Turkish Daily News, 96-05-08
From: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs <http://www.mfa.gov.tr>
TURKISH DAILY NEWS 8 May 1996
CONTENTS
[01] Motherpath is considered 'finished'
[02] While hope fades on government, no immediate end is apparent
[03] Sungurlu: Turkey's role is crucial to European security
[04] Ambassador Unan blasts allegations of Turkish finger in Chechen
war
[05] US endorses Turkish views on Europe and Syria/PKK
[06] Ankara rules out any revision on Montreux accord
[07] Yilmaz invites foreign textile investment
[01] Motherpath is considered 'finished'
Plans afoot to trap rival parties' leaders
By Kemal Balci
TDN Parliament Bureau
ANKARA- The two-month-old Motherpath coalition seems to
be in a process of dissolution. At the head offices of the three
leading parties, leaders are busy working on ways of tripping
one another up. Convinced that the coalition cannot last any longer,
each is making plans for the post-Motherpath era. It is not only
the coalition partners that are trying to undermine each other's
leaders, Welfare Party (RP) staffers are also pondering how to
get in on the act.
This will obviously be a lengthy war of attrition. Among the three
leaders, True Path Party (DYP) Chairwomen Tansu Ciller seems to
be in the most dire straights. Ciller has seen that she can only
fight a "limited, low-intensity war" against Prime Minister
Mesut Yilmaz. She now finds herself in a troubling position.
DYP tactics
There is no way Ciller could retaliate by accusing Yilmaz of irregularities
and tabling similar motions against him. This is because Yilmaz
heads the coalition government of which the DYP is a partner.
The DYP cannot take that path because if the Parliament voted
in favor of such a motion it would inevitably mean the entire
collapse of the coalition government. DYP officials are taking
care not to be seen as the side which ends the coalition.
DYP sources indicate that party staff assessed the situation at
a series of meetings chaired by Ciller in the course of the past
week. The idea that prevailed at these meetings was that the DYP
should not withdraw from the government but that it should do
everything to make Mesut Yilmaz suffer. Ciller has reportedly
given her staff three instructions regarding the tactics to be
employed:
- DYP officials will respond promptly to Prime Minister Yilmaz's
every comment or move.
- To undermine the chances for ANAP-RP dialogue, the DYP circles
will try to drive a wedge between them. For that purpose DYP deputies
will table a motion against RP leader Necmettin Erbakan, in an
effort to have Erbakan's personal assets investigated, and try
to ensure that ANAP deputies vote in favor of that motion.
- Yilmaz will be prevented from making any move on any issue.
The aim is to make Yilmaz look like a "prime minister who
has failed." Bills brought to Parliament will be obstructed
at the committee stage. Yilmaz will not be able to get any laws
passed before the end of the year. This will wear out his nerves
and encourage him to withdraw from the government.
Ciller is reportedly adamant to force Yilmaz to take the final
step because she wants to elaborate on the "Mesut always
runs away," theme, which she has harped on frequently in
the past. She wants to portray Yilmaz as a person who flees in
the face of difficulty. To sum up, the DYP tactics will be aimed
at forcing Yilmaz to end the present coalition and at intimidating
Erbakan with motions of inquiry against him.
ANAP's reasoning
Meanwhile, ANAP tactics are aimed at having the "Motherpath
coalition" lead to a "Motherpath Party," that is,
an ANAP-DYP merger. To do this they want to first get rid of Ciller,
then lure to ANAP the "leaderless" DYP deputies. ANAP
officials assume that the DYP would not be able to withstand for
long the accusations of irregularities allegedly committed during
Tansu Ciller's prime ministry. They believe that Ciller won't
be reelected under such circumstances at the DYP Congress, scheduled
to take place on July 21.
They reason that even if they could not prevent Ciller's reelection
they could still prevent Ciller from taking over the prime ministry
at the end of the current year. According to the Constitution,
if Ciller is tried at the High Court on corruption charges, she
would be barred from becoming prime minister at the end of the
year, as the coalition protocol states. If DYP officials saw that
Ciller would not be able to take over the prime ministry at the
end of the year, they might be inclined to not risk destroying
the party and decide "not to carry her along anymore."
ANAP officials are not only trying to draw this "fine line,"
separating the DYP from Tansu Ciller, but they are also trying
to keep the road clear for an RP-ANAP coalition so that they could
promptly form a government the moment the country is faced with
a "government vacuum." Recalling that the initial ANAP
attempt to form a government with the RP had drawn strong adverse
reactions, they said that any new attempt will be different because
this time an ANAP-RP coalition will be a necessity.
RP position
RP officials, meanwhile, believe that they can divide the DYP
by wearing out Ciller with the parliamentary inquiries they have
moved. According to leading RP figures, Ciller would not be able
to remain leader if a minimum of 30 DYP deputies deserted her
party. The officials assume that the RP would be able to form
a coalition much more easily with a Ciller-less DYP. At the same
time, they are trying to expand their room for maneuver by keeping
ANAP under pressure as well. Their contention is that if Ciller
is "ousted" as the DYP leader, ANAP would no longer
be able to maintain its unity by rallying around Mesut Yilmaz.
An RP source said, "ANAP is simmering. The Tansu Ciller problem
serves to keep the problems inside the party hidden away from
the eyes of the public. The moment the Tansu Ciller problem is
solved, ANAP will be faced with great turmoil." The three
parties' plans to "trap" the leaders of the rival parties
are expected to bear fruit by the end of summer at the latest.
[02] While hope fades on government, no immediate end is apparent
Survival: Despite the fact that the ANAP-DYP coalition
is fighting for its life a number of factors will ensure that
it survives in the short term
By Ayla Ganioglu
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- The vote in Parliament two weeks ago to initiate
an inquiry into True Path Party (DYP) leader and former Prime
Minister Tansu Ciller concerning corruption allegations also started
the countdown for the two-month old coalition. As it was, the
minority government coalition between the DYP and the Motherland
Party (ANAP) had been formed only with the indirect support of
Bulent Ecevit's Democratic Left Party (DSP).
The DSP, by abstaining during the vote of confidence in Parliament,
had ensured that the ANAP-DYP coalition was endorsed by the necessary
number of deputies. But what appears now to have sealed the fate
of the coalition is the Welfare Party, which is still preserving
its hope of coming to power and which effectively tightened the
noose around the ANAP-DYP coalition's neck with its motions for
inquiries into Ciller.
Since then the government can be said to be fighting for its life.
DYP ministers have now fully raised the flag of rebellion against
ANAP leader and Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz. So much so that the
prime minister can only get his words across to ministers from
his own party. DYP ministers are refusing to attend meetings on
the economy even though Yilmaz calls them to these meetings. The
same ministers boycott meetings of the Cabinet.
Industry Minister Yalim Erez, who is known as Ciller's right hand,
is every day coming out with statements attacking Yilmaz that
are more characteristic of an opposition leader than a cabinet
minister. All of these factors are being taken as signs that the
five-year plan announced in the coalition protocol with such great
fanfare is now almost defunct.
Under this plan Yilmaz was to transfer the premiership to Ciller
for two years at the end of this year. There were even rosy dreams
of one of the two leaders becoming president and the other the
leader of the center-right as a result of this "rotating
Premiership" model. But no one is thinking of these any more.
Now the question in everyone's mind is who will be the first to
pull the trigger and officially put an end to this minority coalition
government.
Another question is what the timing selected for the end of the
government partnership will be. In the meantime the passing of
the motion in Parliament for an inquiry into alleged links between
former Prime Minister Ciller and contract irregularities at state-
run
electricity company TEDAS appears to have started the countdown
to the end of the DYP leader's political life as well. Some political
circles see the whole TEDAS affair as the start of the process
aimed at ridding politics of Tansu Ciller.
