Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Iran Sought Turkey's Help To Mend Links With US, Says Erdogan

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Iran Sought Turkey's Help To Mend Links With US, Says Erdogan

    IRAN SOUGHT TURKEY'S HELP TO MEND LINKS WITH US, SAYS ERDOGAN
    Robert Tait in Mardin

    guardian.co.uk
    Tuesday 24 February 2009 17.45 GMT

    Turkish prime minister tells Guardian of Tehran's request for
    intercession with Bush administration

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stormed out of a debate
    with Israeli President Shimon Peres. Photograph: BULENT KILIC/AFP/Getty
    Images Photograph: BULENT KILIC/AFP/Getty Images

    Iran has asked Turkey to help it resolve its 30-year dispute with the
    US as a possible prelude to re-establishing ties, the Turkish prime
    minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has told the Guardian.

    Iranian officials made the request while George Bush was in office,
    Erdogan said, adding that he had passed the message to the White
    House at the time.

    He said he was considering raising the matter with Barack Obama,
    who has said he wants to engage with Iran at a G20 summit in London
    in April.

    Speaking aboard his prime ministerial plane during a local election
    campaign trip to the south-eastern city of Mardin, Erdogan also renewed
    his criticism of Israel's recent offensive in Gaza and challenged the
    Israeli prime minister-designate, Binyamin Netanyahu, to recognise
    Palestinians' right to have their own state.

    Asked if Turkey could play a mediating role in overcoming mistrust
    between Washington and Tehran, Erdogan replied: "Iran does want Turkey
    to play such a role. And if the United States also wants and asks=2 0us
    to play this role, we are ready to do this. They [the Iranians] said
    to us that if something like this [an opportunity for rapprochement]
    would happen, they want Turkey to play a role. These were words that
    were said openly. But I have told this to President Bush myself."

    Erdogan's remarks came as the US state department finally appointed
    the veteran Clinton administration diplomat Dennis Ross as a special
    envoy responsible for tackling the difficult Iran issue. Ross, whose
    experience has been in dealing with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
    has been given the title of special adviser to the Gulf and south-west
    Asia. In an article published last September, Ross advocated that
    the initial approach to Iran should be through a "direct, secret
    back channel".

    Iran and Turkey have drawn closer in recent years, helped by growing
    trade links last year estimated at £5.5bn. Iran's president, Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad, met Erdogan and the Turkish president, Abdullah Gul,
    in Istanbul last August, and several Turkish officials have also
    visited Iran in recent months to boost economic ties. Turkey imports
    one-third of its natural gas from Iran and has signed preliminary
    agreements to invest heavily in the Iranian gas industry.

    US officials have previously reacted sceptically to Turkish
    proposals to mediate with Iran. However, the idea may be given fresh
    consideration by the Obama administration, which has set up a sweeping
    polic y review policy after the president promised to reach out if Iran
    "unclenched its fist".

    Turkey, a Nato member and close ally of the US, shares Washington's
    misgivings about Iran's nuclear programme, which Tehran insists is
    for peaceful purposes but which the west suspects is aimed at building
    an atomic bomb.

    Acting as a go-between for Iran would fit with the regional mediator
    role Turkey has fashioned for itself under Erdogan's Islamist-rooted
    Justice and Development party (AKP) government. Last year, Ankara
    brokered peace talks between Israel and Syria, using its western
    alliance membership and status as a Muslim country to win the trust
    of each side.

    But Turkey's ties with Israel were severely strained by Erdogan's
    fierce criticism of the recent bombardment of Gaza, which left more
    than 1,300 Palestinians dead. Relations soured further after he
    stormed out of a debate at the world economic forum in Davos after
    clashing angrily with the Israeli president, Shimon Peres. The gesture
    was widely acclaimed in Turkey and throughout the Muslim world but
    was condemned in Israel, where Erdogan was seen as an apologist for
    the Palestinian militant group Hamas, with which his government has
    cultivated ties.

    However, in comments likely to provoke further anger, Erdogan drew
    parallels between Hamas's failure to recognise Israel and the refusal
    of Netanyahu, who has been asked to form the next Israeli government,
    to endorse=2 0a Palestinian state. "We are always telling them
    [Hamas)]to act differently, that we are for a two-state solution:
    Palestine and Israel," he said. "They have to accept this, but Israel
    also has to accept Palestine.

    "Is Israel right now accepting Palestine? They are still not accepting
    them.

    But it is being expected of the Palestinian people to accept
    Israel. Now go and ask Mr Netanyahu if he is accepting Palestine."

    Netanyahu has pledged to pursue "economic peace" with the Palestinians
    but has ruled out territorial concessions that would lead to statehood.

    Erdogan said an Israeli-Palestinian settlement had to include Hamas,
    which he called the party of "change and reform". He also condemned
    Israel's recent onslaught as disproportionate. "Hamas doesn't have
    any planes. Hamas doesn't have any tanks or artillery, and with
    the use of disproportionate force Gaza was being put under fire,"
    he said. "One thousand, one hundred and 30people have died. We have
    more than 5,500 injured. Who is going to ask: what has happened here
    and who is going to pay the price for this?"

    His walkout at Davos, when he also clashed with the debate moderator,
    David Ignatius of the Washington Post, was inspired by his conscience,
    he said, and a desire to "be the voice of the voiceless and the
    protector of the people who cannot protect themselves".

    Erdogan dismissed fears that the US pro-Israel lobby would retaliate
    by lifting its oppos ition to a congressional resolution recognising
    the Armenian genocide claims. During last year's US presidential
    election campaign, Obama and his vice-president, Joe Biden, voiced
    support for the resolution.

    But Erdogan said: "I believe the United States feels and knows the
    importance of Turkey within the region more than some people who
    do not understand this. The so-called Armenian genocide is not an
    issue that can affect Turkey-American relations in a very strong
    way. I don't believe the US Congress would take a decision based on
    emotions. It should be left to historians."

    Allegations by the Armenian government and diaspora about the fate of
    their people under the Ottoman empire have long been one of Turkish
    society's biggest taboos. Turkey vehemently disputes Armenian claims
    that up to 1.5 million were deliberately killed in a programme
    amounting to genocide.

    Officials say the death toll was much lower and a result of
    inter-ethnic clashes in which many Turks also died. Turkey has
    called for a historical commission to examine the issue and has
    recently pursued rapprochement with Armenia, with which it has no
    diplomatic ties.
Working...
X