Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Silence Before The Storm In Turkish-US Relations?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Silence Before The Storm In Turkish-US Relations?

    SILENCE BEFORE THE STORM IN TURKISH-US RELATIONS?

    Hurriyet Daily news, Turkey
    Feb 17 2015

    Whenever you ask diplomatic sources about U.S.-Turkey relations, the
    kind of answer you get is usually about the "absence of any problems."

    Relations between Turkey and the United States seem to work well at
    the bureaucratic level on matters of daily needs between diplomats,
    intelligence officers and soldiers. The fact that the Commander of
    the Turkish Land Forces General Hulusi Akar received a Legion of
    Merit medal from the U.S. Department of Defense is an indication of
    close cooperation in action.

    However, it is difficult to say the same at the political level
    nowadays. For example, cooperation at the bureaucratic level did
    not help Turkey's European Union Affairs Minister Volkan Bozkır,
    a former diplomat himself, get political appointments suitable for
    his position when he was in Washington DC earlier this month.

    The last telephone call made public between Turkish President
    Tayyip Erdogan and U.S. President Barack Obama was on Oct. 18
    (Oct. 19 in Turkish time), 2014. That conversation was mostly about
    the predominantly Kurdish-populated Syrian border town of Kobane,
    which was at the time under attack by the Islamic State of Iraq and
    the Levant (ISIL). Obama was telling Erdogan about the U.S. air drop
    that was due to start the next morning in support of the Kurdish
    fighters resisting against the ISIL advance.

    With the help of that air drop and with Turkey's opening of its
    territory for the passage of fighters from Iraq's Kurdistan Regional
    Government (KRG) to Kobane, the ISIL attack was beaten back.

    But since that call there have been a number of rows between the
    Erdogan and Obama administrations, usually triggered by a remark from
    Erdogan himself, and usually on matters related to Western hypocrisy
    about Bashar al-Assad's rule in Syria, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi's rule in
    Egypt, Israel, or Islamophobia. The most recent example was Erdogan's
    slamming of Obama for not reacting to the recent killing of three
    Muslim students in North Carolina. "If you don't, you won't have
    the right to criticize ISIL," he said. Obama condemned the killings
    the next day, but in the meantime the State Department had issued a
    strongly worded statement against Erdogan's words.

    When you scratch the surface a little, you find "long-term stress"
    infecting Turkish-U.S. relations. By that expression, what is meant
    is a close cooperation between the two that started with Turkey's
    entrance to NATO in 1952.

    The reason for this stress is not only about Syria, Egypt, Israel,
    and the fight against terrorism exercised by certain radical Islamist
    groups - but rather Russia. Nobody talks on-the-record about it,
    but Turkey's stance regarding its northern neighbor on the Ukraine
    crisis seems to be a source of problems.

    Relations between the Erdogan and Obama administrations are also
    heading to another test on the Armenian issue in April. There is
    almost no lobby left in Washington DC to work on Turkey's behalf on
    the issue - not even an Arab lobby, let alone a Jewish one.

    As you can read in Burak Bekdil's piece in the Hurriyet Daily News
    today, the Turkish government has postponed its decision on a strategic
    anti-missile system until after April 24, a critical date for Armenian
    lobbying moves in the U.S. Congress.

    And still no high level political link can be observed between Turkey
    and the U.S. Is this a silence before a storm in relations? Or is it
    worse, a silence before an even deeper silence?

    February/17/2015

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/silence-before-the-storm-in-turkish-us-relations.aspx?pageID=238&nid=78445&NewsCatID=409




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X