Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
02ANKARA8381
2002-11-18 16:27:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Ankara
Cable title:  

THE NEW GOVERNMENT'S CORE ECONOMIC TEAM

Tags:  ECON PINR PREL TU 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ANKARA 008381 

SIPDIS


STATE FOR EUR/SE, EB/IFD/OMA AND E
TREASURY FOR OASIA - MILLS AND GUNARATNE
STATE PASS USTR - NOVELLI AND BIRDSEY


E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/18/2010
TAGS: ECON PINR PREL TU
SUBJECT: THE NEW GOVERNMENT'S CORE ECONOMIC TEAM

REF: ANKARA 6259


Classified by Econ Counselor Scot Marciel for reasons 1.5 (b,
d).


C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ANKARA 008381

SIPDIS


STATE FOR EUR/SE, EB/IFD/OMA AND E
TREASURY FOR OASIA - MILLS AND GUNARATNE
STATE PASS USTR - NOVELLI AND BIRDSEY


E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/18/2010
TAGS: ECON PINR PREL TU
SUBJECT: THE NEW GOVERNMENT'S CORE ECONOMIC TEAM

REF: ANKARA 6259


Classified by Econ Counselor Scot Marciel for reasons 1.5 (b,
d).



1. (C) The new Government Cabinet was announced by Prime
Minister Abdullah Gul, following his meeting with President
Sezer November 18. Following are post's informal
biographical notes on several of the likely key economic
players. When asked at the press conference "who will be the
economy minister," Gul was careful to state that the detailed
portfolios have not yet been determined. But it appears
likely that DPM Sener will be in charge of economic affairs,
with State Minister Babacan overseeing the Treasury, and
State Minister Tuzmen overseeing Foreign Trade. Because AK
is reducing the number of ministries (from 38 to 24),these
positions may not correspond exactly to existing ministerial
positions.


Deputy Prime Minister Abdullatif Sener
--------------



2. (U) Sener was the AK Party's Chief of Operations, and is
one of three deputy ministers. He served as Finance Minister
in 1996-97 under the Refah Yol Government. Born in 1954, he
has a BA from Ankara University's elite Political Science
faculty in 1977, a PhD in economics from Ankara's Gazi
University, and served on the economic faculty of Ankara's
Hacetepe University in the 1980's, rising to the post of
Assistant Dean.



3. (C) Sener, in our initial meeting with him, projected
confidence in AK's mandate and in his ability to get things
done within the party. He can sometimes takes a hard line,
but then shows flexibility in negotiations. He stressed that
Turkey needed to strengthen its engagement with the outside
world, including the international financial community. He
speaks little to no English, and comes from the Chechen
ethnic group in Turkey (his family, likes thousands of
others, immigrated to Turkey from the Caucasus in the late
19th century).


State Minister Ali Babacan
--------------



4. (C) Babacan was Coordinator of AK's Economic Committee,
and was in charge of the party's outreach to the
international financial community. He led the party's early

October "road show" to Frankfurt, London and Europe, and
initiated several pre-election meetings with IMF resrep (AK
was the only political party to meet with IMF.) Babacan told
us he wrote the economic sections of the party's platform
(see www.akparti.org.tr). He acted as press spin control for
some pre and post-"mis-statements" by other AK figures. He
is considered the most "market friendly" figure for the
markets, and is likely to get the Treasury portfolio.



5. (U) Born in 1967, Babacan is the youngest member of the
Cabinet. He has an MBA in marketing from Northwestern
University (1992),and an industrial engineering degree from
Ankara's Middle East Technical University (1989). He worked
for a bank consulting firm, QRM, Inc. in Chicago, from
1992-94. Since 1994, he has run the family wholesale textile
business in Ankara. He has also acted as an advisor to the
Mayor of Ankara Gokcek, helping to arrange project financing.
He speaks fluent English.



6. (C) In our frequent meetings with Babacan since August,
we are impressed with his general intelligence, knowledge of
financial markets and economic fundamentals. But, as banking
and market contacts have many times reiterated, Babacan has
no experience managing an economic reform program. His lack
of experience can be overcome by working closely with the
Turkish Treasury's experienced staff and the IMF. But his
degree of freedom and ability to make policy will be an
initial question mark, given AK's centralized process of
decision-making.


