(Archived document, may contain errors)
i 609 October 14, 1987 TURKEX AN INCRE ASINGLY KEY STRATEGIC
ASSET FOR THE US INIRODUCIION At a time when war and chaos in the
Persian Gulf remind policymakers how difficult it is to.deal with
Middle Eastern states, Turkey remains a rock of stability and
reliability in the eastern Mediterranea n . Yet the U.S. Congress
is contemplating actions that will strain relations with this key
ally. Not only is Con ess imprudently considering a reduction in
the Administrations request for $78fWon in dtary aid to Turkey, but
it is considering attaching oner ous conditions to that aid.
Turkey is of great importance to the United States for
geostrategic, political and economic reasons. In strategic terms,
Turkey poses a formidable barrier to Soviet expansion in the
easternMediterranean and Middle Eastern region s. Its pivotal
location and large army make it the eastern linchpin of the North
Atlantic Treay Or anizations (NATO) security perimeter. The Iranian
revolution and Soviet The Greek governments threats to terrmnate
U.S. base ri ts in Greece enhance invasio n o f Afghanistan
emphasize its importance in Persian Gulf contingencies.
Turkeys importance in NATOs eastern Mediterranean de v ense
plans Muslim Bridge In political terms, Turkeys position as NATOs
only Muslim member makes it a bridge between the Western and Muslim
worlds and enables it to play a stabilizing role in the volatile
Middle East. Turkeys commitment to secularism, instituted in I923
by the far-seeing founder of modem Turkey, Kemal Ataturk, makes it
an ideological advers to the Islamic fundamen t alist groups is the
only Middle &tern state with a longstanding commitment to
parliamentary democracy also is a proved model for economic
,development. Turkish Prime Minister Turgut Ozal has ignited an
impressive economic boom by instituting free market e c onomic
which threaten the stability of much of 3 e Middle East. Aside from
Israel, Turkey Turkey thus offers the Third World a model for
secularism and democracy. It -2 reforms The WdZ Street Journal
praises him as "the developing world's closest approxim a tion to
Ronald Reagan relationship with Turkey. Yet cracks are appearing in
the Turkish-American relationship. In -early May Turkish President
-Kenan Evren canceled a scheduled visit to the U.S. to signal
growing Turkish doubt about American sincerity and reliability
because of anti-Turkish actions taken by the U.S. Congress..
Despite Turkey's crucial contributions to the Western alliance,
Congress has reduced the Reagan Administration's aid request for
Turkey each year since 1981 Congress attaches counter p roductive
conditions on that aid and arbitrarily links Greek aid levels to
Turkish aid ,levels in an inflexible 7 to 10 ratio The U.S clearly
has strong reasons to maintain the closest possible working Because
of these. congressional actions, Turks increa s ingly believe that
they are taken for granted by Washmgton; they are particularly
galled when they contrast their stalwart security cooperation with
the U.S. with the shrill anti-American harangues of Greece's
socialist Prime Minister, Andreas Papandreou i nterests, the U.S.
should To restore the health of Turkish-American relations and
enhance American 1) Give $785 million in military aid, which the
Administration requested, to modernize the Turkish armed forces and
enable Turkey to meet its NATO defense r e sponsibilities against
Soviet threats. 2) Set aid levels to Turkey according to its
contributions to Western security 3) Refuse to make US aid to
Turkey depemdent on Turkish behavior in such regional issues as the
Cyprus dispute 4) Press US allies to incr e ase ecoiILomic aid for
Turkey and to facilitate Turkish entry into the European Economic
Community 5) Ihxnmge rappmckment between Greece and Turkey through
a high-level dialogue and such confidence-building measures as a
nonaggression pact TURKEWS !WRA.IC IMPORTANCE Turkey anchors NATO's
eastern flank, guards one-third of NATO's 3,600-mile front with the
Warsaw Pact and is the. only NATO member sharing an extensive
border with the Soviet Union. Turkey controls the Bosporus and the
Dardanelles the key strai t s that constrain Soviet naval access to
the Mediterranean Sea. In the event of conflict, Turkey is to close
the straits to the 69-ship Soviet Black Sea fleet nearly one-third
of Soviet major surface warships. By doing so, Turkey would prevent
Moscow from s urgin against NATO's soft underbelly in the
Mediterranean the Persian Gulf. Turkey's 654,OOO-man armed forces
are the second largest .in NATO, only after the 2,143,000-man U.S.
armed forces, and larger than France's and from cutting sea lines o
P communic ation to Greece, Turkey, Israel, Egypt, and -3 557,000
and West Germany's 485,0
00. The tough, disciplined Turkish forces would tie down 20 to
30 Soviet divisions in the event of war, some of which otherwise
could be deployed on NATO's central front The bo g Border With the
soviets Turkey has long experience in dealing with Russia, having
confronted Russia in thirteen wars over the last four centuries.
