Pro-Israeli American Think Tank Thunders at AKP
By Ali H. Aslan, Washington
Published: Saturday, February 18, 2006
zaman.com
The US administration did not object to HAMAS political bureau chief Khaled Mashal's surprising visit to Ankara, yet one of the most influential pro-Israeli American think tanks, Washington Institute for Near Eastern Policy (WINEP), harshly and abruptly reacted against the Justice and Development Party (AKP), in a report the organization prepared.
The last WINEP report on “policy tracking,” signed by Turkish Research Program Director Dr. Soner Cagaptay, is titled: "HAMAS Visits Ankara: The AKP Shifts Turkey's Role in the Middle East."
Despite ongoing fierce debates in the Turkish press and objections from the secular-minded foreign policy elite, according to the WINEP report, Mashal's visit was made possible with the backing up by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his AKP government. The ruling party damaged its "honest broker" role between the Israelis and the Palestinians.
The report claimed Mashal "will hear nothing in Ankara that he has not heard already from Turkey," and, "Thus the visit serves only to offer legitimacy to Mashal and terrorism without producing any progress toward a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or promoting Turkey's role as a regional mediator."
WINEP viewed this as a sign of divergence in Middle East politics between Turkey and the West. The report relates Mashal's visit to AKP's "strategic depth" policy and notes "this policy makes sense in theory while it fails in practice.” Iran and Syria "exploit" Turkey's attempts to improve "good neighborhood" as a "strategic opportunity." These countries are approaching Turkey only to circumvent an international grip, according to the same document.
The Washingtonian think tank further criticizes the AKP government for inviting “the leader of a terrorist group” to Ankara at a time that Turkey needs all the help it can receive from the West in order to defeat the relentless PKK terror campaign.
"Mashal's visit indicates that far from taking Turkey's strategic interests into account, the AKP's Middle East policy is guided by a cultural desire to help other Muslim governments and even Islamist terrorist groups, regardless of the nature of these governments and groups and irrespective of how their interests may be at odds with Turkey's."
By Ali H. Aslan, Washington
Published: Saturday, February 18, 2006
zaman.com
The US administration did not object to HAMAS political bureau chief Khaled Mashal's surprising visit to Ankara, yet one of the most influential pro-Israeli American think tanks, Washington Institute for Near Eastern Policy (WINEP), harshly and abruptly reacted against the Justice and Development Party (AKP), in a report the organization prepared.
The last WINEP report on “policy tracking,” signed by Turkish Research Program Director Dr. Soner Cagaptay, is titled: "HAMAS Visits Ankara: The AKP Shifts Turkey's Role in the Middle East."
Despite ongoing fierce debates in the Turkish press and objections from the secular-minded foreign policy elite, according to the WINEP report, Mashal's visit was made possible with the backing up by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his AKP government. The ruling party damaged its "honest broker" role between the Israelis and the Palestinians.
The report claimed Mashal "will hear nothing in Ankara that he has not heard already from Turkey," and, "Thus the visit serves only to offer legitimacy to Mashal and terrorism without producing any progress toward a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or promoting Turkey's role as a regional mediator."
WINEP viewed this as a sign of divergence in Middle East politics between Turkey and the West. The report relates Mashal's visit to AKP's "strategic depth" policy and notes "this policy makes sense in theory while it fails in practice.” Iran and Syria "exploit" Turkey's attempts to improve "good neighborhood" as a "strategic opportunity." These countries are approaching Turkey only to circumvent an international grip, according to the same document.
The Washingtonian think tank further criticizes the AKP government for inviting “the leader of a terrorist group” to Ankara at a time that Turkey needs all the help it can receive from the West in order to defeat the relentless PKK terror campaign.
"Mashal's visit indicates that far from taking Turkey's strategic interests into account, the AKP's Middle East policy is guided by a cultural desire to help other Muslim governments and even Islamist terrorist groups, regardless of the nature of these governments and groups and irrespective of how their interests may be at odds with Turkey's."
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