Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
Middle East Stew
7
8
A rebuff to President
9
Clinton by Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Abdallah at the funeral of King Hussein
10
of Jordan last week was heralded in the Saudi press Thursday as evidence that
11
the country wasn't a pawn or a puppet of the United States. Abderrahman
12
al-Rashed, the editor of the leading Saudi daily Asharq al-Awsat , wrote
13
that the heir apparent's rejection of Clinton's attempt to get him to meet
14
secretly with Israeli officials in Amman ("Mr. President, I think friendship
15
has limits")--news of which broke Wednesday in the same paper--was a cause for
16
Saudi pride. Perhaps Clinton thought that all Arab leaders could be "bought,"
17
or coaxed, or intimidated, he wrote. But Saudi policies could not be bought,
18
since Riyadh was not indebted to Washington. "The friendship between the two
19
countries is strong indeed. But there's no reason why Saudi Arabia should
20
abandon its commitments to the Palestinians, Syrians, and Lebanese, as well as
21
to its own citizens, just to please the American president," Rashed
22
concluded.
23
24
Turki al-Hamad, another
25
commentator in the same paper, said that the Amman incident confounded those
26
who believed that Saudi Arabia was just another pawn on Washington's chessboard
27
and therefore had probably already established secret links with Israel. He
28
wrote that the crown prince, the effective ruler of Saudi Arabia, could have
29
met secretly with Israeli officials, as Clinton asked, and struck deals with
30
them behind closed doors, subsequently to denounce Israel in the strongest
31
terms, as many Arab leaders did. But he has consistently applied the principle
32
of "transparency" and candor, believing this to be the best guarantee of sound
33
policy. "His rejection of Clinton's proposal is consistent with Saudi Arabia's
34
policy of not officially recognizing Israel until the Middle East peace process
35
has reached a successful conclusion, at which point Riyadh will make the
36
appropriate decision," Hamad added. "Saudi Arabia has already said all these
37
things. So what would have been the point of a secret meeting? That is
38
undoubtedly what Crown Prince Abdallah had in mind when he turned down the U.S.
39
president's proposal."
40
41
A l-Khaleej , a daily from the United Arab Emirates,
42
claimed Thursday that the United States helped Turkey capture its most wanted
43
man, the Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan, in exchange for Turkey abandoning its
44
policy of rapprochement with Iraq. Commentator Mohammed Idriss wrote in the
45
paper that the betrayal of Ocalan had been preceded by another betrayal--that
46
of the Iraqi Deputy Premier Tariq Aziz. Aziz went to Ankara at the invitation
47
of Turkey's pro-Iraqi Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit to discuss closer economic
48
ties and the problem of Kurdish separatism, which both countries feel is being
49
fueled by the United States' "mismanagement" of the Iraqi crisis.
50
51
Baghdad also saw the visit as an opportunity to
52
persuade Turkey to withdraw logistical support for American bombing raids on
53
Iraq and to speed up the erosion of international sanctions against it. Yet,
54
when Aziz arrived in Ankara, President Suleyman Demirel bluntly refused to meet
55
him, and he found himself boycotted by Turkey's political parties. The
56
explanation for this had to be collusion between the U.S. and Israeli
57
intelligence services, both of them highly active in Kenya, to deliver Ocalan
58
to the Turks.
59
60
Idriss wrote that Greece
61
must have been put under "enormous U.S. pressure" to have agreed to be involved
62
in Ocalan's abduction. "And for the U.S. to be prepared to exert so much
63
pressure on Greece on Turkey's behalf, the price must have been worthwhile," he
64
added. "At this juncture in particular, what better price could there have been
65
than sabotaging any attempt to effect an Iraqi-Turkish rapprochement?" The
66
Pan-Arab al-Quds
67
al-Arabi also saw the delivery of Ocalan to Turkey as its "reward" for
68
toeing the U.S. line on Iraq. In the Gulf state of Bahrain, the daily
69
al-Ayyam said that Ocalan's abduction boded ill for Osama bin Laden,
70
America's most wanted man. He, too, had the intelligence agencies of several
71
countries on his trail.
72
73
Without directly addressing the question of Israeli
74
involvement in the abduction of Ocalan, the moderate Israeli paper Ha'aretz said in an
75
editorial Friday that the affair had shown "the narrow and very
76
dangerous line that Israel walks in its ties with Turkey." It said there was
77
"no doubt that the military alliance with Turkey is one of the most important
78
Israel has ever signed with any country" and that "[t]his type of alliance
79
inherently involves targeting common enemies, or at least fosters the
80
expectation that an agreed-upon map of common threats and dangers be drawn up.
81
The Kurdish question has naturally found its way onto this map of common
82
interests." But Israel has always had very good relations with the Kurds, who
83
also see the Israelis as their friends. "Consequently, Israel must make a very
84
sharp distinction between Turkey's war with what it defines as a terrorist
85
organization, and its ideological and cultural struggle with the Kurdish
86
people," the editorial concluded. "In the aftermath of the tragic incident in
87
Berlin, this distinction must now be expressed openly and publicly in such a
88
manner to make it clear to the Kurds that we are still their friends."
89
90
The Italian papers,
91
which see Turkey's human rights record as a serious impediment to its ambition
92
to join the European Union, reacted with outrage Friday to a photograph issued
93
by the Turkish government showing Ocalan blindfolded and manacled in front of
94
the Turkish flag. La
95
Stampa , in a front-page comment, called it "a punch in the stomach,"
96
comparing it to other sadly unforgettable photos such as those of the dead Che
97
Guevara, the napalm-burnt little girl during the Vietnam War, and the
98
despairing Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro as a prisoner of the Red Brigades.
99
The difference in this case, though, was that the photo was "propaganda
100
material of a government which calls itself democratic, a government of our
101
times," the paper said.
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109