Faced with post-World Wk 11 Soviet demands for bases on the straits
and territorial concessions, Turkey tu r ned to the U.S. for
support. Under the 1947 Truman Doctrine, Turkey along with Greece
became a successful test case for the strategy of containing an
expansionist Soviet Union through U.S. economic aid, military
assistance, and diplomatic support. Turkey f ought alongside the
U.S. in the Korean War, joined NATO in 1952, and later became a
member of the pro-Western Baghdad Pact and its successor, the
Central Treaty Oreanhation (CENTO Greek-Turkish disagreements over
Cyprus have been the mam irritant in U.S.- T urkish re1ations.l The
importance of maintaining close strategic ties was underscored by
the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, which dramatically
demonstrated Moscow's expansionist designs for pushing closer to
the Persian Gulf.2 Hard InteUigence. The U.S. today enjoys access
to six major and 21 smaller facilities in Turkey that are dedicated
to NATO military and intelligence functions.
The air base at Incirlik in southern Turkey offers a staging
area for U.S. fighter bombers; facilities at Sinop on the Black Sea
and Diyarbakir in eastern Turkey provide intelligence on Soviet
military activities; Belbasi near. Ankara contains a seismic
station for monitoring Soviet nuclear tests; Pirinclik is the site
of radar warning and space monitoring stations; and s torage
facilities at Yumurtalik and Iskenderun house fuel and military
supplies. These facilities provide 25 percent of NATO's hard
intelligence on Sowet strategic nuclear activities, weapons
development, military readiness, and force movements.3 U.S. Air
Force units from as far away as Spain and Great Britain use Turkish
bombing ranges on training missions As important as Turkish defense
installations have been to the U.S., they are likely to become even
more important in the future. Greece's Papandreou r epeatedly has
threatened to dismantle U.S. bases in Greece when the current
agreement governing their operation expires in December 19
88. Turkey is the logical choice to help fill the gap that could
be left by the loss of the four major and several minor U.S.
installations in Greece 1. After Greek-Turkish tensions flared on
Cyprus in 1964, President Lyndon Johnson sent a letter to Ankara
hintin that NATO would not back Turkey if a Turkish intervention
precipitated a Soviet arms embargo on Turkey that was, not lifted
until 1978 2.. See: James A. Phillips A Mounting Soviet Threat to
the Northern Tier Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 214, July 1,
1983 3. Bruce Kuniholm Turkey in the Worlc in George Harris, ed The
Middle East in Tunkish- American Relations (Washington, D.C The
Heritage Foundation, 1985 p. 9 reaction. Fo lr owing the 1974
Turkish military intervention in Cyprus, the U.S. Congress imposed
an -4 hkish Role in Persian Gulf The 1980 Defense and Economic
Cooperation Agreement (DECA) between the U . S. and Turkey limits
American use of Turkish facilities to NATO defense purposes. This
condition was imposed by Turkey to avoid regonal conflict-without
NATO backing Yet Turkey' still deterring a Soviet move to the
Persian Gulf. In 1982 the modernize ten Turkish air bases, several
of them in eastern Turkey, on the flank of possible Soviet invasion
routes through Iran. These air bases could enable U.S warplanes to
interdict the supply lines and slow the momentum of a Soviet
invasion force attacking Iran.
Turkey is reluctant to become involved in Middle Eastern
conflicts because of a desire to avoid stirring up memodes of
Ottoman imperialism. It seeks to preserve its neutrality in the
Iran-Iraq war to preclude Iraqi or Iranian support of Kurdish
terrorists inside Turkey. Turkey also enjoys lucrative trade with
both belli8erents in the Gulf war. Although the Turks permit U.S.
intelligence-gathering activlties related to Persian Gulf events,
they have refrained from co-tting themselves in advance to granting
U .S. access to their bases in the event of a Persian Gulf flareup.
