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Rep. Shelley Berkley Opposes Arms Sale To Turkey

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  • Rep. Shelley Berkley Opposes Arms Sale To Turkey

    REP. SHELLEY BERKLEY OPPOSES ARMS SALE TO TURKEY
    By Karoun Demirjian

    Las Vegas Sun
    http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2011/nov/09/rep-shelley-berkley-opposes-arms-sale-turkey/
    Nov 9 2011
    NV

    She's done it before, with Saudi Arabia. This time, Rep. Shelley
    Berkley doesn't want another Israel-antagonist, Turkey, to be allowed
    to buy U.S. military materiel.

    Berkley is co-sponsoring a resolution to block the proposed sale
    of $111 million of U.S. attack helicopters to the NATO ally,
    and to require that the president consult Congress whenever the
    administration is planning to sell more than $50 million in military
    equipment to Turkey.

    In the "Dear Colleague" letter she and Rep. Eliot Engel have been
    circulating this week, Berkley lists several objections to Turkey's
    political positions, including its "belligerence against Cyprus"
    that is "intensifying," being "late to distance itself from the
    nightmare in Syria," "undermin[ing] international efforts to impose
    strong sanctions on Iran," and continued "refus[al] to apologize for
    the Armenian genocide."

    But the key complaint Berkley has with Turkey is its increasingly
    icy relationship with Israel.

    Turkey's humanitarian support for Palestinians in Gaza had already
    begun to vex Israel before May 2010, when things exploded into a
    full-fledged diplomatic crisis over an incident on the Turkish ship,
    the Mavi Marmara, which was part of an anti-occupation movement's
    "Freedom Flotilla" to break Israel's blockade of Gaza. Israeli
    commandos boarded the approaching ships at sea, and in the skirmishes
    that followed on board, killed nine Turkish nationals. Israel has
    not apologized for the incident, claiming it was self-defense.

    In the months since, Turkey recalled its ambassador to Israel, expelled
    the Israeli ambassador to Turkey, and refused Israel's offer of aid
    after a devastating earthquake that hit Turkey's eastern region around
    Lake Van.

    "This is the time for the United States to be raising our very
    serious concerns about Turkey, rather than selling arms to them,"
    Berkley and Engel wrote.

    (One point of dispute with Berkley's complaints: while Turkish Prime
    Minister Tayyip Erdogan was late to support NATO action on Libya, his
    harsh criticism of Bashar al-Assad's crackdown against protesters in
    Syria began only shortly after Hillary Clinton's and before Barack
    Obama joined the fray. Turkey is now harboring most of the Syrian
    refugees, including military defectors who are helping coordinate
    the uprisings. One thing noticeably missing from Berkley's letter:
    any mention of the Kurdish population of Turkey, currently being
    subjected to the most humanitarian injustices at the hands of the
    Turkish government.)

    Berkley isn't going so far, as she did with Saudi Arabia, as to claim
    Turkey would use these weapons against Israel -- just arguing that
    Turkey should not be rewarded for its anti-Israel and anti-Cypriate
    behavior.

    But if Berkley is this upset about the sale of three attack
    helicopters, it's only bound to get worse: Turkey has also requested
    to purchase Predator and Reaper drones from the United States, and
    according to reports, the Pentagon isn't opposed to the idea.

    Turkey has lobbied the U.S. to become a base for a fleet of Predator
    drones, most of which are operated from the Creech Air Force Base in
    Nevada, once the United States leaves Iraq at the end of the year.

    Turkey wants to use the drones to fight the P.K.K., the Kurdish
    separatist group that is fighting for its own country on Turkish
    territory.

    The United States and Turkey have collaborated on the P.K.K. in the
    past, with the United States sharing drone footage from northern Iraq,
    where there is a strong Kurdish population and from where, Turkey says,
    most of the group's attacks are coordinated.

    In the past, the U.S. has cited Turkey's strategic military position
    as a reason not to antagonize the country over some of the political
    positions Berkley complains of in her letter, including its occupation
    of part of Cyprus and its disavowal of the Armenian genocide.

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