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  • Preventing Turkey's Popular Slide Away From The West

    PREVENTING TURKEY'S POPULAR SLIDE AWAY FROM THE WEST
    By Soner Cagaptay

    Washington Institute for Near East Policy, DC
    April 12 2006

    Iran's nuclear program presents one more issue on which Washington sees
    Middle East developments in a different light than does the Justice
    and Development Party (AKP) government in Turkey. Since coming to
    power in November 2002, AKP leaders have pursued rapprochement with
    Damascus and enhanced dialogue with Iran. In March 2006, the AKP
    welcomed Hamas leaders in Ankara. It is surprising that Turkey,
    a traditional bastion of Western policies in the Middle East, is
    promoting close ties with anti-Western actors that have hurt Turkey
    for decades-Syria provided safe haven to the terrorist Kurdistan
    Workers Party (PKK) and Iran supported the PKK and radical Islamist
    terrorists. Why do the Turkish people not resent such policies?

    The Iraq war and the U.S. agenda for political transformation in the
    Middle East have clashed with the Turkish people's desire to preserve
    the Middle Eastern political landscape. What is more, U.S. inaction
    against the PKK's Qandil enclave in Northern Iraq is angering most
    Turks in the way Syrian and Iranian support for the PKK upset them
    in the 1990s. Turkish confusion and anger toward the United States
    stands in sharp contrast with the improved image of Syria and Iran
    in Turkey. Meanwhile, with AKP discussing Middle Eastern politics
    in terms of Islamic codes, some Turks now identify with the region
    through Islam and not their national identity. The challenge for
    Washington is to find a way to prevent Turkey's popular slide away
    from the United States.

    Further Problems with the EU

    Anti-Western sentiments in Turkey are exacerbated by problems with
    the European Union (EU). Even though Turkey's EU negotiations will
    take up to a decade and do not promise membership, objections to
    Turkey are already rising in the EU. In capitals such as Paris,
    opinionmakers are opposing Turkey's membership, describing the country
    is "non-European." With Cyprus, a Middle Eastern island in the EU,
    Turks see this argument referring not to Turkey's geography, but to
    its dominant Muslim faith.

    An important example of Turkey being treated differently than other
    applicants is the EU's embrace of a French plan to introduce references
    to human rights, indicating Turkey's combustive Kurdish question, into
    the "Chapter on Education and Culture," the first of the thirty-five
    chapters of the Turkish-EU accession talks. While this chapter has
    had a technical approach to educational and cultural issues in case
    of previous accession countries, it is evolving into a political
    one for Turkey, demanding more from Ankara than from previous EU
    candidate states.

    The problems in Turkish-EU relations will be exacerbated by the PKK's
    use of terror to coerce Turkey into talks. Over the past two weeks,
    the PKK has launched violent demonstrations in Turkey, destroying
    businesses that refuse its order for social strike, killing people,
    and firebombing public buses in Istanbul. The PKK is able to operate
    thanks to a vast financial, recruitment and propaganda base inside the
    EU. For instance, on March 31, the Turkish daily Hurriyet reported
    that the PKK's current violent initiative is being carried out with
    daily directives from Danish-based Roj TV. EU stipulations that
    "Turkey should do more on the Kurdish issue" sound insincere to Turks
    when PKK fronts are thriving inside Europe.

    European pusillanimity against the PKK angers the wider Turkish
    public, especially since the Kurdish nationalist view represents a
    minority opinion among Turkey's Kurds. In the twelve overwhelmingly
    Kurdish-populated provinces in southeastern Turkey, Kurdish nationalist
    Democratic People's Party (DEHAP) received only 30 percent of the vote
    in the last elections, while in western Turkey, home to over half of
    Turkey's Kurds, support for DEHAP barely exceeds one percent. Even
    though it represents a minority opinion among Turkish Kurds, the
    PKK dominates the Kurdish nationalist movement, including DEHAP (now
    called Democratic Society Party DTP), through the elimination of any
    peaceful alternatives.