Turkish involvement in Persian Gulf affairs is unlikely unless
Soviet forces are involved and Turkish efforts are subsumed under a
NATO umbrella. Nevertheless, no Soviet military planner ca n afford
to ignore Turkey when contemplating aggression in the Gulf ISSUES
IN US-TURKB"RELATIONS Turkqr's De Needs In addition to the Soviet
Union, Turkey is surrounded by some of the world's most ruthless
regimes: the pro-Soviet states of Bulgaria, Syria, and Iraq, as
well as revolutionaxy Iran. Greece, Turkey's only western neighbor,
is led by the volatile Papandreou regime, which persistently
conjures up a Turkish bogeyman to distract its increasingly
disenchanted citizens from the economic havoc wrought by its myopic
socialist ohaes. Since Turkey cannot count on being reinforced
rapidly by its NATO ap lies in the event of Soviet attack, it must
maintain a large military establishment. Ankara devotes 4.5 percent
of Turkey's Gross National Product GNP) to national defense, one of
the highest commitments in NATO. Yet Turkey's economic base is not
broad enough to finance the acquisition of enough modem defense
systems to enable Turkey to fulfill its NATO responsibilities.
Turkey's obsolescent tanks, aircraft, and ships are often far
older than the crews that man them. In fact, Turkish military
equipment has been described as a museum of World War 11 The Turks
have initiated an extensive program to upgrade their aging M-48
tanks, and they hope to replace Korea n War vintage warplanes with
F-16 fighter-bombers produced under a coproduction agreement with
the U.S. -5 In 1983 the Pentagon estimated that bringing Turkish
forces up to minimum NATO standards would cost $18 billion over
thirteen years? Although the 198 0 DECA did not establish an
explicit quantitative link between U.S. aid and access to Turkish
bases, Washington pledged its %est efforts" to underwrite Turkey's
NATO defense commitments. Ankara estimated that this would require
in excess of $1 billion in. A merican aid -'each. year But Congress
has-pared back the Administration's aid request each year. Although
Turkey has been the third largest recipient of U.S. aid in recent
years after Israel and Egypt, American militaly ad has fallen from
a peak of $718 m i llion in Fiscal Year 1984 to $615 inillion m FY
1986 and $490 million in FY 1987 bbbying Congress. When the 1980
DECA expired in December 1985, the Turks sought to extract firmer
U.S. aid level guarantees. After more than a year of hard
bargaining, the Tu r ks last March accepted letters between
Secretary of State George Shultz and Foreign Minister Vahit
Halefogu that contained the unusual clause that the Reagan
Admistration would lobby Congress with "vigor and determination" to
help Turkey meet its NATO res ponsibilities.
To their credit, the Turks did not threaten to terminate
American access to their bases, as has Greece's Papandreou. The
Ozal government subsequently was criticized by its political
opposition for agreeing to renew the DECA without binding U .S.
comtments. Although Ankara signed the new agreement in March 1987
Prime Minister Ozal announced in April that it would not be
ratified by the Turkish Parliament because the U.S. Congress
slashed the Administration's requested aid package by 36 percent
from $913 million to $569 million. President Evren's subsequent
cancellation of his planned U.S. visit further underscored growing
Turkish exasperation with its American ally The Qpms Dispute aid,
particularly the linkage to progress in resolving the long -running
Cyprus issue.
