Category: America

  • US training Syrian rebels in Turkey

    US training Syrian rebels in Turkey

    Press TV – December 9, 2011

    A former employee with the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has said that American and NATO forces are training Syrian rebels in southeastern Turkish city of Hakkari.

    Sibel Edmonds also said that she had received information from Turkish and US sources indicating that training Syrian opposition forces, led by defected Syrian colonel Riad al-Assad, had started in May, the Turkish daily Milliyet reported.

    Edmonds further added that the US is involved in smuggling arms into Syria from Incirlik military base in Turkey in addition to providing financial support for Syrian rebels.

    Syria has been experiencing a deadly unrest ever since mid-March, with demonstrations being held both against and in support of President Bashar al-Assad’s government.

    Confessions by a number of Syrian rebels about foreign-sponsored plans to carry out armed operations and killing ordinary people as well as security forces prove that recent developments in the country are part of an attempt to incite a revolt in the strategic country neighboring the Israeli regime, aiming to overthrow the current government and replace it with a US-backed regime.

    The Western-backed opposition in Syria accuses security forces of a bloody crackdown on protests. But Damascus has dismissed the accusation, arguing that the security forces have been given clear instructions not to harm civilians.

    Damascus blames the violence on foreign-sponsored terrorist groups, with the Syrian state TV broadcasting reports showing seized weapons caches and confessions by terrorists describing how they obtained arms from foreign sources.

    PM/JG/MA

    via ‘US training Syrian rebels in Turkey’.

  • A Reality Check On US-Turkish Relations

    A Reality Check On US-Turkish Relations

    A Reality Check On US-Turkish Relations

    Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 8 Issue: 223
    December 8, 2011
    By: Saban Kardas
    US Vice President, Joe Biden, paid a working visit to Turkey, which provided an opportunity for a reality check of the current condition of US-Turkish bilateral relations. In addition to meeting with Turkish leaders, Biden attended the Global Entrepreneurship summit, which was developed as a new platform by the Obama administration to foster dialogue and cooperation with the Muslim world. Throughout his public appearances, Biden praised Turkey’s economic and political achievements, highlighting its potential to serve as a model for other nations.

    Beyond these words of praise, his contacts largely served to reiterate the growing consensus between the two countries, rather than breaking new ground on any major issue. While seeking to mobilize Ankara’s support for key US strategic interests in the Middle East, Biden at the same time worked to assure his Turkish counterparts about the continuation of US strategic involvement in ensuring regional stability. In charge of the Obama administration’s Iraq portfolio, Biden’s visit to Ankara was preceded by his earlier stopover in Iraq. In many ways, the US experience in Iraq was also a major turning point for Turkish-American relations. Following the disagreements caused by the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, bilateral relations cooled, resulting in serious questioning on both sides concerning the future of the alliance that tied both nations together. Over time, the two countries adjusted their policies in Iraq, as they soon realized that they have major stakes in the stabilization of this country. Their coordinated action in Iraq has been an important development that helped maintain strategic cooperation in recent years. In an environment where the region is in flux in the wake of the Arab Spring and the US military withdrawal is imminent, however, Turkish concerns over the future of Iraq have become even more worrisome. In that regard, Biden largely worked to convey the message to Turkish leaders that the United States will remain committed to that country after the military withdrawal.

    Obviously, another issue of shared concern is the evolving situation in Syria, which runs the risk of destabilizing the region. Despite its initial argument for a controlled transition under Assad’s watch, Turkey has increasingly criticized the Syrian government forces’ brutal crackdown against the opposition and emerged on the frontline of the international efforts to prevent further killing of civilians. As Turkey recently announced a new round of sanctions against the Assad regime in similar fashion with Western powers, the visit provided an opportunity for exchanging information and discussing ways to further coordinate policy on Syria. However, this convergence is putting the Turkish government in a risky situation as Turkey moves to initiate economic sanctions, which might hurt certain constituents and especially local economy. Therefore, although Turkey has followed a policy in tune with the Western and US position, it has to tread a fine line to avoid being seen as too closely aligned with the United States. Most opposition parties and nationalist circles in Turkey view the government as implementing a program in Syria imposed upon it by the United States and interpret Biden’s visit as Ankara’s submission to Washington in its regional policies (Yenicag, December 4).

