Turkish Daily News, 96-05-06
From: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs <http://www.mfa.gov.tr>
TURKISH DAILY NEWS 6 May 1996
CONTENTS
[01] Egypt: Strategical pacts in Mideast may invite counter pacts
[02] Yasser Arafat praises Turkey's support for Palestinian cause
[03] Turkey, Egypt explore prospects of technical cooperation in defense
[04] Coalition crisis lingers on
[01] Egypt: Strategical pacts in Mideast may invite counter pacts
Cairo says Israel holds the key to arms race in the region
Amr Moussa visit shows Turkey has to convince Arabs about PKK
By Ilnur Cevik
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa departed from
the Turkish capital convinced that the recent military training
accord between Turkey and Israel will not create a strategical
alliance between the two countries and thus ruin the delicate
balances in the region.
Speaking to some leading newspaper editors at the residence of
the Egyptian ambassador Thursday night, the visiting foreign minister
stressed such an alliance would spoil the delicate balance of
power in the region and ruin the already fragile peace process.
"Turkish leaders explained to us that the agreement reached
between Turkey and Israel is very similar to the accords Ankara
has signed with more than a dozen countries and we are satisfied,"
the foreign minister told the editors.
He said he was not informed about the content of the agreement
but added that the accord was not secret or beyond his reach.
Amr Moussa was informed that the agreement would be submitted
to the Turkish Parliament for approval.
Egyptian sources said they were concerned because a joint military
venture between Turkey and Israel which would especially create
a strategical alliance would be harmful not only to the region
but to the strong bonds that have been forged between Cairo and
Ankara in recent years. "We have a peace and cooperation
agreement with Israel but this is not a military pact and it does
not create a strategical alliance," Amr Moussa told the editors.
"A strategical pact would only invite counter reaction and
would further create non-confidence in the region," he warned.
Egyptian officials said Egypt as a friendly country to Turkey
did not create a fuss over reports that Ankara had made a military
deal with Israel, and had preferred to send its foreign minister
to the Turkish capital to get an on-the-spot picture of the real
situation. "President Suleyman Demirel and Foreign Minister
Emre Gonensay assured us that there is no strategical link between
the two countries and we are satisfied," Amr Moussa said.
The Egyptian foreign minister also stressed that while his country
did not approve of the Iranian policy of exporting its revolution
abroad, it also did not feel that arguments that Iran should not
acquire nuclear arms were valid. "Israel, which has refused
to sign the nuclear nonproliferation treaty, is allowed to have
nuclear arms and other countries in the region are not. This is
not logical. If we do not want Iran to acquire nuclear arms then
Israel should also give up its nuclear arsenal and thus put an
end to the arms race. If not, an arms race is inevitable,"
Amr Moussa declared.
The Turkish Daily News was told the Egyptians also feel very
strongly about the territorial integrity of Iraq. "We are
against any moves that will divide Iraq," the foreign minister
said.
Egyptian officials privately told the TDN they do not want Iraq
split into three parts, with northern Iraq under Kurdish rule,
central Iraq controlled by Saddam Hussein, and southern Iraq becoming
a Shiite entity.
Amr Moussa said Egypt had voiced its concerns to the Western
powers on several occasions. He said Washington told Cairo the
recent U.S. move to patrol the skies of southern Iraq with its
fighter planes based in Jordan was "temporary" and the
planes would be withdrawn.
"The people of Iraq are suffering. They do not have food
or medicines. The international community has a duty to help them
and in this regard we are also seeking help from Turkey,"
Amr Moussa said.
The Egyptian foreign minister also said his country condemns
every terrorist action levelled against Turkey. "We cannot
tolerate actions against Turkish society. If this comes from the
PKK we also condemn this action."
Egyptian officials accompanying Amr Moussa said they would raise
Ankara's concerns about the PKK and the water issue with the Syrian
administration. "Talking about your problems offers the best
solution. The Syrians will be informed about Turkey's deep concerns,"
the officials said.
However, the officials stressed that Egypt needed more information
about the PKK before it condemned it. He hinted that Turkey should
also do some explaining to the Arab countries about the PKK as
it does to the Western countries. "If you lobby with the
United States about the PKK you should do the same with Egypt,"
a ranking Egyptian official told the TDN.
Amr Moussa said the rise of extremism in the Middle East went
hand in hand with the injustices done to the Palestinians. "You
cannot have a solution in the Middle East as long as the Palestinians
do not have their own state," Amr Moussa said.
[02] Yasser Arafat praises Turkey's support for Palestinian cause
Caution: Palestinian president refrains from criticizing
Ankara's military cooperation accord with Israel
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, taking a different
position from other Arab countries, has refrained from any direct
criticism of Turkey for its recent military accord with Israel
and has instead praised Ankara for its unwavering support to date
for the Palestinian cause.
Arafat was talking on Thursday at a press conference he held
at the U.N. headquarters in New York after a working lunch with
U.N. Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali.
Questioned about a recent agreement permitting Israeli air force
pilots to train in Turkish airspace, he was quoted by Reuters
as saying: "The most important thing to me is that there
are good and strong relations between Turkey and the Palestinians.
Turkey supports the demands of the Palestinian people and the...
establishment of comprehensive and lasting peace in the Middle
East."
Arafat also referred to the visit to Gaza by Turkish President
Suleyman Demirel and said it must not be forgotten that this was
a successful visit, the Anatolia news agency,also reporting on
the press conference, said on Thursday.
