TURKEY - May 7 - Ankara Hits Back At Criticism From US.
Responding to recent criticism by US Deputy Defence Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz, who suggested that Ankara made a mistake by not opening its
doors to the US military during the Iraq war, PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan
says: "Turkey, from the very beginning, never made any mistakes,
and has taken all the necessary steps in all sincerity".
(Wolfowitz, in an interview broadcast on May 6 on CNN-Turk, strongly
criticised Ankara for not joining the US administration's campaign
to topple Saddam Hussein. Just before the US bombing began, the
Parliament rejected Pentagon requests to base troops in the country as
part of a northern offensive on Iraq. Wolfowitz said: "Let's
have a Turkey that steps up and says: 'We made a mistake. We should
have known how bad things were in Iraq, but we know now. Let's
figure out how we can be as helpful as possible to the Americans'.
I'd like to see a different sort of attitude than I have yet
detected". Wolfowitz singled out the Turkish military for
criticism, saying it had lacked leadership at a critical foreign policy
moment. He said: "I think for whatever reason, they did not play
the strong leadership role that we would have expected". Wolfowitz
suggested that relations between the US and Ankara would improve if the
latter followed Washington's line in its relations with Iran and
Syria). Justice Minister Cemil Cicek said Ankara's relationship
with the US ought to be viewed over the last 50 years and not just in
relation to one disagreement. He said, "many Turkish citizens died
due to the importance we attributed to the relations and to the
friendship with the US", noting that 400 Turks died in the Korean
War while fighting on the side of the US. (Ankara allowed the US to use
its airspace after the war in Iraq began but the parliamentary vote in
Ankara frustrated US officials and sent US military planners back to the
drawing board).
COPYRIGHT 2003 Input Solutions
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
|
Reader Opinion