The 1974 Turkish intervention on behalf of Turkish Cypriots
prompted the U.S. to impose an arms embargo on Turkey from 1975 to
19
78. The result: the Turks hardened their position. It also
weakened NATO defenses and harmed U.S inter ests by depriving the
U.S. during that period of access to Turkish intelligence gathering
installations. The deterioration of Turkish-American relations also
led the Turks to seek improved relations with Moscow. One result
was Turkey's acceptance of a bro a d interpretation of the 1936
Montreux convention, which governs usage of the Bosporus and
Dardanelles. This new interpretation permitted the Soviet aircraft
carrier Kiev to transit the straits in July 1976 under the pretense
that it was an anti-submarine c ruiser Ankara justifiably bridles
at some of the congressional strings attached to' U.S Although the
U.S. arms embargo was lifted in 1978 when it became clear that it
did not produce the intended results, it has left scars in the
Turkish-American relation s hip. Yet Congress continues to link aid
to Turkey to Cyprus negotiations in a manner that the Turks find
biased toward Greece. This April, for example, the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee passed a resolution to prohibit the use of U.S
4. Bruce Kuniholm Turkey and 'NATO: Past Present and Future Ohis,
Summer 1983, p. 441. -6 provided wea om by Turkish forces on Cyprus
and called for a reduction in The 7 to 10 Aid Ratio numbers of tg e
roughly 20,000 Turkish troops stationed on that island Another case
-of - congressional- micro-management that impairs American
interests is the 7 to 10 aid ratio that Congress has been using as
a rule of thumb in setting Greek and Turkish aid levels. For every
ten dollars that Turkey receives Greece receives seven dollars. Thi
s arbitrary ratio, never agreed to by the U.S executive branch,
supposedly maintains the regional "balance of power between Greece
and Turkey, although the nature of this
'balance has never been made explicit. Turkey's population is
five times larger than Greece's, and its armed forces are three
times larger. Turkey requires far more military aid than does
Greece because, with its 1ong.common border, it faces a much more
direct Soviet threat.
Doling out security assistance according to criteria set by the
"Greek lobby" in the U.S. skews the distribution of scarce funds
and weakens Western defenses. In practice, the ratio does not .help
Greece, and it hurts Turkey. While Greece amassed up to 1 billion
in unspent U.S. military credits at one point,5 Turkey h as been
forced to delay the long-overdue modernization of its armed forces.
The inflexible application of the ratio reduces U.S. influence with
both aid recipients and allows Greece's Papandreou to continue to
thumb his nose at Washington because he can c ount on Greek aid
automatically being set at 70 percent of Turkey's aid.
The de facto 7 to 10 aid ratio, moreover, contradicts official
U.S. policy by implicitly endorsing Greek claims that Turkey, not
the Soviet Union, is the chief threat to Greek security.
The Greeks once were a Christian minority group living within
,the Turkish ruled Ottoman Empire. Since regaining independence in
1832 with British, French and Russian support, the Greeks zealously
have guarded their sovereign rights against a return of Turkish
domination. Greece historically has sought foreign help to offset
its neighbor's greater size. In 1921, Greece took advantage of
Ottoman weakness to invade Anatolia in an unsuccessful attempt to
incorporate Greeks on the eastern coast of the Aege a n Sea into an
expanded Greece As with other international conflicts involving
claims of rival nations to disputed territories, the Aegean
conflict has created extreme bitterness and distrust on both sides.
After World War II, Soviet meddling in the Greek c ivil war and
territorial demands on Turkey gave both a common enemy and earned
both a common friend in the U.S. In recent years, however, the
declining perceptions of the Soviet threat, rising tensions over
Cyprus, and disputes about sovereignty over Aege an air space,
coastal waters, and the seabed have plagued Turkish-Greek
relations.
Greece claims sovereignty of the waters within six nautical
miles of the coasts of its Aegean islands but reserves the right to
extend its claim to twelve miles 5. The Wall Sbeet Journal,
September 10, 1986. -7 Turkey considers such an extension a
belligerent act because it would close most of the Aegean to the
Turkish Navy. Turkey would like to settle the issue in bilateral
negotiations, but Greece has rejected such an appr o ach,
preferring to bring the dispute before the International Court of
Justice at The Hague. The World Court however, has become a highly
politicized tribunal which probably would not give Turkey a fair
hearing Refusing to Tal& The possible existence of o f fshore
oil deposits has raised the stakes and suspicions of both sides.
This March, a naval confrontation over oil exploration in disputed
waters narrowly was averted. A similar dispute in 1976 led the two
states to a ee to avoid provocative acts and ne o tiate a solution.