    U.S. Options

    Even if Turkey manages the oncoming crisis with the EU, an anti-EU
    and anti-Western backlash will nevertheless follow, with Turks blaming
    the EU for treating them with religious bias. With even the best-case
    scenario offering a bleak picture, Washington can take a number of
    steps to counter the erosion of Turkey's longstanding pro-Western
    foreign policy orientation, and even the prospect of Turkey turning
    into an anti-Western yet modern state, in the mold of Malaysia:

    Convey to the Turkish public that Turkey's interests lie in the
    Western world. Through high-level meetings, the best way of getting
    opinions across to the Turkish elite, and through public diplomacy,
    Washington should tell Turks that Turkey belongs to the West and that
    the United States and Turkey share secular democratic values and an
    interest in fighting terrorism. In terms of public diplomacy efforts,
    eliminating the Voice of America's Turkish services, as proposed in the
    2007 budget, would be dangerous at a time when al-Jazeera has plans
    to start a Turkish broadcast. Washington should also identify areas
    of common interest to convince Turkey's public of the advantages
    of cooperation with the United States. These include new energy
    transportation projects from the Caspian basin; U.S. involvement in
    ending Armenian occupation of Azerbaijani territory, a major concern
    for the Turkish public; and a free trade agreement to build the
    economic pillar of bilateral ties and to strengthen business lobbies
    for better relations.

    Deal with the PKK. U.S. action against the PKK is a must for winning
    Turkish confidence. Turkish frustration with lack of U.S. action
    against the PKK's Qandil enclave in Iraq has mounted in the aftermath
    of recent PKK violence. Even public officials and the liberal press
    now suggest that Washington supports the PKK. If a full-scale battle
    against the group is not possible before Iraq is more fully stabilized,
    the detention or elimination of the group's leadership in Iraq would
    be the best way to pacify the PKK and gain Turkish trust.

    As a hierarchical organization, the PKK loses its tactical abilities
    when it loses its leadership. That was the case in 1999 when PKK
    leader Abdullah Ocalan was captured with U.S assistance-and thanks
    to Ankara giving credit to Washington for its efforts, Turkish public
    opinion embraced the United States as a result.

    Take steps on Cyprus. The Cyprus issue ought to be taken off the
    table before it crashes Turkish-EU relations, damaging the anchor that
    ties Turkey to the West. Washington might appoint a senior diplomat
    with international visibility to build momentum toward a UN-supported
    solution of the problem. Increased political, cultural, and commercial
    contacts with Turkish Cypriots would undercut the confidence of the
    uncompromising Greek Cypriot leadership that the current stalemate
    can be prolonged indefinitely.

    Move Turkey's EU process. Washington should continue its closed-door
    diplomacy to emphasize to European leaders the added value of Ankara's
    membership on issues such as demographics, energy, and strategic
    concerns. Washington could also bring to fruition ongoing collaboration
    with European intelligence bodies, lawmakers, and police forces
    against PKK structures in Europe. This step would not only disarm a
    vector of crisis in Turkish-EU relations, but also, when recognized
    by the Turkish government, improve America's standing in Turkey.

    What Ankara Can Do

    None of Washington's steps will work unless the Turkish government
    works to shape public opinion in favor of Turkey's Western
    orientation. Strange as it sounds, after four years of AKP rule,
    Turkish public opinion worries that American foreign policy constitutes
    a threat to Turkey; the AKP needs to forcefully counter this view. The
    Turkish government should lead a public discussion on U.S moves in
    the Middle East from the perspective of Turkish national interests,
    and not the interests of the country's Arab neighbors or the Muslim
    world, an issue on which Turks are confused. Indeed, the AKP might
    emphasize that by working with the United States, Turkey can shape
    U.S. Middle East policy to its advantage. Only these steps can shape
    public opinion in the long run and maintain Turkey's historic Western
    orientation, a path rooted in Ataturk's vision.

    Soner Cagaptay is a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near
    East Policy and chair of the Turkey Advanced Area Studies Program at
    the State Department's Foreign Service Institute.

    http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/tem plateC05.php?CID=2458
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