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Declining French-Turkish Relations Could Have Regional Implications

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  • Declining French-Turkish Relations Could Have Regional Implications

    DECLINING FRENCH-TURKISH RELATIONS COULD HAVE REGIONAL IMPLICATIONS
    Dorian Jones | Istanbul

    Voice of America
    Oct 10 2011

    Relations between Turkey and France appear to have reached a new low
    following the French president's call on Ankara to recognize the mass
    killings of Armenians before and during World War I as genocide.

    Turkey has angrily dismissed the call as no more than cheap
    electioneering. The increasingly worsening bilateral relations could
    have wider regional implications.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Friday strongly rejected
    French President Nicolas Sarkozy's demand that Turkey face up to
    its past.

    He said any state with a colonial history does not have the right to
    give Turkey a lesson on confronting its history. Davutoglu said it
    would be beneficial if France confronts its own past.

    Ankara says the mass killings of Armenians between 1915 and 1923
    were a result of civil war and unrest during World War I and the
    collapse of the Ottoman Empire. But Armenia, along with much of the
    international community, says it was a genocide.

    Sarkozy, during a visit to Armenia last week, indicated that
    legislation might be introduced to criminalize deniers of the genocide.

    The French president also pressed another point of tension with Ankara
    by repeating his opposition to Turkey's bid to join the European
    Union, saying Turkey is not a European country. That opposition has
    contributed to a rapid deterioration in bilateral relations.

    International relations expert Cengiz Aktar of Istanbul's Bahcesehir
    University said, "Top decision-makers like Nicolas Sarkozy was spitting
    on this country. This is not the way you deal with a future partner."

    The Turkish government has dismissed the latest comments by Sarkozy
    as cheap electioneering ahead of next year's French presidential
    elections. But former Turkish diplomat and visiting Carnegie Europe
    scholar Sinan Ulgen said the two leaders' personalities also are
    adding to the diplomatic polarization.

    "Both politicians are more or less of the same ilk. They [are] both
    known to be quite driven personalities, with a very active agenda
    and therefore when they come together, perhaps this clash [of]
    personalities has really harmed the relationship," said Ulgen.

    Ulgen said the bilateral tensions are now manifesting themselves in
    countries of the Arab Spring, further deepening the divide between
    France and Turkey.

    "We've recently seen a rivalry between Turkey and France after the
    onset of the Arab Spring, in particular when Turkey wanted to increase
    its influence, but also economic contacts within the region. France
    seems to be threatened by this Turkish position, given that in some
    of these countries, France has [a] privileged position that is now
    being challenged by Turkey," said Ulgen.

    Last month, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, addressing
    the Arab League in Cairo, made what was widely seen as a thinly veiled
    attack on France.

    He said the Arab countries must be on guard against forces that
    will try to divide them. He stressed that Turkey stands ready to
    help all those in need and is not motivated by the region's wealth -
    a reference to Libya's energy riches.

    Paris and Ankara are jockeying for influence in Tripoli. Last month,
    the French and Turkish leaders made separate visits to the Libyan
    capital on the same day. But former Turkish diplomat Ulgen said
    such competition extends across the region and can be beneficial. He
    admitted, however, there also are risks.

    "This increased competition will certainly help the economic
    development of the region. But, of course, on the political side,
    the fact that Turkey and France don't see eye-to-eye would complicate
    things, especially if the international community as a whole will
    be asked to give their support for these countries for transition
    towards better democracy," said Ulgen. "There, cooperation between
    Turkey and [the] EU in general, but Turkey and France in particular,
    would have been certainly helpful - but that's not likely to happen."

    With the region at a critical and extremely volatile point in history,
    observers warn the bilateral tensions, and especially the increasingly
    bitter and personal rivalry between the leaders of France and Turkey,
    could well become another destabilizing factor.

    http://www.voanews.com/english/news/europe/Concern-That-Ill-Will-Between-Turkey-France-Could-Spread-131476443.html

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