ISTANBUL,
February 17 (IslamOnline.net) - Turkey is enthusiastic about the
United States' so-called "Greater Middle East Initiative",
which was at the heart of recent talks between Arab foreign ministers,
according to Turkish commentators and analysts.
The
U.S. administration gave Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
the green light during his visit to Washington in January to promote
the initiative in view of Turkey's pivotal role in the plan and the
region, journalist and writer Sibl Araslan wrote Monday, February 16,
in the daily Vakit.
She
said press photos of hijab-donned wives of Erdogan and his Foreign
Minister Abdullah Gul with Laura Bush were intended to highlight the
strong U.S.-Turkish relations and served as a publicity stunt to show
American tolerance towards hijab.
IslamOnline.net's
correspondent says Bush kept Erdogan posted on the initiative, which
envisages the Turkish secular system as a paradigm for the Mideast
countries.
Omar
Cilik, an advisor to the Turkish premier, defended Turkish support for
the U.S. initiative, arguing that the absence of democracy in Mideast
countries harm Turkey's interests in the region.
The
initiative demands Arab countries to introduce wide-scale political
and economic reforms and improve their human rights records.
It
is modeled on the "Helsinki process" of the post-1975 era,
which focused on human rights in Eastern Europe - especially in the
then Soviet bloc.
Vakit
said that Israeli Labor Party Chairman Shimon Peres discussed the
initiative in camera with left-wing leaders during his visit to Turkey
on Saturday, February 14.
Peres
told the STV channel that Turkey was a model country in the Muslim
world and should play a key role in the region.
He
added that Turkey's strong relations with Israel and the Arab world
enables it to broker a peace deal between Israel and Syria.
Unmistakable
Message
Ahmet
Tas wrote in the daily Yeni Safak that the U.S. used its global
war on terror in the wake of the 9/11 attacks and military juggernaut
in Afghanistan and Iraq as a tool to press ahead with its nascent
initiative.
"They
want to send the unmistakable message that 'we can force our project
by force,'" he wrote.
He
also noted that the "U.S. is interfering in the internal affairs
of Iran".
Americans
believe that the peoples of the Middle East would support the
initiative to head off devastating wars and a repeat of the Iraqi
tragedy, added the journalist.