Remarks by Obama and Erdogan After Their Meeting

Below is the transcript of the remarks made by President Obama and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan following their meeting on Dec. 7 in D.C. The sections related to Turkey-Armenia relations are bolded.

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  I want to extend the warmest of welcomes to Prime Minister Erdogan.  I’m glad that I, personally, and the American people have a chance to reciprocate the wonderful hospitality that was extended to me when I visited Turkey in April.

President Barack Obama talks with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey in the Oval Office, Dec. 7, 2009. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)
President Barack Obama talks with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey in the Oval Office, Dec. 7, 2009. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

As I said when I had the great honor of addressing the Turkish Parliament in Ankara, I am strongly committed to creating the best possible relationship between Turkey and the United States.

Turkey is a NATO ally, which means that we are pledged to defend each other.  There are strong ties between our countries as a consequence of the Turkish American community that has been established here.  We have had the opportunity to work together during this recent financial crisis, given Turkey’s role as a member of the G20.  And given Turkey’s history as a secular democratic state that respects the rule of law, but is also a majority Muslim nation, it plays a critical role I think in helping to shape mutual understanding and stability and peace not only in its neighborhood but around the world.

During the course of our discussions here, we’ve had the opportunity to survey a wide range of issues that both the United States and Turkey are concerned about.  I thanked Prime Minister Erdogan and the Turkish people for their outstanding contributions to stabilizing Afghanistan.  We discussed our joint role in helping Iraq achieve the kind of independence and prosperity that I think has been advanced as a consequence of the election law finally being passed over the weekend.

We discussed issues of regional peace, and I indicated to the Prime Minister how important it is to resolve the issue of Iran’s nuclear capacity in a way that allows Iran to pursue peaceful nuclear energy but provides assurances that it will abide by international rules and norms, and I believe that Turkey can be an important player in trying to move Iran in that direction.

And we discussed the continuing role that we can play as NATO allies in strengthening Turkey’s profile within NATO and coordinating more effectively on critical issues like missile defense.

I also congratulated the Prime Minister on some courageous steps that he has taken around the issue of normalizing Turkish/Armenian relations, and encouraged him to continue to move forward along this path.

We reaffirmed the shared commitment to defeat terrorist activity regardless of where it occurs.  I expressed condolences to the Prime Minister and the Turkish people for the recent terrorist attack that was taken there and pledged U.S. support in trying to bring the perpetrators of this violence to justice.

And finally, I complimented the Prime Minister for the steps that he’s taken, often very difficult steps, in reintegrating religious minorities and ethnic minorities within Turkey into the democratic and political process, and indicated to him that we want to be as supportive as possible in further steps that he can take, for example, assuring the continuation of the Halki Seminary and addressing the vital needs of continuing the ecumenical patriarchy within Turkey.

Over all, just to summarize, I am incredibly optimistic about the prospect of stronger and stronger ties between the United States and Turkey that will be based not only on our NATO relationship, our military-to-military relationship, our strategic relationship, but also increasing economic ties.

And one of the concrete outcomes of this trip is to follow through on discussions that I had with both Prime Minister Erdogan and President Gul in Turkey to stand up a strategic working group around economic issues and improving commercial ties.  That will be launched with the participation of Secretary of Commerce Locke and our U.S. Trade Representative Ambassador Ron Kirk, along with Turkish counterparts.  And we think that there is enormous potential for us to grow trade and commercial ties between the two countries.

Turkey is a great country.  It is growing in influence around the world.  And I am pleased that America can call Turkey a friend, and I’m pleased that I’m able to call Prime Minister Erdogan personally a friend.  I’m grateful for his trip here and look forward to many years of collaboration with him to observe both the prosperity of the American people and the Turkish people.

Thank you.

PRIME MINISTER ERDOGAN:  (As translated.)  Thank you very much.  I’m very grateful for the hospitality that both myself and my delegation have been shown since our arrival here.  And I would like to once again express my thanks for that hospitality.

The fact that the President visited Turkey on his first overseas trip and that he described and characterized Turkish-U.S. relations as a model partnership has been very important for us politically and in the process that we all look forward to in the future as well.  And important steps are now being taken in order to continue to build on our bilateral relations so as to give greater meaning to the term “model partnership.”
Of course, there are many sides to the development of this relationship — be it in the economic area, in the areas of science, art, technology, political areas and military areas.

We have also appointed two people from our side to act as counterparts in order to liaise with their American counterparts to continue on this process.  Those two people are the Deputy Prime Minister, Mr. Ali Babacan; and the Minister of State responsible for economic affairs, Mr. Zafer Caglayan on the Turkish side.  I do believe that this group is going to work to take the Turkish-American relations forward, not just in the economic area, but in all areas in general.

