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Just Another Ugly American
By PHILIP TERZIAN The Providence Journal Aug 10, 2004, 05:04 NICOSIA, Cyprus -- It was more than a little embarrassing to be an American in Cyprus last week. A bumptious State Department bureaucrat, Laura Kennedy, was touring the country and visiting the northern third of the island under Turkish military occupation. She lectured the Greek Cypriots about their rejection this spring of the Annan reunification plan, which would have effectively delivered their free-market, democratic republic into the hands of the generals in Ankara. She then dined with the political leader of the Turkish Cypriots at a Kyrenian restaurant whose Greek owner had been driven out by the Turkish army. The Cypriots, to their credit, regarded Kennedy's offensiveness with a sense of humor. They graciously assumed that she didn't realize the Greek Cypriot restaurant owner had been ethnically cleansed from Kyrenia, and they smiled at her description of the Annan plan as "fair and balanced." They are accustomed to American officialdom's repeating such talking points -- and repeating them over and over -- and wondered if she had deliberately adapted the Fox News slogan. There's no question about it: The State Department is annoyed with the Republic of Cyprus for rejecting Kofi Annan's confusing proposal. In truth, many Greek Cypriots were conflicted about the plan: While they fervently wish to see their island reunified, and the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities politically reconciled, they could not get past the dangerous flaws, and the obvious concessions to the Turkish military, in the Annan formula. The U.N. plan would have allowed the Turkish army to remain on Cyprus indefinitely, without security guarantees for the Greek majority. It would have forced Cypriot taxpayers to subsidize the cost of repairing the damage from the Turkish invasion, and decades of plunder and neglect by a foreign invader. It would have barred Greek Cypriots from traveling in parts of their own country, or seeking compensation for stolen property. And on and on. To be sure, American impatience is not grounded in American hostility to the Republic of Cyprus. It could hardly be so: Cyprus is a democratic member of the European Union, historically friendly to the United States, a faithful ally in the war on terrorism. American impatience is caused by the fact that Cyprus is a thorn in the side of Turkey, and America's strategic relationship with Turkey supersedes all else in the region. This may not be practical, and it is certainly unwise; but it is a fact of life that the Cypriots understand, and sadly accept. Because Turkey is ambitious to join the European Union, and because the United States is Turkey's foremost advocate for membership, the United States needs the Cyprus problem to go away. Turkey cannot join the EU so long as its army illegally occupies one-third of the territory of an EU member, and so Washington is anxious to "solve" the problem by any means necessary. Of course, the United States would have rightfully objected to the provisions of the Annan plan applied to, say, nearby Israel, or our own territory; but the Greek Cypriots were expected to take a deep breath and swallow their medicine. Kennedy, and her successors, can return to Cyprus again and again to pronounce the Annan plan "fair and balanced," but repeating such slogans doesn't make them true. Can American policy ever be expected to move from accommodation of the Turkish military to embracing the U.S. national interest? Maybe. The challenge for Cyprus is that it is universally perceived as a problem when, in fact, it constitutes an opportunity for the United States and the European Union. Cyprus sits at the easternmost limits of Europe in the Mediterranean, but its culture is indisputably European. A visiting American feels comfortable in Cyprus, in familiar (if exotic) surroundings. It is also a crossroads society, and has been for centuries: A mixture of Christian and Muslim, a variety of disparate nationalities, astride the trade routes of the classical world and the modern Middle East. The fact that these various streams have flowed together harmoniously for so long, and within a lively democracy and conspicuously prosperous economy, is not insignificant. Americans talk about secular Turkey as a beacon for the Muslim world, and a bridge between East and West. But no Arab looks to Turkey as a model for anything, except for things to avoid; and Turkey's neighbors are united in disdain for the Ankara regime. Cyprus, by contrast, is everything American policymakers claim for Turkey -- but without the military junta, human-rights abuses and record of genocide. If Kennedy and her colleagues seek a model multicultural society in the region, planted firmly in the democratic West, but circulating comfortably throughout the Middle East, they need look no further than Cyprus. http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artma...cle_5009.shtml |
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