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ANKARA: Turkey And US Begin To Enjoy Warm Ties

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  • ANKARA: Turkey And US Begin To Enjoy Warm Ties

    TURKEY AND US BEGIN TO ENJOY WARM TIES
    By Lale Kemal

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 2 2011

    Despite the ups and downs in relations between the two NATO allies,
    both Turkey and the US have always needed to cooperate on issues
    related to problems occurring in Turkey's environs in particular.

    Turkey's location next to the Middle East, the Balkans and Russia
    as well as Central Asia has stood as an important factor in making
    Turkish-US relations indispensable.

    Having close allies in those regions has been crucial in advancing
    US national interests since Washington is still the only world power
    intervening in conflicts elsewhere in the world, from Afghanistan to
    Turkey's neighbor, Iraq.

    But a shift in Turkish foreign policy in the past several years, from
    a policy based on reacting to events whenever they take place to one
    based on proactive policies concerned with taking initiatives, at
    the beginning irked the US. Washington's concern stemmed from fears
    that Turkey, under the Justice and Development Party (AK Party),
    having stronger Islamic traditions in this staunchly secular nation,
    would look to the East and turn its back to the West.

    I myself have never believed that the AK Party, which initiated major
    democratic reforms and enabled the now stalled accession negotiations
    in 2005 for full membership in the European Union, would move away
    from the West. Turkey's pursuit of a more independent policy in the
    past decade that has sometimes contrasted with its Western allies has
    stemmed mostly from an increased awareness of safeguarding Turkish
    national interests in the region.

    Turkey's policy of having closer political and economic dialogue with
    Iran, for example, has been based on pragmatism, rather than the fact
    that both nations are majorly Muslim despite belonging to different
    sects of Islam, i.e., Turkey being Sunni and Iran being Shiite.

    Nevertheless, Shiite Iran's policy of influencing Shiite-dominated
    segments of the Middle East has always been perceived as a threat
    for Ankara.

    The US was further frustrated in June 2010 when Turkey voted against
    imposing UN sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program.

    But Turkey's recent decision to host US-backed NATO missile defense
    system radar has come as a relief for the Western alliance in general
    and for the US in particular. If Turkey had refused to take part in
    the missile shield project, relations with the US could have reached
    a sticking point. By agreeing to host the early warning radar system,
    Turkey did away with concerns that it would be NATO's weakest link.

    Independent from easing the concern of its NATO allies by accepting
    to host the radar on its soil, Turkey has also safeguarded its own
    national interests. This is because neighboring Iran's development of
    nuclear arms is not an acceptable scenario and stands as an important
    priority issue with regard to Turkey's major national interests.

    As far as I understand, in return for Turkey agreeing to host the early
    warning radar, among other things, the US administration appears to
    have convinced congress, which is irritated by Turkey's strained ties
    with its once close strategic partner Israel, about selling weapons
    to Turkey, which it urgently needs in its fight against the outlawed
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and its intensified violence.

    After holding Turkey's request for the transfer of arms systems on
    the table for several years, the Obama administration notified the
    US Congress last week of the potential sale of three US Marine Corps
    (USMC) AH-1W SuperCobra attack helicopters to Turkey.

    Turkey has a shortage in its SuperCobra fleet, as it is believed that
    it now only has six SuperCobras, following the crash of the other
    four during various missions.

    Turkey's active engagement in the region has also made Ankara an
    increasingly influential US ally in the Middle East. This has been
    serving to safeguard US interests in this now chaotic and uncertain
    region where the oppressed citizens have begun either toppling their
    leaders, such as Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Libyan leader
    Muammar Gaddafi, who was brutally killed recently by his opponents,
    or forcing them to leave office, such as Syrian President Bashar
    al-Assad, who refuses to leave. Turkey has been an outspoken critic
    of President Assad's bloody crackdown on protests in neighboring Syria.

    As a matter of fact, Turkey and the US have engaged in a deeper
    dialogue since the outbreak of protests in parts of North Africa and
    the Middle East that began in March of this year.

    Turkish Defense Minister İsmet Yılmaz stated that a new situation
    was emerging in Turkish-US ties and described this as both countries
    beginning to rediscover each other.

    "From now on, both countries agreed to consult and inform each other
    on every issue. In order to prevent a power vacuum from emerging
    once the US withdraws from Iraq [at the end of December], the US
    will consult Turkey on every step that it takes," Yılmaz told
    the media in Washington on Tuesday where he is attending the annual
    American-Turkish Council (ATC) meeting, which brought together senior
    Turkish and American officials.

    Apparently, the US's possible transfer of SuperCobra attack helicopters
    after putting on hold Turkey's request for several years pleased
    Turkey extremely, which is understood to have prompted the Turkish
    defense minister to hail relations between Washington and Ankara.

    According to Yılmaz, Turkish-US relations are unique.

    For Turkish-US relations to become unique, however, Ankara should
    also mend its ties with its former strategic partner Israel. The
    US once again emphasized this condition in a recent remark made by
    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Speaking at the ATC meeting on
    Monday, Clinton said Turkey must do more to cement democratic gains
    and smooth prickly ties with its neighbors such as Israel, if it
    is to emerge as a guarantor of Middle Eastern stability. Israel's
    killing last year of nine Turks aboard a Gaza-bound activist ship
    has brought ties between Turkey and Israel to a historic low.

    As Clinton reminded both Turkish and American participants of the ATC
    in her address, Turkey's ability to realize its full potential depends
    also on its resolve to strengthen democracy at home, where the state
    of human rights and freedom of expression requires serious improvement.

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