These took office in 19
81. As a result, minor Turkish-Greek issues have become
politicized to such an extent that they become contentious tests of
national wills that all too easily escalate into saber-ratthng
crises. talks, along with o ir er bilateral contacts, were broken o
d by Papandreou when he Although Turkey's pragmatic Ozal seeks to
open a dialogue and has offered to meet Papandreou "anytime,
anywhere the Greek leader has ruled out such a dialogue as long as
Turkish troops remai n on Cyprus. This puts the cart before the
horse. No progress can be expected on the Cyprus issue without a
broad willingness to compromise on both sides. By refusing to talk
or listen to his Turkish counterpart, Papandreou perpetuates
distrust and diploma t ic paralysis. This may benefit him
politically by allowing him to pose as the uncompromising defender
of Greek sovereignty, but it increases the risks of a blow-up in
the Aegean that could harm Greek, Turkish, American, and NATO
interests TURKEYSExpERIMEN T WlTHFREEENTERpRIsE market economic
reforms. He has been praised by Ronald Reagan as "a real Reaganite
in economic terms" because of his determined efforts to prod Turkey
toward free enterprise. Since 1980, Ozal has rationalized the price
system by abolish i ng subsidies and lifting price controls,
overhauled the tax system, and slashed income taxes by 20 percent
for most workers. He has opened up the economy by liberalizing
currency exchange rules and expanding access by Turks to foreign
imports, credit, and investment. By encouraging Turkish industry to
shift toward exports rather than import substitution, Ozal hopes to
harness fully Turkey's comparative advantages, especially its
large, skilled workforce and its geographic prommity to both Europe
and the Mi ddle East.
Under Ozal's stewardship, first as head of the State Planning
Organization and since 1983 as Prime Minister, Turkey has made
dramatic economic gams. Today it boasts the strongest growth rate
of any of the twenty-four countries that belong to the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development--7.9 percent real growth
in Gross National Product in 19
86. Inflation plummeted from over 100 ercent in 1980 to 26
percent in 19
87. Exports surged from $2.9 billion in 1980 to E 7.5 billion in
1986, and foreign investment inceased fivefold in the same period
Prime Minister Ozal, trained as an engineer in the U.S., is
dedicated to free -8 Despite Ozal's success in stimulating econo m
ic growth, his centrist Motherland Party is losing ground
politically because of its austerity program and a persistent
unemployment rate of 20 percent. Moreover, Ozal's efforts to
protect Turkey's credit rating by assiduously meeting its forei
debt commi t ments 4 billion in rincipal and interest was paid on
Turkey's P 25 billion foreign debt in 1986) have Eft him -open to-
opposition-charges :that he serves-"urkey's foreign creditors
better than his own people RivateSectorE To reduce the budget
deficit, An k ara is moving slowly to privatize some of the State
Economic Enterprises that collectively account for approximately 40
percent of Turkey's industrial production. Privatizing such state
enterprises as mining, textiles, cement, and aviation are under
consi d eration. Sales of shares in the toll revenues of a bridge
across the Bosporus already have provided money for a second
bridge. Encouraged by interest rates that exceed the rate of
inflation, and continued political stability, the private sector
now may ha ve the enthusiasm and financial strength to support the
rapid growth of privatization.
Textile exports are the centerpiece of Ozal's export-oriented
economic strategy making up the single largest source of Turkey's
export earnings. Turkish textile exports to the U.S. rose to about
$140 million in 1986, up from roughly $80 million in 19
85. But the growth rate of Turkish textile imports to the U.S.
is inhibited by import barriers. The Turks complain that as a late
entrant to the Multifiber Arrangement that sets quotas for U.S.
textile imports, the lose out to such Far Hong Kong U.S. officials
argue that granting Turkey a larger textile quota would prevent the
U.S. from fulfilling its commitments to other textile exporters.
This is a lame answer. The U.S. is now in a position to reduce
signficantly its barriers to textile imports.6 The chief
Turkish-American bilateral economic issue concerns Turkish
textiles.
Eastern textile producers as South Korea, the Republic o r China
on Taiwan, and In addition to ration alizing its economy, Turkey is
reforming its political system. The army, which mounted a bloodless
1980 coup to avert impending civil war, returned power to civilians
just three years later and held elections. Although military rule
sparked harsh Western c riticism, the army garnered little Western
praise for restoring democracy and preserving Ataturk's secular
reforms against growing (but still marginal) Muslim fundamentalist
extremism. The participation of twelve political parties in
Turkey's September 19 86 'by-elections and the referendum last
month that lifted a ban on several politicians attest to the steady
evolution of Turkey's "guided democracy" into a thriving, stable
democratic system.
