DANISH PM MAY BE APPOINTED NATO SEC. GEN.
PanARMENIAN.Net
23.03.2009 13:25 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Current secretary general Dutchman Jaap de Hoop
Scheffer steps down on July 31. His successor is expected to be named
at an April 3-4 NATO summit.
NATO diplomats and a U.S. source said on Saturday Washington had told
NATO allies it would back Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen
as the next secretary general but getting Turkey to agree would be key.
A Turkish official said the Turkish position could be set in coming
days, but Rasmussen was "tainted" in Turkey’s eyes.
"It may come to the veto," he told Reuters. "We will have to see." NATO
leadership positions are filled by consensus among the 26-nation
military pact.
The official, who did not want to be named due to the sensitivity of
the issue, said Turkey was riled that Demark allowed a pro-Kurdish
militant television station to broadcast from Denmark, and by
comments by Rasmussen in 2003 saying that Turkey would never be a
full EU member.
"Thirdly, the way that Denmark handled the cartoon crisis didn’t go
down well at all in Turkey," he said.
"The cartoon crisis has a larger dimension than just Turkey. At a
time when NATO is going to assume added responsibility in Afghanistan
and Pakistan, having a secretary general with such an objectionable
approach to billions of Muslims is not the right approach to the
Muslim world."
The cartoon row erupted in 2006 after a Danish newspaper cartoon
depicted the Prophet Mohammad with a bomb in his turban were reprinted
across the European media.
Rasmussen refused to apologize for the cartoons, which sparked riots
and attacks on Danish embassies in several Muslim states, but which
Western governments defended in the name of freedom of expression.
The Turkish official said Ankara would prefer to see Canadian Defense
Minister Peter MacKay in the NATO job, noting Canadian political
support for Turkey in the past.
Speaking on the sidelines of the annual Brussels Forum conference,
Mackay refused to rule himself out of the job that has traditionally
gone to a European, although he said he had a lot of work to do
rebuilding the Canadian armed forces.
"Canada, by virtue of being a … founding member of NATO is of course
very interested in all aspects of NATO, including the leadership,
he said.
At the same event, U.S. Congresswoman Ellen Tauscher, seen as due to be
named the new U.S. under secretary for arms control and international
security, called Mackay "a star," but declined to say who Washington
wanted in the job.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress