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Analysis: The West Unhappy With New Transformations In Turkey's Fore

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  • Analysis: The West Unhappy With New Transformations In Turkey's Fore

    ANALYSIS: THE WEST UNHAPPY WITH NEW TRANSFORMATIONS IN TURKEY'S FOREIGN POLICY
    Naira Hayrumyan

    ArmeniaNow
    May 31, 2010

    Politics

    Dividing lines are emerging between Turkey and the West, marked by
    Turkey's nuclear energy deal with Iran and by its efforts this weekend
    to use its ships to break Israel sea blockade of Gaza.

    The process of Turkey's disengagement from pro-Western forces was
    clearly manifested when in January 2009 at the World Economic Forum
    in Davos Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel
    of occupying the Palestinian-administered Gaza Strip.

    Then, just this weekend, Turkish vessels set off from Istanbul to break
    the Israeli blockade of Gaza from the sea, ending in intervention by
    the Israeli military that left at least 10 dead Monday morning.

    But the main discontent of the West is connected with the initiative
    of Turkey and Brazil on Iran when earlier this month Ankara announced
    that it was ready to provide enrichment for Iranian uranium. U.S.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton responded to that development
    by saying that there are "very serious disagreements" over Iran's
    nuclear program and added that there are very serious differences
    with the diplomacies of Brazil and Turkey towards Iran.

    On Tuesday, June 1, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu will
    leave for Washington where he is expected to hold talks with the U.S.

    secretary of state "to defuse the Turkish-American tensions."

    The West is not satisfied with the Turkish policy on Armenia either.

    In fact, the process of the ratification of the Armenian-Turkish
    protocols has come to a standstill, and Western countries have approved
    of Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan's decision to suspend the process.

    The Turkish premier also had to cancel his trip to Argentina as
    part of his Latin America tour because of the Armenian factor. The
    Turkish Foreign Ministry said that although the Buenos Aires Autonomous
    Administration had been granted permission to erect a monument to the
    founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, it was canceled due
    to an "unfriendly initiative of the Armenian circles."

    Western experts think that "Turkey is becoming an immediate concern."

    In a much-talked about article in The American Thinker, Joel J.

    Sprayregen writes:

    "...The transformation of Turkish foreign policy increasingly presents
    a clear danger to American interests. The 'zero problems' foreign
    policy of AK Foreign Minister Davutoglu advertises friendliness with
    proximate neighbors. In practice, this means allying with rogue states
    Iran and Syria (whom even President Obama recently saw fit to designate
    a state sponsor of terrorism). Worse, Turkey now embraces terrorist
    murder squads like Hamas and Hezbollah and fetes their leaders as
    honored guests. Turkey hosted Sudanese President Bashir, who is under
    indictment for crimes against humanity by the International Court
    of Criminal Justice. Turkey's new alliances have left in tatters-but
    not yet completely dismembered-its traditional military alliance with
    Israel," the article says. "A country with a worldview that demonizes
    resistance against terrorism is a problematic member of NATO... Our
    officials are hardly aware that -- while Erdogan and Obama have
    fulsomely flattered each other -- Erdogan uses his controlled media
    to incite populist hatred of the U.S."




    From: A. Papazian
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