Turkey also has been making strides in correcting the human
rights abuses that accompanied the crackdown on warring leftist and
rightist terrorists in 19
80. It has 6. See Edward Hudgins Robust U.S. Textile Industry
Needs No More Protection Heritage Foundation Brrekgrounder U
e No. 54, September 29, 1987, and Katsur o Sakoh and Edward
Hudgins The Multifiber Arrangement: U.S. Gains From Relaxing Its
Restrictions Heritage Foundation Backgvunder Update No. l.3, June
6, 1986. -9 established a commission to ,investigate Turkish prison
conditions and permitted Council of E urope officials to visit
prisons. The U.S. State Department's most recent Human Rights
report for Turkey concluded that In general, the positive trend in
the observance of human rights continued in 19
86. The Government made considerable progress in reduci ng human
rights abuses, although significant shortcomings are still evident
question of past Turkish treatment of its Armenian minority. Each
year a measure is introduced in Congress to designate a day of
remembrance in the official U.S calendar for hundr e ds of
thousands of Armenians who perished in the final tumultuous years
of the Ottoman Empire. Although the resolution has never been
passed by both Houses, the Turks see it as providme a fig leaf of
respectability to Armenian terrorists who have waged a w ar of
terronsm against Turkey since the mid-1970s. Over fif an average of
25 hves a day in 1980, the Turks have taken a hard line against
terrorism of any stripe. The Turkish public interprets support in
the U.S. for the Armenian resolution to be support f or
anti-Turkish terronsm, an equation that could harm bilateral
relations if the resolution were passed Perhaps the most emotional
issue in Turkish-American relations is the thorny Turkish cittzens,
most of them diplomats, have been murdered, including Y o ur in the
U.S.7 Seared by a terrorist bloodbath that claimed Turkey is a
steadfast ally and should not be taken for granted: The Ozal
government's strong commitment to NATO, modernization, free
enterprise, and free trade make it one of the most pro-Americ an
Turkish governments ever to hold power Ozal's opposition derides
him as "Amerikanci" and criticizes him for not securing firmer U.S.
aid commitments in the DECA signed earlier this year.
Washington should help Ozal demonstrate the benefits of a close
U.S. connection.
It should avoid giving Ozal's critics on the left and the right
issues that can be used to discredit him and the rising generation
of U.S.-educated technocrats.
Long-term U.S. goals should be to facilitate Turkey's transition
-to a stable democracy, to a free market economy, and to full
integration into Western Europe's economy as well as its defense
alliance. To accomplish these goals must meet its DECA obligations
to help mode hr9s armed foras is committed to make its best efforts
to hel p Turkey upgrade its military strength.
The Administration's request for $785 million in military aid
for Turkey is an absolutely necessary investment in Western
security. Congress undermines NATO security to the extent that it
arbitrarily cuts this aid. M ilitary aid to Turkey is one of the
most cost-effective means of deterring Soviet aggression in the
eastern Mediterranean as well as southwest Asia. While it costs the
U.S 60,000 to outfit enable the Turks to fulfill their NATO
responsl'bilities The U.S. 1 ) w 7. The Armenian Secret Army For
the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) which is responsible for many of
these outrages is supported by the Soviet Union, Syria, and
Palestinian terrorist groups. For an excellent analysis of the
Armenian terrorism see: Micha e l Gunter, Acming the Just Cause o
Their People: A Study of Contemponuy henian Tem*m (New York
Greenwood Press, 1986 10 and station one American soldier in
Turkey, the cost for one Turkish soldier is roughly 9,000.8 the
Cyprus question. Cyprus is a complex problem that cannot be
resolved by solutions imposed by outside powers Only-direct--talks
between Greece and Turkey will lay the groundwork for a settlement.
If the U.S. pressures Turkey to make concessions, the Greeks may
lose incentives to make reciproc al concessions and be tempted to
negotiate with Washington rather than Ankara. Moreover, the U.S
arms embargo proved to be a blunt instrument that hardened Turkey's
position instead of encouraging compromise.
Washington should offer its good offices to exp lore possible
solutions but should not cajole either side into a settlement that
could later unravel, leaving the U.S. as a scapegoat. Nor should
Washington recognize the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
established in 1983 or any other unilateral appr o aches 2)
Coogress should stop linking Turkish aid levels to diplomatic
progress on 3 Tbe arbitrary 7 to 10 Greece:Turkey aid ratio should
be scrapped. Scarce funds d or security assistance should be
disbursed to maximize Western defenses against Soviet th r eats,
not to offset the real or imagined threats posed by one NATO member
against another. If Greek Prime Minister Papandreou genuinely
believes that Turkey is more of a threat to Greece than is the
Soviet Union, then he should withdraw from NATO. Since h e does
not, it is clear that the real enemy of Greece is the Soviet Union.
