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Turkey fights calls for greater Afghan role

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  • Turkey fights calls for greater Afghan role

    Turkey fights calls for greater Afghan role
    By Delphine Strauss in Ankara

    FT
    December 6 2009 20:23

    Turkey is `already doing what it can' in its dispatch of troops to
    Afghanistan, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, prime minister, said on Sunday,
    signalling he would resist US pressure to send a bigger contingent to
    back the American surge.

    He spoke before flying to Washington on an official visit intended to
    dispel suspicions of an eastwards drift in Turkey's foreign policy,
    and show its value as a partner in addressing regional challenges -
    from stabilising Iraq to ending frozen conflicts in the Caucasus or
    containing Iran's nuclear ambitions.

    The decision may feed doubts in Washington that Turkey's pursuit of
    closer ties with Muslim neighbours could dilute its support of western
    aims. Mr Erdogan's visit comes soon after a crisis in Turkish-Israeli
    relations, and a defence of Iran's nuclear programme as `peaceful and
    humanitarian'.

    `The US side needs to impress diplomatically on [Mr Erdogan] how much
    his populist rhetoric in support of anti-western bugbears is damaging
    Turkey's position with its key partners and ... in Washington and
    Brussels,' Hugh Pope, an author on Turkey, wrote in a paper for the
    Transatlantic Academy.

    Despite the criticism, Mr Obama's administration considers Ankara a
    vital partner in a difficult region. It supports Mr Erdogan's drive to
    broaden rights for Turkey's Kurdish minority, aiming to end a conflict
    that has deepened divisions within Turkey and also threatened
    stability in northern Iraq. The US shares intelligence with Turkey on
    Kurdish rebels operating from Iraq, and Mr Erdogan is accompanied on
    the trip by a senior general.

    Mr Obama, who before his election promised to recognise Ottoman-era
    massacres of Armenians as genocide, is also likely to urge Mr Erdogan
    to speed ratification of a deal to normalise relations with Yerevan.

    The agreement, signed after last-minute mediation by Hillary Clinton,
    US secretary of state, is one of Mr Obama's few tangible successes in
    foreign policy, but he will face pressure from Armenian groups if it
    does not take effect before April.

    The real test of what Mr Obama has called a `model partnership',
    though, will be Iran. Turkish diplomats say they share western fears
    of Tehran gaining nuclear weapons, and differ only in their approach
    to preventing it.

    But Turkey, which imports gas from Iran and wants to expand trade
    ties, is against any new sanctions and abstained in last month's
    United Nations vote condemning Iran's nuclear activities, even though
    China and Russia joined the censure.

    Ian Lesser, in a paper for the German Marshall Fund, said Turkish
    foreign policy was `in the European mainstream' on most issues, but
    warned its position on Iran's nuclear programme `holds the potential
    for a damaging departure'.
    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009. You may share using our
    article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute
    by email or post to the web.
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