This feeling is particularly prevalent given that even if she
comes out of the TEDAS inquiry unharmed there are other inquiry
motions waiting for her. The most notable of these, the file involving
alleged irregularities in the privatization of state shares in
carmaker TOFAS, will be put to the vote on Thursday. This motion,
also submitted by the RP, is expected to be accepted by an even
greater margin of votes than the TEDAS motion, with many ANAP
deputies expected to vote for an inquiry. Following this motion
is one in the pipeline concerning the manner in which the Ciller
family accumulated the assets that it possesses today; this will
also be submitted by the RP.
Ciller, who in the past has managed to free herself without bruises
from such motions, will probably find it difficult to do so this
time. Political analysts estimate that the prospect of Ciller
becoming prime minister at the end of the year is more or less
a dream at this stage. Perfectly aware of all this, Ciller now
appears to be after securing satisfaction by making her party's
coalition partner pay dearly for its support for these motions.
DYP deputies have thus started a war of attrition against Yilmaz
which is expected to intensify after Thursday's TOFAS vote.
Despite all this, the struggle between the coalition partners
is not expected to finish off the government right away, simply
because neither party at this stage wants to appear the one to
have ended the coalition partnership. This in turn means that
the government will continue in the short term, especially because
both Yilmaz and Ciller are planning to escape this whole crisis
with the minimum harm to themselves. Both leaders will also be
involved in a race for their party's leadership this month. The
DYP is expected to hold its big congress in the first half of
July.
DYP sources say that for Ciller to enter this congress as prime
minister will give her an advantage. Ciller's withdrawal from
the government before the congress, on the other hand, is expected
to give her rivals within the DYP an advantage. The ANAP congress
is expected to be held in August unless a decision is taken to
hold it earlier. Yilmaz too, if he can go to this congress as
prime minister, will not have much problem being reelected as
party leader. Some political analysts feel that it is overoptimistic
to expect the ANAP-DYP coalition to survive until July or August
and claim that ties will be severed between the parties before
then.
Others, however, are aware that a factor tying the hands of the
two parties is the fact that the only alternatives to their government
are a government with the RP at the helm, or early elections,
a prospect that neither are prepared to digest. Yet another scenario
being brought to the fore by some analysts has the DYP being split,
or Ciller being "deposed" from the leadership, and the
center-right uniting under the leadership of Mesut Yilmaz.
But this scenario also has Yilmaz being deposed later and the
center-right uniting under another leader.
[03] Sungurlu: Turkey's role is crucial to European security
Greek defense minister Arsenis rates Turkey's prospects for WEU
membership as "zero"
By Orya Sultan Halisdemir
Turkish Daily News
BIRMINGHAM- Turkish Defense Minister Oltan Sungurlu said
Tuesday that Turkey has a crucial role to play in Europe's security
as it is a very important member of the NATO alliance. Speaking
at a briefing for Turkish journalists at the Western European
Union (WEU) council meeting held in this Midlands city, Sungurlu
stated that it was necessary for Turkey to become a full member
of the WEU. "Europe's security cannot be achieved without
having Turkey as a full member of the WEU," he said. Sungurlu
also said the future of the WEU should be clarified before Turkey's
full membership. "We do not know what the Intergovernmental
Conference will decide regarding the future of the WEU,"
he pointed out.
The defense minister added that the member states were in favor
of cooperation between NATO and the WEU. When asked, Sungurlu
said Turkey had once again voiced its reservations about the proposed
full membership of Malta and Cyprus in the WEU. Meanwhile Greek
Defense Minister Gerassimos Arsenis said in Birmingham that there
was no possibility that Turkey would become a full member of the
WEU. In a statement to the BBC's Greek service Arsenis said he
rated the chances of such membership for Turkey as "zero"
because WEU membership was restricted to membership in the European
Union.
"We do not have to put up any fight in this respect. The
case is a lost one for Turkey" Arsenis maintained.
[04] Ambassador Unan blasts allegations of Turkish finger in Chechen
war
Ambassador Bilgin Unan says these allegations are part of a 'dirty
game' which in some cases 'exceeds the limits of imagination'
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Turkey's ambassador to Moscow, Bilgin Unan, has
characterized certain reports in the Russian press concerning
alleged involvement by Ankara in the Chechen crisis as "part
of a dirty game."
Unan said, contrary to what was being alleged, that Turkey attaches
great importance to the stability of Russia. Speaking to "Red
Star," the publication of the Russian Ministry of Defence,
Unan said the good ties between Ankara and Moscow today rested
in this stability being preserved. Unan, whose remarks were carried
by the Anatolian news agency on Tuesday, indicated that both Turkey
and Russia were countries which faced major problems. But he said
Turkey was well aware of the big potential that Russia carried
as a successful country and added this was the reason why Ankara
"believed in Russia's role in the world."
Indicating that Turkey and Russia were also going through a "historic
phase" in their ties, Unan pointed to the five high level
visits that have taken place between the two countries in the
past month alone. He also highlighted the "rich relationship"
between the two countries in terms of trade and tourism contacts.
Touching on the crisis in Chechnya, Unan also underlined that
Turkey respected Russia's territorial integrity and that it was
also respectful of the principle on noninterference in the domestic
affairs of other countries.
Referring to articles in the Russian press on Turkey's alleged
role in the Chechen crisis, Unan said these were part of a "dirty
game" and that some of the reports "exceeded the limits
of imagination." He drew attention in this context to a recent
report alleging that fighter jets taking off from Turkey had bombed
civilian targets in Chechnya.
Unan also said that the cooperation between the intelligence units
of both countries would become effective in the not so distant
future.
[05] US endorses Turkish views on Europe and Syria/PKK
'It would be hard to overstate the importance of Turkey as a US
ally,' official tells Congress State Department spokesman is 'not
aware' of plans to include Turkey in regional strategic cooperation
scheme
Turkish Daily News
WASHINGTON- The U.S. State Department has endorsed the
views of two top Turkish officials regarding Turkish-European
and Turkish-Syrian relations. And Undersecretary of State Lynn
Davis has told a congressional committee: "It would be hard
to overstate the importance of Turkey as a U.S. ally."
Asked at the department's daily press briefing Monday about Prime
Minister Mesut Yilmaz's call that morning for Syria to cease its
support of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), spokesman Nicholas
Burns reiterated U.S. support of "Turkey's wish that countries
beyond Turkey give up their support of the PKK, specifically Syria.
Therefore what Prime Minister Yilmaz said this morning makes sense
to us ... as part of our own policy." Said Burns flatly:
"Syria ought to cease and desist from support for the PKK."
Burns also was asked about Foreign Minister Emre Gonensay's statement
that Turkey should become a full member of the Western European
Union. "We have supported almost across the board Turkey's
wish ... to become more closely linked to European institutions,"
the spokesman replied, citing the EU customs union as an example.
However, he had nothing specific to offer on Turkey's possible
membership of the Western European Union.
Another Turkey-related question at the press briefing involved
the possibility of including Turkey in a regional strategic cooperation
agreement built around the U.S.-Israel relationship. The question
arose in the context of the planned meeting Wednesday between
Secretary of State Warren Christopher and Israeli Foreign Minister
Ehud Barak..
While Burns acknowledged recent efforts "to strengthen the
U.S.-Israel relationship ... on a bilateral basis," he said
he was "not aware of any efforts to create a multilateral
effort ... That would include Turkey or anyone else." However,
he expressed confidence that "we'll talk about those issues
with Foreign Minister Barak and many others, as well."
Testifying last week in support of the Clinton administration's
foreign aid request for next fiscal year, Davis noted that "America's
vital security and economic interests are inextricably tied to
Europe ... The potentially volatile situation in Europe's southeastern
corner requires particular care.
"The U.S. is committed to advancing the negotiating process
on Cyprus, reducing and ultimately eliminating tensions between
Turkey and Greece, and strengthening Turkey's place in the Western
economic and security system," Davis said before the House
Appropriations Subcommittee on Foreign Operations. "Failure
here could unravel all our other European security efforts. As
a result, the United States gives high priority not only to bilateral
relations with these countries, but also to promoting ties between
this region and Western Europe."
