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Turkey Starts To Love Its Neighbours

TURKEY STARTS TO LOVE ITS NEIGHBOURS
Simon Tisdall

guardian.co.uk
Tuesday 12 January 2010 20.00 GMT

The rapprochement policies of Ahmet Davutoglu are making a splash in
the region, though Israel relations remain prickly

Ahmet Davutoglu has made quite a splash since his appointment last
year as Turkey’s foreign minister. Formerly chief foreign policy
adviser to prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the dapper professor
dubbed the "Turkish Kissinger" has energetically pursued the ruling
AKP party’s trademark policy of "zero problems with neighbours",
a policy he first articulated in a 2001 book, Strategic Depth.

Given the torrid history of Ottoman involvement in the Balkans,
southern Caucasus and the Arab lands, good-neighbourly relations are
not a given for modern Turkey. But in the past year, Davutoglu has led
a drive to strengthen ties to Iraq’s new government, mend fences with
Syria (with which Turkey nearly went to war ten years ago), and forge
an as yet incomplete rapprochement with Armenia, another ancient foe.

Behind this drive lies the belief that Turkey, nearly a century
after the Ottoman empire imploded, is destined once again to become
a regional power with global influence. For Davutoglu, this ambition
entails a "comprehensive" approach embracing enhanced economic,
cultural and social ties as well as political and security relations.

Hence Turkey’s multiplying regional trade and energy deals, not least
with Russia, and its lifting of visa requirements for citizens of
Syria, Lebanon, Romania and several other countries.

Not everyone wants to be friends. Interviewed in London yesterday
ahead of a meeting with foreign secretary David Miliband, Davutoglu
spoke of three complex challenges where progress in 2010 remains
problematic. The first is Cyprus, where long-running, UN-brokered
talks on reunification are inching towards some sort of denouement.

Analysts suggest that if a deal is not done by April, when presidential
elections are due in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, all
bets are off.

"We have reached an historic moment in the negotiations. That’s one
reason for coming to London now," Davutoglu said, noting Britain’s
role as a guarantor of any settlement. The Turkish Cypriot side had
introduced a promising new package last week, he said, including a
so-called "cross voting" scheme that would give the two communities
a quota in each other’s elections.

Although the initial Greek Cypriot reaction was to reject the package,
Davutoglu insisted that was not the end of the matter. "We know first
of all the Greek Cypriots always say ‘No!’ Then they say ‘No-o-o’.

Then they say ‘No-maybe’ … I am optimistic. We need an intensified
international effort by the EU, by the UN, by both sides, and by Greece
and Turkey and Britain as guarantors, like we had in 2004." He had
personally contacted US secretary of state Hillary Clinton and the
UN secretary-general to generate momentum for a deal, he said.

Meanwhile, the Turkish and Greek Cypriot presidents had embarked on
six day-long negotiating sessions to try and find a way through.

Turning to Iran, a particular British preoccupation, Davutoglu said
his advice to Miliband, if asked, would be to eschew more public
name-calling and pursue discreet negotiations on the nuclear issue
and other matters of concern. He said Turkey was at pains to maintain
a friendly relationship with its Persian neighbour.

"The situation in Iran is not good, is not compatible with our vision,"
Davutoglu said. "We don’t want nuclear proliferation in the region,
we don’t want nuclear weapons in Iran or Israel or anywhere.

Second, every country has the right to pursue nuclear power for
peaceful purposes. Third, we also don’t want more sanctions [on Iran].

Sanctions hurt ordinary people and neighbouring countries.

"We don’t forget the very bad experience in Iraq. We would advise
intensified negotiations through diplomacy. An absence of mutual
trust is the problem." If asked, Turkey would be happy to facilitate
a constructive dialogue with Iran, he said.

Davutoglu reserved his sharpest words for Israel, with which Turkey,
unusually, has enjoyed cordial relations in the past but with which
Erdogan fell out noisily after last year’s attack on Gaza. Verbal
hostilities resumed this week after the Turkish prime minister called
Israel a threat to peace and accused it of acting disproportionately.

Israel hit back angrily, in effect telling Erdogan to mind his own
business.

"When Israel follows a policy of peace, we have good relations,"
Davutoglu said. Before Gaza, Turkey had mediated indirect talks
between Syria and Israel and made "remarkable" progress, he said. But
the Israeli incursion had scuppered the talks. "That attack changed
many things … It created a very unstable situation in the region"
that even Barack Obama had been unable to overcome. Since then, there
had been further "provocations" such as additional Jewish settlement
building in east Jerusalem.

"If Israel wants peace, they must learn that others have rights
that must be respected," he said. Davutoglu pauses and smiles. But
it’s clear that when it comes to Israel’s treatment of the
Palestinians, there are limits to even his highly developed sense
of good-neighbourliness.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS
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