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ANKARA: Turkey's Increased Importance for United States

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  • ANKARA: Turkey's Increased Importance for United States

    Radikal, Turkey
    Dec 8 2009


    Turkey's Increased Importance for United States

    by Ceyda Karan

    Washington -Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's trip to Washington as US
    President Barack Obama's guest comes at a time when Turkey is setting
    its foreign policy on a new foundation, when the active diplomacy it
    pursues in its region is no longer limited to improving relations with
    its neighbours, and when with a short space of time Turkey has become
    the centre of the world's attention. The axis of Turkish-American
    bilateral relations, the agenda for Erdogan and Obama, is replete with
    fat files ranging from the Kurdish overture and combating the PKK to
    Iran, Afghanistan, Cyprus and Armenia. The oddest thing about the
    perception of US-Turkish relations is this: Some people in Turkey are
    continually advocating the notion that the AKP's [Justice and
    Development Party] foreign policy leanings are "along American lines
    and under American tutelage." They maintain that Turkey cannot take
    the steps it is taking in the region without getting the go-ahead from
    America.

    It is ironic then that before Prime Minister Erdogan entered the
    meeting at the White House, where he was going to be hosted by Obama,
    the most widely discussed topic in the Washington lobbies was how the
    seeds of distrust regarding Turkey within the US administration were
    flourishing more and more. This notion has been constantly repeated
    dressed up as "Neo-Ottomanism" and "Axis-changing." Can you imagine a
    country that "cannot move without America's approval" yet is steadily
    becoming an annoyance to the very country whose "tutelage" it is
    under! Some madmen are constantly causing problems while others are
    constantly trying to fix them. Be that as it may, these formulations
    do not alter the facts. Chief among these facts is Turkey's importance
    for the United States. This was why Obama made Turkey one of his first
    stops after coming to power. Turkey is steadily increasing its
    importance in every area of interest to the United States. In my
    opinion, the independent policies that are being pursued have a
    significant place here. Perhaps in one part we are seeing a Turkey
    that is trying to act like a global actor in a way that extends its
    reach. However, what other way is there to make oneself heard? Even
    more so when what wants to be said is so important...

    Harmony of rhetoric

    In short, with the foreign policy it has been following over the past
    few months Turkey has not reduced its importance for the United
    States; on the contrary it has increased it. And this fact does not
    require both countries to adopt the same attitude in every matter. One
    should not make the mistake of looking at this in the form, "The
    United States asks Turkey for more soldiers in Afghanistan and Turkey
    does not comply." This is because if you look at the core of the
    matter you can easily see that in a burning problem like Afghanistan
    Turkey's diplomacy is overall working for "Washington's good." Turkey
    has been maintaining right from the start that the military option
    alone is not the solution in Afghanistan. Today, Obama is using those
    same arguments when announcing his new and much riskier Afghanistan
    strategy. Naturally, he is not bringing the occupation to an end but
    it is interesting how the rhetoric he uses matches Turkey's line.

    The Iran issue is naturally far more complex in that it is not easy to
    predict the Obama administration's approach to Iran from one day to
    the next. However, there is no cause for exaggerating the concerns
    that the international community is ultimately going to "attempt to
    punish Turkey," which appears to be complying with the attitude of
    forcing Iran into a corner. The Iran issue is clear enough from
    Turkey's point of view. Prime Minister Erdogan made this abundantly
    clear yesterday. Iran is Turkey's most important neighbour, and Turkey
    does not want to see a new nuclear armed power in the region or any
    new state of conflict. It is Turkey's responsibility to do everything
    it can here and to make all sides see sense. In this matter, Turkey is
    a "natural mediator" even though neither the United States nor Iran
    acknowledges this today.

    Indeed, it was understood from yesterday's critical meeting that both
    sides maintained their own positions, even though they do not entirely
    overlap.

    [translated from Turkish]
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