State Minister Kursad Tuzmen
--------------



7. (C) Tuzmen was elected an AK Party MP from Gaziantep in
the November elections, but is best known to Washington
interlocutors as the former Undersecretary of Foreign Trade.
In that position, he was considered close to the prior
government's coalition partner MHP, though he clashed
frequently with his State Minister Tuncay Toskay. He is a
strong, even vociferous advocate of Turkish industry, and has
in the past brought industry reps into bilateral U.S.-Turkey
meetings. Tuzmen has a forceful personality, and often is
combative. As Foreign Trade U/S, he demonstrated keen
interest in promoting trade with Iraq, and led several
Turkish business delegations to Baghdad.



8. (U) Tuzmen rose up in the Foreign Trade Undersecretariat
bureaucracy, becoming a director general of Free Zones, and
then Deputy Undersecretary. For his work on behalf of the
duty free zone businesses, he was awarded "Bureaucrat of the
Year" by a Turkish business magazine in 2001. He had earlier
served as an expert on duty free zones in the State Planning
Organization. Tuzmen speaks English, with a BS in management
from the Middle East Technical University and an MBA from the
Universitiy of Illinois.


Minister of Industry and Commerce Ali Coskun
--------------



9. (C) Ali Coskun, born in 1939, is AK's Vice Chairman of
Economic Affairs and a well known, pro-Islamist Istanbul
businessman. In frequent meetings beginning in August, he
strikes us as an "old school" Turkish businessman who sees
the state's role in the economy as largely to subsidize
private industry, through the traditional channels of
below-market loans for exports and other means. He opposed
the establishment of the independent banking board BRSA in
2000, and has continued to criticize it. At the same time,
he deferred in our meetings to other AK figures like Babacan,
younger than him, who had differing ideas. His ministerial
job as an advocate for industry and the "real sector" may not
grant him much control over policy, which is good. He is not
dogmatic, and has a good sense of humor.



10. (U) Coskun is a former ANAP supporter, who after the
death of President Ozal joined Refah. He was elected to
parliament first as a Refah deputy from Istanbul and then
from the Refah successor Fazilet Party. He has served as an
executive of several semi-official business associations: a
founding member of the Foreign Economic Relations Board
(DEIK); its U.S. branch, the Turkish American Business
Association (TABA); and the Union of Chambers of Commerce of
Islamic Countries. He owns several ceramic tile factories
in Istanbul. His other main business was as Chairman of an
Islamic bank - Ihlas Finans - which went bankrupt in February

2001.


Minister of Energy Hilmi Guler
--------------



11. (C) Guler has been head of AK's research and development
group. Born in 1949, he graduated from Ankara's Middle East
Technical University with a degree in metallurgical
engineering. He worked in the Turkish Aircraft Industry as a
project engineer, and later served on the boards of several
public sector entities, including TUBITAK (Turkish Scientific
and Technical Research Organization),IGDAS (the Istanbul Gas
Distribution Company) and Erdemir (the state-owned steel
giant),and Etibank (the former state bank mandated to
support the mining industry, later privatized and now
bankrupt). In Embassy's initial meetings, Guler struck us
as reasonable and pragmatic.


Minister of Finance Kemal Unakitan
--------------



12. (U) Unakitan is a relative unknown with whom Embassy has
never met. He was named at the last-minute to replace Tayyip
Erdogan as an Istanbul parliamentary candidate when Erdogan
was prohibited from running. We have heard that he worked
with Erdogan in a financial capacity in the Istanbul
municipality. He worked as a Finance Ministry auditor, and
then served as President of Turkey's Pulp and Paper
Association under Prime Minister Demirel in 1978. He has
previously served as a board member of the Islamic bank
Al-Baraka Turk, and currently sits on the board of Family
Finans, previously known as Feisal Finans (an Islamic bank
partly owned by Saudis).
PEARSON