Regarding proposals for assistance to Greece and Turkey, Davis
said the United States plans "to continue our support for
two key NATO allies in recognition of their importance in maintaining
stability in a region that is critical to U.S. interests. Our
FY (fiscal year) 1997 request of $32 million for the subsidy cost
of a total of $297 million in FMF (Foreign Military Financing)
loans for Greece and Turkey will supports sustainment of U.S.-origin
equipment. "We are also requesting $60 million in ESF (Economic
Support Funds)," Davis stated, "to help Turkey address
long-term structural reforms necessary to sustain growth, to ease
the transition resulting from Turkish membership in the EU customs
union, and to help offset the economic costs associated with enforcement
of U.N. sanctions against Iraq." (Comparative figures for
FY 1976 are $33.5 million for ESF and $320 million for FMF.) In
justifying the aid to Turkey, Davis pointed to the difficulty
of overstating "the importance of Turkey as a U.S. ally.
It is at the crossroads of almost every issue of importance to
the United States on the Eurasian continent, including NATO, the
Balkans, Cyprus, Iraq sanctions, Russia's relations with the NIS
(New Independent States formed out of the former Soviet Union),
Middle East peace, narcotics trafficking, and transit routes for
Central Asian oil and gas." But Davis also noted that the
Clinton administration "continues to stress to Turkish officials
the necessity of improving its human rights record and strengthening
its democracy. We are working with our European Allies at every
opportunity to urge Turkey to continue the reforms it began last
summer and fall." Continued Davis: "Turkey's new Prime
Minister, Mesut Yilmaz, has indicated Turkey's willingness to:
- engage in discussions to begin the process of a peaceful settlement
with Greece;
- start working to solve the Kurdish situation by a peaceful,
rather than military, means; and
- open a border gate with Armenia if Turkey sees clear signs
of progress toward a peace settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan
in their five-year war over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. We are
pleased by the new government's commitment to resolving these
problems and we will work closely with them to implement these
policies, especially the new approach to the Southeast."
[06] Ankara rules out any revision on Montreux accord
Gonensay's words that Turkey can take new measures for safety
of Straits signals an accelerated Turkish drive on same lines
rather than a 'new magic formula'
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Despite Foreign Minister Emre Gonensay's reference
to new measures to prevent oil tankers using the straits, Ankara
still has no intention of changing the Montreux Convention which
governs the status of the straits. Gonensay said on Monday, on
his way to Birmingham for a Western European Union (WEU) meeting,
that the Foreign Ministry was working on a set of measures against
the possibility of increased traffic of oil tankers through the
Straits.
The foreign minister, who has been responsible for the Caspian
oil pipeline projects via Turkey since his time as prime ministerial
adviser, did not elaborate on the measures. Turkish diplomats,
for their part, confirmed that there were indeed efforts in the
relevant departments "to prevent the straits from becoming
oil pipelines" -- a sarcastic reference to the frequent oil
leaks that further threaten the already-polluted straits.
However, the same sources denied that the measures would be "any
shock package" and said they would definitely fall short
of revising the 1936 Montreux Convention that gives Turkey the
right to regulate the traffic in the two straits -- Bosphorus
and Dardanelles -- but gives perfect freedom of transit in peace
time.
A diplomat firmly denied that Turkey was even considering the
revision of the Montreux Convention. "This is not at all
on the agenda of Turkey," he said. Asked about the "possible
measures," he said that there would be "no magic formulas"
but that Turkey would go on expressing its "safety concerns"
for Istanbul, Turkey's largest city with a population of 12 million.According
to diplomatic observers, Gonensay's statement did not mean a new
initiative but signalled an accelerating Turkish drive to voice
its environmental and safety concerns to international organizations,
governments and also to the oil companies which are part of various
consortia of Caspian oil. Turkey has put its position bluntly
before Chevron, which has substantial shares in Kazakh oil. Gonensay's
words were occasioned by the recently signed Russo-Kazakh accord
to transport Kazakh oil to Novorossiysk, a Russian port in the
Black Sea.
