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ANKARA: Clouds Gathering Over Turkish-US Relations

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  • ANKARA: Clouds Gathering Over Turkish-US Relations

    CLOUDS GATHERING OVER TURKISH-US RELATIONS

    Hurriyet
    http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/eng lish/domestic/10964914.asp?gid=244
    Feb 10 2009
    Turkey

    ANKARA - Two serious threats are on the horizon to relations between
    NATO allies Turkey and the United States during the period of the new
    Obama administration in Washington: a resolution recognizing Armenian
    claims and the fallout from the Turkish prime minister's encounter
    with Israeli President Shimon Peres at Davos, according to a veteran
    U.S. diplomat.

    "The style of leadership in Washington now has changed and is quite
    different from the Bush style. I am optimistic about the future of
    bilateral ties but there are two very serious problems on the horizon,"
    retired Ambassador James Holmes, president of the American-Turkish
    Council, told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review in an interview
    yesterday.

    One issue is the negative repercussions in Washington from a public
    confrontation between Peres and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan at the now-infamous Davos panel that ended when the latter
    walked off stage, he said.

    "As popular as that was in Turkey and in much of the Arab world it
    was received very negatively in the United States and particularly
    in the American-Jewish community, which has always been a supporter
    and ally of Turkey," said Holmes.

    "The American-Jewish community's support for Turkey's position on
    the Armenian genocide resolution, for example, is gone. They will not
    expend any political energy in blocking a resolution or a presidential
    proclamation."

    Holmes said he watched the full panel debate.

    'Mediator role blown away' "I could see what happened, I could see
    who raised his voice first, I could see who pointed fingers, but in
    the United States we got 30 seconds in which Erdogan lost his temper
    with Peres and stalked off stage. That was it and all the blame was
    put on Erdogan's shoulders," he said. "That is not a fair presentation
    but is a fact of media life in the United States. I don't think it
    is permanent, I don't think it is terribly serious but it does need
    to be addressed."

    Turkey has expended energy in positioning itself as peace broker in
    the Middle East and according to Holmes, the mediation role has been
    undertaken successfully for the better part of the year with a lot
    credit going to Turkey for this.

    "And in the minds of most in Washington this has been blown away now
    by what happened in Davos," he said.

    Holmes illustrated what he said was "the inconsistency of Turkey's
    policy of inclusiveness," in the case of Gaza when Erdogan skipped
    Israel on his regional tour following the Israeli offensive and his
    rhetoric excluded recognition of some of the initiatives that were
    taken by Hamas and had led to violence.

    As another example of inconsistency, Holmes said many in Washington
    questioned the visit by Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, whose
    regime stands accused of genocide in Darfur.

    "Turkey has shown an independent foreign policy streak over the last
    three or four years, much of that was appreciated or well-received in
    the United States. Over time people have begun to understand there
    was value in Turkey's ability to speak with Hamas, there was value
    in its ability to work with the leadership of Syria," Holmes said.

    Anti-Semitism "But this is certainly not the case with
    al-Bashir. Turkey received al-Bashir and his deputy was recently here
    (in Ankara), so many people have scratched their heads and asked what
    is going on here."

    While the government's strong rhetoric against Israel raised questions
    over Turkey's regional role, it also awakened grave distress among
    Turkish Jews over rising anti-Semitism.

    Holmes said some instances, particularly in Istanbul, had frightened
    the Turkish-Jewish community and led to the emergence of a feeling in
    Washington that Turkey and the government were moving in the direction
    of anti-Semitic behavior. "This is another sign of anti-Western
    behavior on the part of Turkey that has to be addressed," he added.

    "It is all loss, no gain. This is the message that we need to get
    across in Washington," he said referring to Armenians' efforts to make
    their claims regarding the 1915 incidents recognized as "genocide".

    Armenia, with the backing of the diaspora, claims up to 1.5 million
    of their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in 1915.

    Turkey rejects the claims saying that 300,000 Armenians, along with at
    least as many Turks, died in civil strife that emerged when Armenians
    took up arms, backed by Russia, for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    The issue remains unsolved as Armenia drags its feet on accepting
    Turkey's proposal to form an independent commission to investigate
    the claims.
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