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  • ANKARA: Ankara not yet decided on France's return to NATO

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 7 2009


    Ankara not yet decided on France's return to NATO


    Turkey is still assessing France's planned return to the NATO
    alliance, Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said yesterday, a sign that
    Ankara might use its veto card in the 19-nation group if Paris refuses
    to halt its obstruction of Turkish accession to the European Union.


    "Whether this decision needs to be put to a vote or not is still being
    evaluated in NATO," Babacan told reporters before departing for a
    security conference in Munich, where top US and European officials are
    discussing the issue. "It is more of a political matter than a legal
    one. Most of the NATO allies see this as a positive thing, but we are
    still evaluating it," he added.

    France opposes Turkey's membership in the EU and has blocked the
    opening of five negotiation chapters directly related to
    accession. When French President Nicolas Sarkozy said he wanted France
    to resume its full role in NATO, many suggested that this could give
    Ankara a trump card to negotiate with France for a more favorable
    stance toward its EU bid. Government officials have said the two
    subjects are unrelated.

    If no objection is raised, NATO members could agree to France's return
    to the alliance as early as an April summit in Strasbourg that will
    mark the 60th anniversary of the Western military pact. Alliance
    officials say there is no need for a consensus vote on the move if
    France decides to go ahead with it. "It is France's decision to decide
    politically whether it wants to take its full place in NATO's military
    structure," said NATO spokesman James Appathurai.

    The United States and France have already agreed in principle that
    France should secure two top NATO posts in the event of its expected
    return, Reuters reported on Friday, quoting a diplomat. Under the
    agreement, French officials would head NATO's regional command
    headquarters in Lisbon, Portugal and its Allied Command Transformation
    (ACT) headquarters in Norfolk, Virginia -- the command center in
    charge of revamping Europe's Cold War protector to tackle 21st century
    security challenges.

    No Arab resentment

    Babacan also responded to questions about whether a joint statement
    released by foreign ministers from three Arab countries, Jordan, Saudi
    Arabia and Egypt, this week was a warning to Turkey to stay away from
    Middle East affairs. The statement, which came at the end of a meeting
    to discuss the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the aftermath of
    Israel's attack on Gaza last month, said non-Arab parties should stay
    away. It was widely interpreted as a message to Iran, but some
    newspapers in Turkey have commented that it also appears to have been
    directed at Turkey, which has intensified its criticism of Israel in
    the wake of the Gaza offensive.

    "It is impossible to construe it as directed at Turkey," said
    Babacan. "Turkey's policies are commended in our region and across the
    entire Arab world. We see this in both the public reactions and in our
    regular contacts with the leaders of these countries."

    Armenia diplomacy

    Babacan is scheduled to meet with Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
    Nalbandian while in Munich, continuing a series of diplomatic contacts
    with this country to discuss normalization of relations. Turkey has
    had no formal ties with Armenia since 1993, when it closed its border
    gate and severed diplomatic relations in protest against Armenia's
    occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan.

    Babacan said he would also have talks with his Azeri counterpart,
    Elmar Mammadyarov, in Baku during a visit next Monday.


    07 February 2009, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN ANKARA
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