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ANKARA: US expert links Obama's success to role of Turkey

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  • ANKARA: US expert links Obama's success to role of Turkey

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 21 2009


    US expert links Obama's success to role of Turkey


    The success of US President Barack Obama's foreign policy hinges on
    Turkey's role, said Walter Russell Mead, a senior fellow at the New
    York-based Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), during a seminar held
    at the US Embassy residence in Ankara on Thursday.

    Mead, one of the America's leading foreign policy experts, who has
    been described by The New York Times Book Review as `one of the
    country's liveliest thinkers about America's role in the world," told
    the select group in attendance that `Turkey has a role to play in
    whether or not President Obama's initiative [of reaching out to the
    Muslim world] will be seen as a success.'

    Stressing that Turkey has influence in the region, Mead said Turkey
    has the ability to help President Obama appear as a successful leader
    in the eyes of his critics, `We can hope that the Turkish initiative
    in the region will complement and supplement what America is trying to
    do and lead to the kind of stable and peaceful Middle Eastern order
    that does not depend on a large American presence or high-profile
    American leadership.'

    Calling Obama's foreign policy approach Jeffersonian -- a term coined
    after US President Thomas Jefferson, who advocated strict limits on
    foreign policy engagement by removing conflict points in global issues
    -- Mead said, `I would say that in this case Turkish national
    interests and the interests of Jeffersonians in the US are closely
    aligned.' `When Jeffersonians succeed, they make lasting changes. When
    they fail, they are generally replaced by someone who tries to undo
    what they have accomplished,' he added.

    Mead, who describes himself as a lifelong Democrat, praised Obama's
    approach to foreign policy, saying Obama can leave a lasting legacy
    just like the Monroe Doctrine in the 19th century or the containment
    policy adopted by the US during the Cold War. According to Mead,
    Obama's speeches in Ankara and Cairo, where he tried to reach out to
    the Muslim world, were very important. `He tried hard to reposition
    the US with Islam in order to remove conflict points and to find a
    common ground,' he underlined.

    US needs Turkey more then ever
    Mead went on saying that Turkey is one of a very small number of
    countries in the world that are more important to the US today than 10
    or 20 years ago. He acknowledged, however, that Turkey and its
    neighborhood are a much more complicated place today than it was 20
    years ago. `The US-Turkish cooperation is more important. We need each
    other more today than 20 years ago,' he emphasized.

    The American scholar also noted that the US is absolutely committed to
    the idea that PKK [the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party] is a
    terrorist organization. `I am not aware of any shortcoming in
    US-Turkish cooperation on that issue,' he said. Mead praised the
    Turkish engagement in northern Iraq and said, `From a US viewpoint,
    the development of strong economic and political ties between Turkey
    and authorities in northern Iraq is a very positive sign for everybody
    concerned in order to bring stability in Iraq.'

    On Iran's nuclear ambitions, Mead argued that Iranian nuclear weapons
    would make all existing problems in the region worse. `It will not
    help solve any of the problems we have in the Middle East. It will
    narrow the range of choices for any American president.' He noted that
    any nuclear test in Iran would have fallout in the US and may put the
    entire Obama foreign policy approach into question.

    Turkey's foreign policy is commendable
    Commenting on recent Turkish foreign policy engagement, the CFR
    scholar said Turkey has played a very constructive and positive role.
    `Turkey has continued to look for positive ways forward on the
    Armenian question and the Cyprus question. Turkey has showed
    commendable flexibility in dealing with the Kurdish situation in Iraq,
    for example. Turkey's approach to the EU strikes me as solid, mature,
    and sound in every way.' `Overall, Turkey remains very stable and very
    important, a solid citizen in this part of the world,' he added.

    On Turkey's relations with Israel, Mead said he hopes Turkey would be
    able to retain Israel's trust to continue as a mediator between Israel
    and Syria. Calling the mediation role a `difficult vocation,' he made
    the point that Turkey's long-term strategic interests calls for it to
    maintain this kind of unique position in the region and in the world,
    as a place where everyone can come and feel that they will be
    understood. He criticized, however, the Israeli side for being
    premature. `In my opinion, criticism from Israel against Turkey is
    coming too fast,' he said.

    On secularism, the American scholar suggested that Turkey needs to
    write its own chapter on relations between state and religion. Noting
    that there are different models in the West regulating the affairs of
    church and state, he provided examples from countries including
    Argentina, where the president until 1994 by law had to be Roman
    Catholic, as opposed to Great Britain, which prohibits royals from
    converting to Catholicism.

    He said that though Turkey modeled its secularism on the French
    experience, which calls for a hostile attitude to all religions and
    public manifestations of religion, unlike France there was no
    hierarchal single religious entity in Turkey. `I would suggest looking
    at Western historical experiences, as there are many different ways of
    doing this,' he said.

    `Let historians sort out Armenian claims'
    Mead also voiced strong opposition of any resolution recognizing
    Armenian killings during World War I as `genocide' in the US Congress.
    `I would be painfully surprised if a bill on that subject passed both
    houses and was signed by the president,' he said, adding that he would
    be opposed to such a resolution. He also expressed the opinion that
    the French law recognizing the Armenian genocide should be repealed as
    well.

    He continued: `Some people describe me as a `working historian.' I
    believe in the separation of state and history. Legislative bodies
    should not be issuing historical declarations. A legislative body
    should not be saying this was genocide or was not genocide. Let
    historians work on that, research it, argue with each other about it,
    publish nasty articles repudiating other historians' claims. Let the
    general intelligence of the public over time reach their conclusion.
    These kind of issues need to be separated from diplomatic relations,
    which are complicated enough already.'

    He criticized former US President George W. Bush's notion of exporting
    democracy and said, `The progress of democracy around the world
    probably depends more on domestic political forces in other
    countries.' He stressed that the US has been more hostile to Iran than
    to any other nation, yet there are few countries today that have as
    vibrant a democratic movement as Iran. `Countries move in their own
    way and respond to domestic issues,' he said, adding to that, `I think
    President Bush looks back at his support for democracy as something
    that was not as successful as he would have hoped.'


    21 November 2009, Saturday
    ABDULLAH BOZKURT ANKARA
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