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ANKARA: What Was Really Talked About At Cankaya?

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  • ANKARA: What Was Really Talked About At Cankaya?

    WHAT WAS REALLY TALKED ABOUT AT CANKAYA?

    Hurriyet
    March 29 2010
    Turkey

    At a meeting with former U.S. Ambassador to Ankara Morton Abromowitz
    and the Forbes magazine's Claudia Rosett, whose statements were
    denied over the weekend by the Presidential Office in Cankaya, and
    with numerous American commentators, President Abdullah Gul talked
    about the pain and sorrow felt during the 1915 Armenian events and
    of Turks living in the Balkans. As leaving, he said "I salute your
    elderly in the family," to the Armenian decent journalist Khatchig
    Mouradian who told the story of his family left Turkey in 1915.

    Coincidentally, I had a dinner with an old friend of mine from New York
    at Yakup's in Asmalı Mescit on Fri. evening. I was totally unaware
    of this potential scandal of the next morning. My friend was: Rosett.

    This is how things happened... I met Claudia when I was in New
    York. She sent me an e-mail and let me know that she would be in Turkey
    for a trip organized by the Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges
    of Turkey, or TOBB, and Turkey Economic Policy Research Institute,
    or TEPAV, and that she wants to see me. Since I was out of town,
    we managed to meet on Fri. evening.

    She was excited and spent a busy week through contacts with Mr.

    President and officials from the Foreign Ministry, the TUSÄ°AD, eight
    American journalists and commentators who were also participated in
    a week-long TEPAV trip.

    The government or non-governmental organizations organize similar
    trips time to time in order to influence opinion leaders in U.S. and
    Europe. And such trips have a great impact on Turkey's image abroad.

    This time, the aim was to promote Turkey and to create public opinion
    ahead of the Apr. 24 speech of U.S. President Barack Obama for the
    occasion of the so-called genocide's commemoration. So Rosett and
    Abramowitz as the big guns, in addition to two Armenian descent
    journalists, Mouradian from the Armenian Weekly and Emil Sanamyan
    from the Armenian Reporter daily, were invited to the meeting.

    But her article published in the Forbes has caused a small diplomatic
    crisis. After being received by Mr. Gul, Rosett in her article titled
    "Turkey tilts toward Iran" claimed "...He is sure that even if Iran
    gets the bomb, 'they will not use it.' he is sure they will remain
    rational enough to refrain from devastating Israel--lest, by doing so,
    they should harm the Palestinians or the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem
    (which he says would then create problems for Iran 'with all the
    Muslims of the Gulf and the surrounding regions')."

    This article was a bomb dropped in the agenda. As a matter of fact,
    officials in Ankara imply a possibility that Iran is working on
    an atomic bomb, they wouldn't adopt a clear-cut stance before the
    international community and say "Yes they are working on an atomic
    bomb." On the contrary, Turkish authorities focus on the uncertainty
    prevails in the Iranian nuclear program and want to remain outside
    of a possible clash or not to ruin a chance of playing the mediator
    between the West and Iran.

    For this reason, as the Vatan daily carries this news to the headline,
    I was not surprised to see a counter-statement issued by the Cankaya
    Residence. Presidential Press Office was saying in it "Our President
    had never given any interview to the Forbes magazine neither in the
    past nor in present."

    But on Friday evening, Claudia was telling me about the tea party she
    had at Cankaya. The strangest thing is that both versions are accurate.

    As Mr. Gul was receiving the TEPAV delegation on March 19 afternoon,
    he was probably thinking this is just a meeting not an interview
    session. According to Rosett, reporters in the group were told not
    to bring in any tape-recorders, but no one told that conversations
    will be off the record. Rosett defends that they were given small
    notebooks and pens in the meeting. All were taking some notes and
    nobody asked them to keep conversation off the record.

    Rosett, TOBB President Rıfat Hisarcıklıoglu and Turkish Ambassador
    to Washington Namık Tan say that this was certainly the dialogue took
    place. She adds that there are both opinion and news in her article.

    "If people disagree with my opinion, I understand that but there is
    no error in quotations I noted down," Rosett claims.

    At times, reasons behind a diplomatic crisis are so very simple. As I
    searched about behind the doors of this Cankaya meeting, I came up with
    a few elements that probably caused Mr. Gul to err. TEPAV sent CVs of
    the attendees in advance of this gathering. In these notes however,
    Rosett's former affiliation, which is the Wall Street Journal, was
    mentioned. So, Mr. Gul was probably thinking that he was talking to
    a reporter from the Wall Street Journal not the Forbes magazine.

    As I say, the reality at times is in simple mistakes, not in big
    conspiracies.

    * Ms. Aslı AydıntaÅ~_baÅ~_ is a columnist for the daily Milliyet
    in which this piece appeared Monday. It was translated into English
    by the Daily News.
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