We, of course, have — we take joint steps on regional issues.  This is in the Middle East, in Iraq, with respect to the Iranian nuclear program.  We continue to have joint activity in Afghanistan, and the Turkish armed forces have taken over the command of the forces there for a third time with the additional support that we have sent to Afghanistan in the last couple of months.  And there are steps that we have taken with respect to training activity and other activities in the context of provisional reconstruction teams, and we continue on that.  We’ve had an opportunity to continue discussing those issues during our visit here.

Another important area, of course, is energy.  Turkey is a transit country for energy issues.  And the agreement has been signed for Nabucco and we are ready to take some important steps with respect to Nabucco.

We continue to talk with Azerbaijan.  I do believe that positive progress will be made in this area.  In addition to Azerbaijan, of course, there is the importance of companies like Statoil, Total, and British Petroleum and others.

We have also discussed relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which is of great importance.  This is important in the context of Turkish-Armenian relations.  We have discussed the Minsk Group and what the Minsk Group can do — the United States, Russia, and France  — to add more impetus to that process.  I can say that to have more impetus in the Minsk process is going to have a very positive impact on the overall process, because the normalization process between Turkey and Armenia is very much related to these issues.  As the administration in Turkey, we are determined to move forward in this area.   

Another important issue with respect for us in Turkey is the fight against terrorism.  And there was a statement that was made in this very room on the 5th of November 2007, which was very important in that context, because at the time we had declared the separatist terrorist organization as the common enemy of the United States, Turkey, and Iraq, because terrorism is the enemy of all mankind.

Our sensitivity and response to terrorism is what we have displayed when the twin towers were hit here in the United States.  Wherever a terrorist attack takes place our reaction is always the same, because terrorism does not have a religion — a homeland.  They have no homeland, no religion whatsoever.     

We have also had opportunity to discuss what we can do jointly in the region with regard to nuclear programs.  We as Turkey stand ready to do whatever we can to ensure a diplomatic solution to the nuclear issue in our region.  And we stand ready as Turkey to do whatever we can do with respect to relations between Israel and the Palestinians, and Israel and Syria, because I do believe that, first and foremost, the United States, too, has important responsibility in trying to achieve global peace.

And we, too, must lend all kinds of support that we can in our regions and — in our respective regions and in the world in general in trying to achieve global peace, because this is not the time to make enemies, it’s the time to make friends.  And I believe that we must move hand in hand towards a bright future.

Thank you once again.

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Thank you.

All right, where’s Ben Feller?  There you are.

Q    Thank you sir.  I’d like to ask you briefly about a domestic issue, that being the economy, heading to your speech tomorrow.  Do you support the use of federal bailout money to fund job creation programs?  Is that an appropriate use of that money?  Is that something that you plan to support tomorrow?

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  You know, Ben, it would be a mistake for me to step on my speech tomorrow by giving you the headline today.

Q    Not that big a mistake.  (Laughter.)

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  But let me speak generally about what we’ve seen.  On Friday we got the best jobs report that we’ve gotten in a very long time.  And it significantly beat expectations.  At minimum, it showed that for all practical purposes, we’ve stopped losing jobs.  And that’s consistent with the fact that in the third quarter we saw the economy grow.

My first job when I came into office was to make sure that we got the financial crisis under control and that we tried to limit the devastating effects that it was having on the real economy.  We have had a very tough year, and we’ve lost millions of jobs.  But at least now we are moving in the right direction.

What my speech tomorrow will focus on is the fact that having gotten the financial crisis under control.  Having finally moved into positive territory when it comes to economic growth, our biggest challenge now is making sure that job growth matches up with economic growth.  And what we’ve seen is, is that companies shed jobs very quickly, partly induced by the panic of what was happening on Wall Street, and they are still tentative about hiring back all those people who were laid off.  Also what we’re seeing is some long-term trends where companies are becoming so efficient in terms of productivity that they may feel that they can produce the same amount of goods or services without as many employees.

So those present some particular challenges, given the fact that we lost over 3 million jobs just in the first quarter of this year before any of the steps we took had a chance to take effect.

With respect to TARP specifically, I think you saw stories today and you’ve seen stories over the last several weeks that TARP has turned out to be much cheaper than we had expected, although not cheap.  It means that some of that money can be devoted to deficit reduction.  And the question is are there selective approaches that are consistent with the original goals of TARP — for example, making sure that small businesses are still getting lending — that would be appropriate in accelerating job growth?

And I will be addressing that tomorrow.  But I do think that, although we’ve stabilized the financial system, one of the problems that we’re still seeing all the time — and I heard about it when it was in Allentown just this past week — was the fact that small businesses and some medium-sized businesses are still feeling a huge credit crunch.  They cannot get the loans that they need to make capital investments that would allow them to then expand employment.  And so that’s a particular area where we might be able to make a difference.

