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ISTANBUL: Turkey blames everybody but itself

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  • ISTANBUL: Turkey blames everybody but itself

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 14 2010

    Turkey blames everybody but itself

    AMANDA PAUL [email protected] Columnists


    If there was an award for passing the buck and blaming others, Turkey
    would surely be near the top of the nominee list. It really never
    ceases to amaze just how often Turkey does this. These days, US
    President Barack Obama has been on the receiving end of Turkey's
    wrath, with Ankara accusing Washington of having no strategic vision
    and of failing to take the necessary steps to prevent the approval of
    the Armenian `genocide' resolution by the US House Foreign Relations
    Committee last week. I sometimes wonder who is the superpower, the US
    or Turkey? In any case, between now and April 24, when Obama delivers
    his annual message, Turkey will be obsessed. It is really sad that we
    have to witness this scene over and over again. Turkey's criticism has
    been ever harsher this year, and Ankara seems to be expecting Obama to
    resolve this issue once and for all. If he does not, well, as Foreign
    Minister DavutoÄ?lu has threatened, strategic ties may go adrift --
    meaning that Turkey will develop even closer ties with the Russians,
    Iranians, Africans, South Americans, etc., with Turkey possibly
    becoming an increasingly unreliable partner for the West. With the
    ambassador already recalled and State Minister Zafer Ã?aÄ?layan's visit
    cancelled, Turkey is really piling on the pressure. Ã?aÄ?layan's visit
    was supposed to develop further economic ties with the US under a
    model partnership framework suggested by Obama. With Prime Minister
    ErdoÄ?an due to visit Washington in April, what will happen next is
    anybody's guess, but I would expect once we get into May the rocky sea
    will calm down again.
    I don't believe Obama can make the genocide issue disappear as Turkey
    requests. In fact, the genocide issue is not going to go away in the
    US or anywhere else, with the Swedish parliament narrowly approving a
    resolution last Thursday recognizing the 1915 mass killing of
    Armenians in Turkey as genocide and prompting the Turkish government
    to recall its ambassador there, too, in protest. While Foreign
    Minister Carl Bildt said he regretted the decision because it would
    serve as another blow to Turkey's reconciliation with Armenia, the
    fact is that Turkey could have moved the process forward months ago
    but preferred not to. So now they blame the US, the Swedes and the
    Armenians. In fact, anybody but themselves. If Turkey believed
    reconciliation with Armenia would make the genocide issue go away,
    then they were and are fooling themselves. As long as there is an
    Armenian diaspora on this planet, they will continue to push
    everywhere they can for recognition of the genocide, no matter how
    many historic commissions or rapprochements there are. The genocide
    issue is their life's cause.

    In addition, the Jan. 12 ruling by the Armenian Constitutional Court
    resulted in Turkey questioning whether Armenia remains committed to
    their promise to ratify the two protocols for the normalization of
    relations with Turkey. Perhaps Ankara would do well to take a good
    look in the mirror. It is Turkey more than any other entity that is
    responsible for the difficulty in the current reconciliation. Turkey
    has crippled the process by insisting on a parallel process on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, which is clearly not going to happen any
    time soon. And here again Turkey blames Armenia for the lack of
    progress when in fact Armenia is no more to blame than Azerbaijan.

    Turkey is well aware that the process is in danger of failing and is
    looking everywhere it can to find others to blame. Probably it would
    please Ankara no end if Armenia were to announce that it was fed up
    with Turkey's imposed Karabakh preconditions and withdraw its
    signature from the protocols -- as they have threatened to do. This
    would give Turkey the perfect scapegoat for the failure of the
    process. If I were sitting in Yerevan, I would do precisely the
    opposite. I would not withdraw the signature; rather, I would take the
    initiative and have the protocols ratified in the Armenian parliament
    as soon as possible.

    And of course the blame game is not simply limited to this issue; it
    is alive and kicking on many others, too. On Cyprus Turkey always
    claims to be driving forward a solution and continues to deny any
    wrongdoing in the past rather continuing to state that its role in the
    Cyprus conflict was to bring peace to the island and placing the blame
    elsewhere for the continued division. It is the same when it comes to
    the membership negotiations with the EU. Blame for the stagnation of
    the talks always lies at the feet of the EU. But this approach should
    come as no big surprise given the fact that many Turks are simply
    unable to accept or acknowledged that their country, and the Ottoman
    Empire before it, has ever behaved in a way that was less than
    perfect. They are unable to deal with the past and have trouble
    acknowledging that sometimes Turkey does make mistakes. Rather they
    prefer to point the finger at others.
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