Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Ayla Jean Yackley Reuters
ISTANBUL: NATO member Turkey said Monday it opposed growing international calls to impose a no-fly zone over Libya, saying such operation would be unhelpful and fraught with risk.
“Military intervention by NATO in Libya or any other country would be totally counter-productive,” Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, whose country is the only Muslim member of NATO, told an international forum in Istanbul. Washington has said any decision to impose a no-fly zone is a matter for the United Nations and should not be a U.S.-led initiative.
But Erdogan said foreign interventions, especially military ones, had in the past only deepened the problems. “We need to give the Libyan people permission to chart their own course,” he said.
NATO needs to make decisions by consensus. In the event of a vote on a military intervention, Turkey could decide to abstain, which means Ankara would not actually block it. Non-Arab Turkey had projects worth more than $15 billion in Libya.
Analysts said business interests, along with Erdogan’s apprehension over the implications of backing a Western-led intervention in the region three months before parliamentary elections in Turkey, could be behind Ankara’s opposition.
“Erdogan is unsure about the ultimate victor of the revolt in Libya and he might be hedging his bets,” Fadi Hakura, an associate fellow at the London-based Chatham House said. Erdogan, who last year received a human rights award from Moammar Gadhafi, told Al-Arabiya television in an interview broadcast Monday he had told Gadhafi he should name a president with popular support as a way to end Libya’s crisis.
Erdogan told the channel he expected Gadhafi, who has been in power for more than four decades, to take “positive steps in this direction.” “I called Gadhafi three times and I proposed to him that all the while he says that he is not a president, that he nominates someone picked by him who enjoys the support of the Libyan people to be the president for the coming period,” Erdogan said.
Turkey, a Muslim democracy with a secular constitution, has been cited as a model for the volatile region. Speaking to the same international forum, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Ankara supported change in the region, but through a peaceful path.
“Change is necessary but peaceful change being the method is also necessary. It should not be a war among brothers that creates new tensions that evolves into a blood feud,” he said.
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