    Iran was another major item on Biden’s agenda. Biden reportedly sought to convey the message that the US policy of isolating Tehran through coercive measures was effective and they needed to be pursued vigilantly (Hurriyet, December 3). Yet another source of friction in the bilateral relationship once, the recent change in Turkey’s policy on Iran has pulled Ankara and Washington together, also leading to a series of threatening statements coming from Tehran. Granted, Turkey remains reluctant to impose new sanctions against Iran, in an effort to avoid putting further strain on its relations with Iran.

    In return for Ankara’s more cooperative position on issues of interest to the United States, Washington has been more forthcoming in its support for Turkey’s fight against the terrorist campaign by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has seen escalation in recent years. Biden reiterated recent steps undertaken by the United States, including the stationing of Predator drones in Incirlik to increase Turkey’s information gathering capacity, and selling three Super Cobra helicopters to Turkey. Moreover, Turkish President Abdullah Gul seemed content with Biden’s statements that even after the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq, Turkey would continue to receive support from not only the United States, but also Iraqi groups in its fight against the PKK , December 2). Though such statements obviously are important signs of commitment from a symbolic and political point of view, the level of military contribution is unlikely to bolster Turkey’s operational ability against the PKK and change the situation on the ground decisively in favor of the Turkish army.

    Granted, the accelerating pace of the US-Turkey security partnership has been an issue of concern in terms of the ongoing process of domestic transformation inside Turkey. Some commentators who have grown critical of the AK Party government’s democratic credentials and its commitment to fundamental rights have been expecting the West and the United States to act as a restraint against the “authoritarian tendencies” of the government. Troubled by the new realignment between Ankara and Washington, they have expressed concern that the US might turn a blind eye to the government’s conduct in domestic politics. One commentator argues that “the Turkish government takes it as carte blanche to be careless about political freedoms, to limit free speech and to crush the Kurdish opposition in return of its ‘great’ role in regional politics” (Hurriyet Daily News, November 15).

    Partly in an effort to allay such concerns, US delegations visiting Turkey and US diplomats based in Ankara often emphasize the importance of respecting basic rights. Maintaining the same tradition, Biden highlighted the need for a free political climate, and urged Turkey to maintain the momentum for rewriting a more civilian and democratic constitution (Anadolu Ajansi, December 4). It remains to be seen if such statements will be followed by deeds in the coming months and whether the US will observe the AK Party’s domestic conduct in a manner to satisfy its critics.

    https://jamestown.org/program/a-reality-check-on-us-turkish-relations/
  • U.S. Again Tells Turkey To Honor Armenia Accords

    U.S. Again Tells Turkey To Honor Armenia Accords

    U.S. Vice President Joe Biden pressed Turkey to unconditionally ratify its Western-backed normalization agreements with Armenia “in the months ahead” during a visit to Ankara and Istanbul that ended at the weekend.

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    Turkish President Abdullah Gul (left) receives U.S. Vice President Joe Biden at the Presidential Palace in Ankara on December 2.

    A senior official from the administration of President Barack Obama said the fate of the two Turkish-Armenian protocols signed in 2009 was on the agenda of Biden’s talks with Turkish President Abdullah Gul, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and parliament speaker Cemil Cicek.

    The official said that during a breakfast meeting with Cicek on December 2, Biden “applauded the fact that the protocols for normalization with Armenia were back on the agenda of the [Turkish] parliament.”

    “And he expressed his hope that the parliament will be able to act on those protocols in the months ahead,” the official told U.S. journalists traveling with Biden.

    The U.S. vice president met Gul later on December 2 before traveling to Istanbul for separate talks with Erdogan held on December 4.

    “On Armenia, he said to the prime minister what he had raised with President Gul, as well — the hope that now that the protocols for normalization were back on the agenda of the parliament, that Turkey would be able to move on those protocols in the months ahead,” the Obama administration official said.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton conveyed a similar message to the Turkish government when she visited Istanbul in July.