The military cooperation accord Turkey signed with Israel in
February has come under fire from the Arab League, individual
Arab countries and Iran for "serious risking the disruption
of regional balances."
Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa, whose country spoke out
against the accord, was told in Ankara on Thursday that the arrangement
between Turkey and Israel did not target any country in specific
and could not be considered a step at forming a "strategic
alliance."
[03] Turkey, Egypt explore prospects of technical cooperation in defense
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Turkey and Egypt explored on Friday the prospects
of technical cooperation in the field of defense during the two-day
working visit of Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa.
Egypt, whose concern over the signing of a Turco-Israeli military
training accord, appeared eager to "activate" the defense
technical cooperation accord, which had been signed in the early
1990s.
Moussa, in a press conference before his departure, signalled
the Egyptian eagerness for the deal.
According to diplomats from both sides, the accord is as important
as the Turco-Israeli deal, which Ankara assured was a "largely
routine one" that Turkey signed with many other countries.
The prospects of activating the accord was discussed by Moussa
and Turkish Defense Minister Oltan Sungurlu. "It is important
that your visit took place after the clouds of anger have dissolved,"
Sungurlu said, in a thinly-veiled reference to the Arab wrath
against the Turco-Israeli deal.
Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz, who also received Moussa, said that
Turkey and Egypt were two countries that were the pillars of stability
in the Middle East.
[04] Coalition crisis lingers on
Mistrust between coalition partners lingers in the wake of ANAP
support for the anti-Ciller RP motion for a parliamentary investigation
of TEDAS. Next week the Parliament will vote on another motion
of this kind, this time involving alleged irregularities in the
TOFAS sale. ANAP is expected to turn its back on its coalition
partner on that issue too. The TOFAS vote will determine the fate
of the DYP-ANAP coalition government
By Kemal Balci
TDN Parliament Bureau
ANKARA- The True Path Party (DYP)-Motherland Party (ANAP)
coalition government has been plagued by a confidence crisis since
April 24 when some ANAP deputies voted in favor of a Welfare Party
(RP) motion calling for a parliamentary inquiry into alleged irregularities
committed in the awarding of electricity contracts under DYP leader
Tansu Ciller's prime ministry.
The confidence crisis is turning into a fully-fledged government
crisis. The second motion introduced against Ciller will be put
to a vote in the Parliament on May 9. If the ANAP deputies turn
their back on their coalition partner in that vote too, the coalition
may collapse.
DYP officials, still simmering with resentment over the fact that
some ANAP deputies voted against their leader Ciller on the Turkish
Electricity Distribution Company (TEDAS) issue, have a tendency
to cause problems for ANAP by delaying government action. First,
the DYP wing of the coalition government boycotted government
meetings. Then, to create problems for ANAP leader Mesut Yilmaz,
they refused to sign any government decrees. DYP leader Tansu
Ciller publicly complained that the government had done nothing
since Mesut Yilmaz became the "rotating prime minister"
two months ago, and that Mesut Yilmaz had not performed successfully.
The DYP side not only boycotted government meetings but also prevented
the convening of the Central Bank General Assembly meeting last
week. State Minister Yaman Toruner, who is a member of the DYP,
tried to attend the meeting as the Treasury representative. On
the agenda was a discussion of the bank accounts of the period
during which Toruner himself had been the Central Bank governor.
When Prime MInister Yilmaz got wind of Toruner's attempt, he sent
written orders which said that State Minister Rusdu Saracoglu
of the ANAP, another ex-Central Bank governor, was authorized
to represent the Treasury at the meeting. Following the incidents
which prevented the convening of the Central Bank General Assembly,
Toruner had a quarrel with Prime Minister Yilmaz, reportedly telling
him, "I will not take orders from you."
In the face of the "obstructionist" attitude of his
coalition partner, Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz decided to adopt
new tactics. After the RP motion on TEDAS was adopted by the Parliament,
Yilmaz did not even phone Ciller. And he did not invite State
Minister Yaman Toruner to a recent "summit meeting"
where key economic decisions were made. Angered by that development,
Toruner boycotted the government meeting which discussed the May
Day incidents in Istanbul.
During a telephone conversation he had with Ciller on Wednesday,
Yilmaz said he would not change his basic stance regarding the
motions introduced against Ciller, which he recently summed up
as: "The ANAP deputies are free to vote in any direction
according to their own consciences."
Yilmaz has also decided to stage a press conference next Monday
to explain to the general public his government's performance
in the past two months. He has already announced that the ANAP-DYP
partnership was continuing in line with the coalition protocol,
and that ANAP would not be the side which ends the coalition government,
unless faced "with an act contrary to the coalition protocol."
Meanwhile, desperate not to be seen as the person who ended the
coalition because of a motion introduced against her, Tansu Ciller
decided not to pull the DYP from the coalition at least until
May 9 when another motion on alleged irregularities will be debated
and put to a vote. She will make a final decision on May 9 if
she fails to get from her coalition partner the support she expects.
That motion involves alleged irregularities in the sale of the
state-owned shares in TOFAS car company.
Though it continues to exist legally, the DYP-ANAP coalition is
not functioning anymore. Whether it will be brought to an end
legally too will depend on the DYP circles' capacity to endure
the anti-Ciller motions being introduced one after another.
Meanwhile, there are reports indicating that ANAP officials are
having "secret" talks with the Welfare Party with a
view to reviving the coalition talks between the two parties if
the current DYP-ANAP coalition collapses.
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