Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey Hits US Business After 'Genocide' Vote

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

  • Turkey Hits US Business After 'Genocide' Vote

    TURKEY HITS US BUSINESS AFTER 'GENOCIDE' VOTE
    By Delphine Strauss in Ankara

    Financial Times
    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/1d9ec10c-36e6-11df -bc0f-00144feabdc0.html
    March 24 2010
    UK

    Turkey has frozen its efforts to strengthen defence, energy and trade
    ties with the US after a congressional panel labelled the Ottoman-era
    killing of Armenians as "genocide", according to the country's minister
    for foreign trade.

    Zafer Caglayan, who cancelled two trips to the US in February and
    this month, said: "All steps taken so far are at a halt."

    The freeze on new economic initiatives with the US stands in sharp
    contrast to Turkey's rapidly developing ties with its neighbours to
    the north and east, where it is pursuing closer integration as part
    of a policy of greater regional engagement.

    Washington has long viewed Turkey as a key strategic ally and an
    important partner on energy matters and in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    However, trade between the two countries is dominated by US arms and
    aerospace sales to Turkey - an imbalance that Ankara had hoped to
    correct. Mr Caglayan had been charged with developing economic ties
    in the "model partnership" proposed by Barack Obama, US president.

    "We were hoping that beneficial steps could be taken . . . in the
    context of this model partnership," Mr Caglayan told the Financial
    Times.

    The American-Turkish Council, the US organisation that promotes
    commercial, defence and cultural relations, has postponed its annual
    conference because Ankara had advised public and private businesses
    that its policy was to curtail official visits because of the
    congressional vote.

    That announcement came after Turkey this month made its strongest
    assertion yet of economic independence from the west by cancelling
    talks on a new loan from the International Monetary Fund.

    The Ankara government said it could "stand on its own feet", after some
    50 years as one of the IMF's most assiduous and crisis-prone clients.

    Writing in Hurriyet Daily News, the columnist Semih Idiz noted:
    "Turkey . . . has started to act more freely from its traditional
    allies and partners, and is veering toward other parts of the world
    in search of new partners." He described the latest events as a
    "visible expression of Turkey's desire to be an independent actor
    free of western encumbrances".

    Ankara is also forging links with other emerging economies. Taner
    Yildiz, energy minister, this month signed a deal paving the way for
    South Korea's state power company to build a nuclear plant on the
    Black Sea coast, bypassing the option of an open tender.

    Talks with Russia over a nuclear plant are already under way. The
    day after the US "genocide" vote, Turkish diplomats flew to Moscow
    to discuss the nuclear project and an intricate web of pipeline deals.

    Dmitry Medvedev, Russian president, is due to visit Turkey in May.

    This was a "signal" that "Turkey could, if an unwanted scenario
    em-erged, strengthen its ties with Russia", said Sinan Ulgen, head
    of the Edam think-tank in Istanbul.

    On the ties with Russia, Mr Caglayan said: "Turkey and Russia are
    strategically close counterparts and two countries that are willing
    to increase economic and commercial ties.

    "I'd like to emphasise this fact that Turkey and Russia are very
    sincere in their relations."

    Turkey's new economic partnerships and broadening diplomatic horizons
    will not necessarily weaken its traditional alignment with the west.

    Thanks to proximity and the customs union with the European Union,
    Europe remains Turkey's most important market, receiving about 60
    per cent of its exports.

    On energy, the strategy is to keep all options open - joining
    western-sponsored projects, such as the Nabucco pipeline aimed at
    bringing Caspian and Iraqi gas to the EU, as well as Russian-backed
    proposals.

    But many in Washington assume Turkey will abstain from supporting
    more sanctions on Iran in the United Nations Security Council, where
    it holds a non-permanent seat.

    Philip Gordon, one of the US administration's strongest proponents
    of ties with Turkey, said last week that Ankara should not pursue its
    aim of "zero problems" with neighbours "uncritically or at any price".

    Mehmet Ali Birand, a Turkish political commentator, has pointed
    out that US-Turkish trade amounted to about $15bn in 2008, with
    Turkish-Russian trade totalling more than treble that amount.

    He questioned which partnership would prove more persistent. "Is it
    the one on paper with the slogan 'strategic partnership', progressively
    becoming irrelevant, or the one amounting to $50bn-$100bn?"
Working...
X