    However, the Turkish leaders and Erdogan in particular have repeatedly made clear that the protocols will not be ratified by Turkey’s parliament before a breakthrough in international efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Armenia rejects this precondition. President Serzh Sarkisian threatened earlier this year to withdraw Yerevan’s signature from the accord if the Turks stick to the Karabakh linkage.

    According to the Istanbul-based “Hurriyet Daily News,” Biden told Gul that Ankara should “speed up the normalization process with Armenia” if it wants the Obama administration to block further resolutions in the U.S. Congress recognizing the 1915 mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    This warning attributed to Biden could be seized upon by Armenian critics of the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement, who say it has helped Ankara to thwart a broader international recognition of the Armenian genocide.

    They were already incensed when Biden claimed last year that Sarkisian himself had asked the White House not to use the word genocide with regard to the killing of some 1.5 million Ottoman Armenians while Turkish-Armenian negotiations are in progress. Both official Yerevan and the U.S. Embassy in Armenia denied that claim, which was videotaped by an Armenian-American activist and available on YouTube.com.

    Biden strongly supported Armenian genocide resolutions debated by Congress when he was a member of the U.S. Senate.

    compiled from agency reports

    via U.S. Again Tells Turkey To Honor Armenia Accords.

  • Turkey’s changing regional role…

    Turkey’s changing regional role…

    IN one year, US-Turkey relations have moved from tension to co-operation. This was the focus of remarks by a Turkish journalist at the opening session at the second convention of the Turkic American Alliance. He asked: “What happened to account for this change and where will it lead us?”

    He recalled that when he appeared at the group’s founding conference in 2010, relations were at an all-time low. Turkey had broken with Israel over its blockade of Gaza and assault on the Gaza-bound flotilla. And the US was not happy with Turkey’s efforts to negotiate a compromise that might ease global concerns with Iran’s nuclear programme. The US and Congress had been critical of Turkish “meddling” and new “anti-Israel” bent.

    Now President Obama and Prime Minister Erdogan speak often and there appears to be co-operation in dealing with regional issues from Syria to the imminent departure of US forces from Iraq.

    What happened to account for this change? It was the “Arab Spring”, and the difficulties the US has had finding its way through the maze created by the region’s new political realities. All this has occurred at a difficult time for the US. Its ability to manoeuvre in this changing environment has been hampered by several factors. First and foremost is the damage done by the war in Iraq which created resentment in the Arab world, tarnished the US image, and emboldened and empowered Iran.

    Then, the failure of the Bush administration to halt Israel’s four bloody wars against Lebanon and the Palestinians, which deepened Arab anger.

    Finally, despite Obama’s intention to change direction, Israeli intransigence and the partisan split in Washington have frustrated his efforts. As a result, at the onset of the Arab Spring, the US policy in the Middle East was adrift. One by one allies had fallen or were at risk, and Washington found itself in a bind.

    The US’ “unshakable” bond with Israel had “taken it out of the game”, reducing its ability to play a meaningful regional role. It was at this point that Syria exploded. Like the US, Turkey was caught off-guard by the Arab Spring. They meandered in response to developments in Egypt and Libya. But with their southern neighbour boiling over, Turkey announced sanctions.

    The US appears to be deferring to Turkey as an ally in handling Syria for one important reason. As a result of its support for Palestinians, Turkey has earned “street cred” in the Arab world, while the US has none. Turkey can meet the Arab League as a partner, the US cannot, and Turkey can house and endorse the Syrian opposition in a way that the US cannot.

    But Turkey cannot overplay its hand in Syria. Turkey’s standing is high in the Arab region, but that is not an invitation for it to reassert a new “Ottomanism”. Turkey may be but a “placeholder. When Arabs are asked who is playing a leadership role, they respond “Turkey”. But when asked who they want to lead, they say “Egypt”.

    Turkey must be careful not to allow either hubris or frustration or external pressure to force it to get dragged into a Syrian quagmire. Some Syrian oppositionists may want Turkey to militarily intervene.

    The wiser course would be for Turkey to resist pressures and continue to work in concert with the League to insist that the Syrian regime enter into negotiations leading to broad reform and an orderly transfer of power.

