Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Erdogan Scheduled For Critical Visit To US

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

  • Erdogan Scheduled For Critical Visit To US

    ERDOGAN SCHEDULED FOR CRITICAL VISIT TO US

    Hurriyet
    March 2 2010
    Turkey

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan will attend a nuclear security
    summit in the United States, hosted by President Barack Obama.

    However, because the visit is on April 11, the trip is likely to be
    dominated by the lead-up to April 24, the day Armenians commemorate
    what they term the World War I-era killings of Ottoman Armenians
    as genocide While Turkey's prime minister ostensibly travels to the
    United States for a meeting on nuclear security in April, the visit
    is likely to be overshadowed by the run-up to April 24, a day of
    critical importance to Armenians.

    Although Turkey widely expects a House of Representatives Foreign
    Affairs Committee to endorse a resolution calling the 1915 killings of
    Armenians as genocide during a Thursday vote, officials and experts
    both seem quietly confident the U.S. administration will intervene
    to prevent the resolution's adoption during a full House vote.

    "The U.S. will act according to its strategic interests. And at this
    stage it needs Turkey in the Middle East as well as South East Asia,"
    said Professor Hasan Köni of Ä°stanbul's BahceÅ~_ehir University.

    "It would not be a surprise if the resolution passes the panel's vote.

    But, in the long run, President [Barack] Obama will step in to block
    its final adoption. In the past the administration stepped in for
    strategic reasons. Today, the U.S. has more at stake than ever. It
    needs Turkey on Iraq, on Afghanistan and on Iran," said Mustafa Aydın,
    rector of Istanbul's Kadir Has University.

    Government officials also believe the resolution will ultimately not
    pass, yet are prepared for an extremely tense period because pressure
    will mount on Turkey to proceed with a parliamentary ratification of
    normalization protocols with Armenia.

    The U.S. will do its utmost to exert pressure on Turkey and increase
    tension until the last minute to convince the ruling Justice and
    Development Party, or AKP, for a parliamentary vote on the protocols,
    according to a Turkish official familiar with the issue.

    "One of the reason for the current deadlock is the prime minister's
    pledge to Azerbaijan during a visit last May, [in which he said]
    the protocols would not be endorsed until there is a solution to
    Nagorno-Karabakh," said Aydın, adding that Erdogan has changed the
    official position and has now tied the improvement of Armenian ties
    to progress on the issue, rather than a comprehensive solution.

    Armenia has occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a region that legally belongs
    to Azerbaijan, along with five adjacent regions since 1993. Turkey
    closed its borders with Armenia as a result of the invasion.

    Meanwhile, the Armenian Constitutional Court's qualified support
    for the protocols that has been perceived by Turkey as an obstacle
    to progress has made it further difficult for the Turkish government
    to send the protocols to Parliament.

    Both Köni and Aydın said they see no indications of a breakthrough
    on ether the Turkish-Armenian track or the Armenian-Azerbaijani track.

    Feridun Sinirlioglu, the Foreign Ministry's undersecretary, returned
    empty-handed from a trip to the U.S. in which he had sought legal
    clarifications on the Armenian court's decision.

    Despite this, government officials said intense negotiations are
    continuing, especially for progress on the Karabakh problem. Turkey
    has suggested a preliminary agreement could be signed based on the
    withdrawal of Armenian forces from Karabakh in a move that would
    help the government convince public opinion about the merit of the
    Armenian protocols.

    Armenia, however, is asking for concessions from Azerbaijan on the
    future status of Karabakh before agreeing to a withdrawal, according
    to a Turkish official.

    While intense discussions are continuing, few in Ankara believe they
    will bear fruit before April 24, the date Armenians commemorate
    what they claim was the World War I genocide of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey has told the U.S. the reconciliation process with Armenia, as
    well as Turkish-U.S. cooperation on critical issues like Afghanistan
    or Iraq would suffer in the absence of a potential breakthrough
    with Armenia.

    Such a message is likely to be delivered during Erdogan's attendance
    at a nuclear security summit hosted by Obama.

    U.S. strategic needs, along with progress on Turkish reconciliation
    with Armenia, should provide sufficient incentive to the U.S. to
    block the resolution, said Aydın.

    He also said it would be difficult, however, for the AKP to send the
    protocols to Parliament, especially when general elections are nearing.

    "Behind closed doors, I think Turkey will tell the U.S. that it had
    initiated an Armenian initiative, thereby doing what the U.S. was
    expecting the government to do. The AKP will tell the U.S.: 'Public
    opinion in Turkey, Azerbaijan and Armenia is not letting us make
    further progress. Trust me. Let me get over the elections and I will
    continue the process.'"
Working...
X