An inflexible U.S. formula for doling out aid undermines the
rationality of NATO defense planning, constrains the 8 President's
ability to conduct foreign policy, and limits U.S. in f luence in
both capitals on should invoke the 1986 amendment to the on to
transfer surphs military Defense autho-on act that aUm the e
equipment to Turkey, Greece, and Portu F-4 fighter-bombers, that
they may be eligible to receive. The Admnistration shoul d use such
surplus equipment transfers as much as possible to help offset
expected congressional cuts in military aid. Increased
contributions from U.S mditary construction, the NATO
Infrastructure program, and the Defense Industrial Cooperation
program al s o can help to make up the difference amsider favorably
Turkey's applidm for full membership in the Eurapean Economic
Chummily. Japan, which claims to be looking for ways to strengthen
the Western alliance on which it depends, should be encouraged to
buttr e ss Turkey with economic aid 4 Rea&an Secretary of
Defense Caspar Weinberger has given the Turks a list o P surplus
equipment, includinp 40 Phantom 5) Washingon should press its aUies
to increase foreigu aid to Turkey and to 6) Tbe U.S. should open
its mar k ets,to Turkish textile exports as much as possile under
the Multifiber Arrangement. Better yet, the Multifiber Arrangement
8. Testimony of Ambassador Parker Hart, cited in Bruce Kuniholm
Rhetoric and Reality in the Aegean: U.S. Policy Options Toward
Greec e and Turkey SAIS Review, Winter/Sprhg 1986, p. 153 9. For an
excellent analysis of U.S. policy toward Greece, Turkey, and Cyprus
see: Paul He Out of Kilter: Greeks, Turks and U.S. Policy," The
Nufionol Infemf, Summer 1987 11 should be phased out to libera l
ize the textile trade and reduce clothing and other fabric prices
for U.S. consumers a full, open revim of the Turks' treatment of
Armenians While the Armenians unquestionably suffered. grievous
wrongs, there -is no incontrovertible proof of a systematic g
enocide campaign by the Turks against them. Moreover, the acts in
question were committed by the defunct Ottoman government, not the
Turkish Republic. A full-scale investigation of the matter, using
the old Ottoman archives could clear up the issue. Congr e ssional
resolutions on the Ottoman Armenians would only reopen old wounds
and disrupt Turkish-American relations without resolving anythmg 8)
Washington should enoourage a rappmchememt between Greeoe and
Turkey by offering itself as a conduit for pnvate c o mmunication,
by calling on both sides to tone down their rhetoric, by exploring
the possibilities of a mutual nonaggression pact and other
confidence-buildmg measures. A dialogue between Athens and Ankara
must be established before any progress can be mad e on sovereignty
disputes in the Aegean. Such disputes are essentially a matter of
national pride. They will not be resolved until there is a
political will on both sides to accept compromise 7)
TheU.S.shouldenarurageAnkaratoopentheOttomanarchivestoaUow CO N
CLUSION The U.S. cannot afford to take Turkey for granted. Turkey
anchors NATO defenses in the eastern Mediterranean and contributes
to the deterrence of Soviet expansion toward the Persian Gulf.
Turkish facilities provide 25 percent of NATO's hard intell igence
on Soviet military activities.
Turkey also is important as a stabilizing force in the Middle
East and as a bridge between the Moslem world and the West. Its
secular system provides a workable alternative to the rising tide
of Moslem fundamentalism that plagues the Middle East. Moreover ,
Prime Minister Ozal's free market economic reforms provide a
valuable model for economic development for scores of other
countries.
The U.S. must live up to its commitment to make its best
possible effort to help Turkey fulfill its NATO obligations. By
trimming the Administration's aid proposals for Turkey and
attaching counterproductive aid conditions, the U.S.
Congress undermines Western security and strains bilateral
relations ivith a valuable ally.
Given the stead drift of Papandreou's Greece away f rom the
Western alliance Minister Papandreou chooses to oust U.S. bases
from Greece, Turkey is the obvious candidate to provide substitute
facilities the U.S. must strengt i en its ties to Turkey, not
weaken them. For if Prime James A. Phillips Senior Pol icy
Analyst