them are based in mountainous hideouts in neighbouring
    northern Iraq.

    "The bargaining on Afghanistan is linked directly to Iraq since Obama
    essentially wants to pull out from Iraq and move his forces to
    Afghanistan," political analyst Rusen Cakir wrote in the Vatan daily.

    "If the US withdraws from Iraq without taking the necessary measures,
    the risk for Turkey will become more serious," he said.

    Since 2007, the US has backed Turkish air raids against rebel bases
    across the border by providing intelligence on militants' movements.

    Another major issue of common interest is Iran, but Turkey's growing
    ties with Tehran and Erdogan's defence of its nuclear programme have
    raised questions on whether Ankara is deviating from its traditionally
    pro-Western path.

    Erdogan, whose party hails from a now-banned Islamist movement, has
    played down concerns that its eastern neighbour may be developing an
    atomic bomb and slammed Western powers for turning a blind eye to
    Israel, widely considered the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear
    power.

    Ankara insists the row with Iran should be resolved peacefully and has
    sought to help mediate a settlement.

    Turkey's warming ties with Iran and other countries frowned upon by
    the West such as Libya, Sudan and Syria, have come against a backdrop
    of a sharp downturn in relations with Israel, its main regional ally.

    Angry over the devastating war on the Gaza Strip at the turn of the
    year, Turkey excluded Israel from joint military drills in October,
    prompting harsh reactions from the Jewish state and a rebuke from
    Washington.

    The government rejects criticism it is sliding away from the West and
    says it is committed to Turkey's European Union membership bid,
    strongly backed by Washington but opposed by some key European
    nations.

    Obama and Erdogan are expected to discuss also Turkey's fence-mending
    efforts with historic foe Armenia and the long-standing Cyprus
    conflict, a major obstacle for Turkey's EU bid.
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