Is there somebody in the Turkish delegation that wants to call on a reporter?

Q    Mr. President, is there any new and concrete U.S. action plan for disarmament and the elimination of the PKK terror organization in northern Iraq?  Thank you, sir.

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, what the Prime Minister and I have discussed is coordinating closely in dealing with the problem of the PKK.  We have stated before and I have reaffirmed since I came into office that the United States considers PKK a terrorist organization, and that the threat that it poses not only in Turkey but also in Iraq is one that is of deep concern.  And as NATO allies, we are bound to help each other defend our territories.  More broadly, I think that it is important for us to have a consistent position with respect to terrorism wherever it takes place.

So we discussed how we can coordinate militarily.  I will tell you that with respect to the issue of the PKK, I think that the steps that the Prime Minister has taken in being inclusive towards the Kurdish community in Turkey is very helpful, because one of the things we understand is, is that terrorism cannot just be dealt with militarily; there is also social and political components to it that have to be recognized.

With respect to Iraq, I think the degree to which the Kurdish population within Iraq feels effectively represented within the central government in Baghdad, to the extent that we can resolve some long-term pressing issues like Kirkuk, the more I think that Kurds will recognize that their interests are not in supporting any kind of military activity but rather in working through conflicts politically, in a way that allows everybody to be prosperous.  And that’s the kind of process that we would encourage.

Okay?  Thank you very much, everybody.  Happy holidays.

10 Comments

  1.          Politicians
        Before my birth
           Did and still
                  Do

    Possess imperative whispers
             Qualified to mystify
                The laymen’s
                      Crew
    Teaching selves to sink
             Blood in ink
              Vanishing
              Marchers
                 Steps
        Showing the sky
          Still Shines
             Bright
               Blue
               Says,
    Sylva-MD-Poetry

     

  2. As you see, Turkey is very important strategic partner of US.  US  is strongly supporting Turkish-Armenian protocol. In addition Turkey won’t ratified protocol without any progress regarding Nagorno-Karabakh problem. Obama will pressure Armenia for a withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh.

  3. Hye, the Turk is pursuing their Second Genocide, now in the 21st century, of the Kurds… labels them as ‘terrorists’ in order to accomplish this Genocide of the Kurds… right under our noses! Manooshag

  4. Obama should pressure Turkey to withdraw from occupied Cyprus, occupied Kurdistan, occupied Greece and occupied Armenia. PKK is a national liberation movement, like the liberation movement of the USA in late 1700s.
    Turkey is a terrorist state, Americans know this, but for now, and because of oil, they are keeping quiet. Once Turkish oil is done with, trust me alibaba, your Turkey will be worth pennies. Don’t be arrogant, everything has its place and time. Regretably, it is your time now, but our time is very near indeed.
    Turkey is the biggest terrorist state in the world, and Erdogan was a former terrorist(British intelligence knew about Erdogans terrorist past, sitting on the floor in front of Hekmetyar like a good student, and supplying Hekmetyar with money). If alibaba does not remember Erdogans past, he should start investigating Erdogan.

  5. Ferhat,
    Two things to keep in mind; There can be no peace without justice and the peoples of anatolia inside and outside of so called turkey have to liberate Anatolia themselves. It can never be done by others. So called turkey must be balkanized. turkey must be carved into 12 or 13 states. This is to disapate power. Transparent democracy and rule of law must be forcefully enacted from the bottom up. Whatever national wealth there is, shall be divided amongst all. Not like what happened during the collapse of the Soviet Union. Cultural properties of all ehtnic groups must be returned to their rightful owners even if the building was torn down and another cultural building was put in its place. All ethnic groups must have their old original villages returned to them. All people should be free to come out of hiding and  reclaim their rightful ethnicities. Every Anatolian should be completely free and be unthreaten if he/she choses to change their religion. Anatolia shall be a checkerboard federation. Land that is held by one ethnicity can not be sold or given to different ethnicity. Whatever the common standards of individual rights the EU maintains we shall maintain. The kurdish tribes that participated in both the multiple ehtnic genocides of Anatolia and assisting the turks throughout the time of the republic must move to the city of Ankara and live only in the city of Ankara. Let their trouble making be a municiple issue not a transnational headache. Every village and every same ethnicity village cluster and every same ethnicity valley shall have sovereignty. This is possible. we may be David against a Goliath but working together we can bring down the giant, have justice, peace and prosperity equally for all regardless of religion or ethnicity.  