    Sanctions and other forms of pressure to weaken the regime make sense, though they will take time to work. But Turkey should avoid making the mistake in Syria that the US made in Iraq.

    via Gulf Daily News » News Details » Comment.

  • Biden’s Day Out in Istanbul

    Biden’s Day Out in Istanbul

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    VP strolls through the cobblestone streets of Istanbul’s Samatya Square neighborhood, gets a “good price” at the fish market.

    Read the pool report below.

    VPOTUS neighborhood visit

    On a gorgeous sunny Sunday, VP Biden left the Hilton Hotel for a walkabout in an Istanbul neighborhood (some basic details from WH below). En route, his motorcade rolled along the coast of the Sea of Marmara, with the minarets of the Blue Mosque and the Hagia Sophia looming on the hill above.

    The VP, wearing a blue blazer, open-neck shirt and aviator shades, strolled up a cobblestone street lined with fish stalls. He stopped at one, out of earshot of the pool.

    As the VP resumed his amble, another fish-monger called out, saying he’d give him a good price. Biden, who was by now clutching a plastic bag, said, “I already got a good price.”

    VP shook hands and waved at passersby, including some peering down from their windows. He stopped again to greet a young boy. “Come visit me in the White House,” he said.

    The boy’s father replied, “But how are we going to get there?”

    A few steps later, he stopped at a fruit stand, flashed a small wad of lira, and bought oranges, tangerines, and other fruit. He tossed a tangerine to the same boy he had greeted earlier; the boy made a perfect catch and smiled with delight.

    After that, the VP stopped by a pastrami and honey market.

    Justin Fishel of Fox engaged the VP in a brief chat, asking him how his day was going.

    “You can tell I’m eating whatever I can eat,” Biden replied.

    Asked what he was buying, the VP said, “I got some sweets, I got some fruit, I got some olives, some cheese, and the ambassador ate all the fish.”

    That was a reference to US Ambassador Frank Ricciardone, who had been busily noshing as he walked.

    Was the VP taking anything back for the wife?

    “Well, knowing Franny and the plane and you on it, you probably will eat it all on the way back,” he said (Fran Person is his body man)

    “Only if you share,” Justin shot back.

    “I’m happy,” Biden said. “I’m gonna share.

    The VP then headed into the Develi restaurant, where he is lunching privately with Greek religious leaders, including Father Alex Karloutsos from New York and Andy Manatos, a prominent Greek-American.

    Pool is holding on another floor of the same restaurant.

    WH details on neighborhood:

    The Vice President will visit Samatya Square, a traditional Istanbul neighborhood. Samatya is in the Fatih district and represents a “mosaic of life” in Istanbul, having been home to Turks and various minority groups for centuries. The neighborhood includes many traditional small local vendors: grocery shop, butcher, fish stand, bread maker and more.

    via The Page by Mark Halperin | Biden’s Day Out in Istanbul.

  • In Turkey, Biden touts political freedoms

    In Turkey, Biden touts political freedoms

    In Turkey, Biden touts political freedoms

    Originally published: December 3, 2011 6:45 AM

    Updated: December 3, 2011 1:36 PM

    By The Associated Press CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA (Associated Press)

    Quick ReadTurkey: Biden tells entrepreneurs that democracy spurs economic innovation

    biden

    Photo credit: AP | In this photo provided by the Turkish Presidency Press Office, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, right, and Turkish President Abdullah Gul pose for photographers during their meeting in Ankara, Turkey, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011. Biden urged Turkey to impose new sanctions against Iran and praised Ankara for its role in pressuring Syria to stop its bloody crackdown on protesters. (AP Photo/Turkish Presidency Press Office, Murat Cetinmuhurdar) EDITORIAL USE ONLY

    Photos

    (AP) — A free political climate is essential to economic innovation, and countries that try to censor the Internet are pursuing a “dead end,” U.S. Vice President Joe Biden told a group of young entrepreneurs gathered in Istanbul on Saturday.

    The international forum, which drew hundreds of attendees, followed up on a meeting in Washington last year aimed at deepening ties between the United…

    via In Turkey, Biden touts political freedoms.