Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Obama Visit To Be Start Of New Era, Atilgan Says

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

  • ANKARA: Obama Visit To Be Start Of New Era, Atilgan Says

    OBAMA VISIT TO BE START OF NEW ERA, ATILGAN SAYS

    Today's Zaman
    March 20 2009
    Turkey

    US President Barack Obama's planned visit to Turkey in April will be
    a milestone in the two countries' relationship, according Nationalist
    Movement Party (MHP) deputy and Retired Gen. KurÅ~_at Atılgan.

    Speaking to Today's Zaman about his views on Obama's plans, Atılgan
    said he believed Obama's visit will be followed by military operations
    against Kurdistan Workers' Party's (PKK) terrorist bases in northern
    Iraq.

    Atılgan expressed the opinion that Obama's decision to visit Turkey at
    such an early phase of his presidency could be a watershed event for
    future developments. "This visit could be the first step in changing
    the region's balances from head to toe."

    Also a member of the NATO Parliamentarians Assembly, Atılgan
    projected: "President Obama's first point of discussion will be the
    NATO summit. I think his decision to visit Turkey after the summit is
    highly indicative of the importance the US administration attaches to
    Turkey. ... The US administration understands that none of its policies
    would succeed without Turkey's support and contribution," he said.

    He listed four central themes to the discussions taking place in the
    upcoming meeting: developments in Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran and the
    Caucasus, highlighting the issue of Iraq as the most crucial subject.

    "This will be a visit where conflicting policies over Iraq will be
    harmonized. With the US's partial pullout from Iraq, Turkey's new
    position in the region will be established," Altıgan noted.

    He said the US has taken terrorist organizations PKK and the Party
    for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK), an Iranian offshoot of the PKK,
    out of the equation and will start clearing these elements from the
    region in April and May, believing the US would support a Turkish
    operation into northern Iraq in April. However, the US will support the
    Kurdish political struggle. "The armed Kurdish movement has nothing
    left to do. But the US has made its mind up to take the initiative
    in the resolution of the Kurdish question.

    The issue will be put on the table at events such as conferences,
    summits and international gatherings. .... As long as they don't
    contradict Turkey's sensitivities, important steps can be taken in
    the region towards solution of the Kurdish question."

    He also said he doubted that Obama would appease the Armenian
    community, adding that the president will not fulfill his promise
    to declare that the killings of Anatolian Armenians during the early
    20th century amounted to genocide. However, Atılgan said the US will
    ask Turkey to do more to normalize its relations with Armenia.

    "Armenia has the [political] position of being the country in the
    Caucasus closest to Russia. They [the US] will want Turkey to open
    its border with Armenia in order to pull Armenia out of Moscow's
    sphere of influence. Turkey might have special demands, and in return
    for these, Obama might not mention genocide in his speech on April
    24. The Armenian diaspora, which is aware of this, has already started
    pressuring Obama to keep his promise."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X