The US has
designated Tunisia a major non-NATO ally, promising enhanced military
cooperation. Tunisia, the starting point for the Arab Spring, faces growing
security threats - especially from a destabilized Libya.
Deutsche Welle, 21 May 2015
President
Barack Obama on Tuesday said Washington intended to confer the special status
to Tunisia because of the country's efforts at a transformation to democracy.
Obama said
the move should take place "in recognition of our shared values, Tunisia's
democratic gains, and our growing security and counterterrorism
cooperation."
Tunisia is
often cited as being starting point for the 2011 Arab Spring, after a
disaffected fruit seller set himself alight.
The North
African country has held elections, and Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebsi in
December became the first democratically elected leader in Tunisia's 60-year
history.
Risk of
power vacuum
However,
the country faces rising security threats, and in March suffered an attack -
claimed by "Islamic State" (IS) - on the Bardo National Museum that
killed 21 tourists.
The US
president stressed the importance of stabilizing neighboring Libya "so
that we don't have a failed state and a power vacuum that ends up infecting the
situation in Tunisia as well," Obama said.
The US
president, playing host to Essebsi at the White House Oval Office, said the US
would offer short-term aid so Tunisia could complete economic reforms.
"At
this critical time in world history, we think it's very important for us to
continue to expand the economic assistance that we're providing so that
ordinary Tunisians can feel the concrete benefits of a change to a more open
and competitive economy," Obama told reporters.
'Long path
ahead'
Essebsi
told reporters that his country had "a long way ahead" to transform
its economy and said that it needed US support. "The democratic process is
always vulnerable and threatened by chaos, by parties that do not believe in
democracy," Essebsi said, via a translator.
While major
non-NATO ally status would also mean a greater sharing of military technology
and possible ease of restrictions on weapons exports, it would not guarantee US
assistance if Tunisia were to be attacked from outside.
Other
countries with the designation include Afghanistan, Argentina, Australia,
Bahrain, Egypt, Israel, Japan, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco, New Zealand, Pakistan,
the Philippines, Thailand and Korea.
rc/bw (dpa, AFP, Reuters)

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