  6. The Blind is leading another Blind — Armenians, Kurds, Greeks, Assyrians are dying. Where is the Lord Almighty?

  7. It is amazing how selective issues become suddenly very important, such as NK. What happened to the 40.000+ Turkish troops that invaded and are still occupying Cyprus for the past 35 years and no progress on negotiations. Turkey should solve her problems first before lecturing others to do so. Playing the part of a regional superpower is fine but it is only a play and will end soon.

  8. This is increditble.  If Obama ever pushes for Armenia to back up from Nagorno-Karabakh, Artsakh; Armenians all around the world must demand that Turkey backs off from Cyprus.  Turkey had no business in Cyrprus to begin with.  However Nagorno-Karabakh, Artsakh was our homeland for thousands of years; along with all of Western Armenia.  It’s not enough Turkey annihilated most of their Armenian population in Turkey after stealing all our lands and pushed us out by annihilating us, till today they are denying the Armenian Genocide, and denial is the continuation of the Genocide.  Then Turkey is strongly pushing Armenia’s president to forfeit Turkey’s illegal Kars Treaty in the form of the so called Protocols of today and demanding in the Protocols that Armenia accepts their stolen territories from Armenians.  Armenians around the globe MUST NOT digest all these injustices any longer.  We must never let United States, Turkey or any others to push us out of our historical lands!

  9. Hye, In addition to Turkey leaderships being, to this day, still in the Ottoman mode of thinking… Turks today are pursuing more Turkish modes – PLOYS…  one after another, over and over, dishonestly, distracting other nations in the attempt to appear as if Turks have the mentality/experience of many years,  to right the wrongs of the world today!
         Turks shall look into their own mirrors – and clean out all the vile treatments of  even their own Turkish citizens… ready to ‘right’ the world… but so many ‘wrongs’ still in Turkey… 
         This includes the Second Genocide being perpetrated for these many years against their Kurdish citizens… First Genocide of  the Armenians in the 19th/20th centuries (Turkey mentally incapable of accepting their own hisory/leaderships guilt, to this day) and currently,  their Second Genocide (since 20th century and into the 21st century)  perpetrated against their own Kurdish citizens and wherever else  Kurds may be…
         And why not?  Humanity the world over does nothing to the Genocide perpetrators – howsomever, the victims… the survivors where is the justice for them?  Today, perpetrator Turk continues, as if nothing every happened!  But yet, spends millions upon millions to deny the Armenian Genocide!  Even comes to the United States of America and politically, pulls the wool over our president/his advisors eyes -and more, tells USA what USA shall do…  What does the Turk hold over others to gain the convoluted attention it doesn’t deserve? 
         Yet, the USA abides by Turks’ morality (any?) sadly, as the bones of the more than 1,500,000 Armenian victims – unburied – lie across their Armenian homeland awaiting humanity’s efforts for justice – for all the perpetrators’ facing justice – thus to end of the cycle of Genocides.
         It seems today’s nations – world over, will pursue criminals..l whether murderers, rapists, kidnappers,  thieves who steal from homes, child abusers,  and so many more crimes until the perpetrator is located, the perpetrator is brought to the local courts, and justice is served. 
         Somehow, leaderships – the world over, even in the most advanced civilizations of today, have not reached that level of civilization – to come together – to take on ANY nation (whether civilizied OR uncivilized),  or whether an ‘ally’ (of the moment) who have dared to terrorize, slaughter, murder, rape, kidnap women and children, and THEN (Turkey) dares to deny the GENOCIDE OF A NATION, wherever, whenever, WHOMEVER – even so-called ‘allies’!  Hence, millions of innocents who never have their ‘day in court’… never know justice  served… by the politics of the moments – MORALITY denied – by so-call civilized leaderships… today, now the 21st century. 
         Hence Armenian Genocide is not ended, Turkey still in pursuit to crush Armenia,  1915-2009!
    Manooshag

  10. I saw Mr. Erdogan interview on Charlie Rose. Mr. Rose asked what was his (Erdogan) stand on Ahmadinjad Holocaust Denial. When Erdogan answered that question, turkish  genocide denial policy was written all over his face. There was no question bout any armenian issue until at the last minute of the interview when Erdogan himself told Charlie Rose “I will take this opportunity being on tv” and recited the same story about the turkish archives being open and his obvious turkish official stance about the Armenian Genocide never happened. The donkey is showing his tail nothing more and everyone who understands a little history and politics can see this. The Armenians are in a never ending saga of pursuit of Justice and genocide recognition as longest the Turkish governments and their deep state act as donkeys.  Unfortunately,  President Obama is telling the truth about the Americans and their policy by underlining the importance of Turkey being a strategic partner but President Obama is lying to the world with his silence and denial of the Armenian Genocide.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*