Thursday, May 20, 2010

Turkey, and the United States, Going Forward


JINSA Report
#: 988
18 May '10

(One thought about Turkey. The second thought is about the United States/Israel.)

Turkey and Brazil announced they have "brokered" a "deal" to bring some percentage of Iranian LEU (Low Enriched Uranium) to Turkey. The "deal" is a fraud-without knowing how much uranium Iran has, you cannot know how much it "lent" to Turkey and how much remains in its weapons program. And knowing that Iran has lied about every single stage of its nuclear program, we will assume it is lying about this stage as well.

So much for Iran.

But there is something compelling about a country that looks at its position, determines its interests, and changes course to achieve new objectives. Turkey has done that.

Let us be clear: we don't have to like the direction or the choices; we don't have to support them; and we don't think the United States should treat Turkey as if it hadn't made those choices. That was one reason we wrote-and strongly believe-that the Congress of the United States is the wrong place to parse and judge someone else's history. Our Armenian friends entirely misunderstood-we were neither denying nor denigrating their history. But Congress has to be about the present and, more important, about the future. Our ongoing irritation with our Congress and our Administration is that they find it easier to pronounce on a past for which they are not responsible than to deal with present circumstances.

For the moment, it may be easier but it is shortsighted in the extreme.

After decades of resolutely secular, pro-Western economic and security policy, during which it was resolutely rejected by Europe, the Turkish government, specifically the AKP, surveyed the landscape in the absence of the Soviet Union and the apparent decline of the United States and decided to stop banging its head against a closed European door. Turkey, in their view, didn't have to be the stepchild of Europe; it has a strong military, a good economy in regional terms and historic interests.

(Read full report)

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