Turks fear that the accord, which would mean the building of a
pipeline from Kazakhstan's Tenghiz fields to Novorossiysk, will
lead to the transportation of Azeri oil through this route, rather
than the Turkish-supported and as yet unbuilt route via Georgia.
The 1.24 million barrels per day question is where the oil would
be taken from there.
Turkey has already introduced new measures for "safety of
passage" for the two straits. The rules have also received
a partial international recognition by being approved by the International
Maritime Organization (IMO) despite Russian protests. Gonensay
indicated that there could be new measures, but it is difficult
to predict how far Turkey can go with the limits imposed by Montreux.
According to legal experts, Turkey cannot introduce limitations
of tonnage and quality of the cargo. Turkey has the right to "regulate
passage," but not the right to prevent certain merchant ships
from passing through the straits. Both the 1924 Lausanne Treaty
and Montreux give commercial concerns the right of free passage
from the straits during peacetime.
The right of fortification over the straits was given to Turkey
with Montreux. Pilotage and towage will be optional. But it can
make use of the "safety clause" in the convention which
says Turkey has the right to regulate the right of passage to
ensure the steady and safe flow of traffic through the straits.
[07] Yilmaz invites foreign textile investment
Turkish Daily News
ISTANBUL- Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz invited foreign textile
firms to invest in the Turkish textile and clothing sector in
his opening speech of the 12th World Apparel Convention, saying
they should take advantage of the fact that "Turkey has become
a country of know-how transfer". Yilmaz pointed out that
Turkey is among the very few self-sufficient countries in textile
raw materials, saying behind the success of the Turkish clothing
industry lies the large quantity of high quality cotton production.
The prime minister predicted that with the completion of the Southeast
Anatolia Project (GAP), the Harran plateau will turn into "a
second Cukurova", Turkey's major cotton producing area, and
the textile sector will flourish in the provincial centers of
the southeast such as Gaziantep and Diyarbakir. "We trust
in our private sector's ability to transform this immense capacity
into industrial goods and exports" Yilmaz told the gathering,
emphasizing Turkey's ambition to expand its share of the world
textile markets.
Yilmaz outlined recent changes in Turkey's economic direction,
pointing out the new orientation of the Turkish economy to globalization
leading to an open economy, shifting to an export orientation.One
positive result of this shift, according to Yilmaz, is the fact
that the Turkish economy continued growing during the world economy's
recent bout with stagnation and recession.
Turkey's leading exports are textile and clothing products, Yilmaz
noted, and stated that Turkey ranks the second in the European
textile trade and fifth among textile- exporting countries of
the world.
"All our expectations, however", Yilmaz continued, "are
far from being realized."He underlined the contrast between
the 62 million strong population of Turkey and her share of world
trade, which is still 04.5%.Yilmaz compared this figures with
those of the member countries of NAFTA, EU and APEC, which contain
the 44% of world population while holding 85% of world trade.
Yilmaz emphasized the importance of international cooperation
in the textile industry, and marked the holding of the International
Apparel Foundation's convention in Turkey as an important step
towards developing the Turkish textile sector's international
connections.
Yilmaz reminded the foreign participants that the 70% of the foreign
investment in the Central Asian republics are realized by Turkish
firms and invited the foreign textile industrialists to invest
in machinery production in Turkey rather than trying to supply
machinery for Turkish textile industry."Turkey has become
a know- how transferring country", he suggested, and continued
that Turkey is capable of bridging the western technology with
the Asian potentials.
Reiterating the title of the convention, Yilmaz called Turkey
the center of the "winds of enterprise" with a textile
sector working in line with European standards. Yilmaz's brother
Turgut Yilmaz attracted large media attention but he repeatedly
reminded the journalists that he was there in capacity of representing
the Textile Bank rather than as the prime minister's brother.
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