Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Spirit Of Cooperation Dominates Turkic Summit

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Spirit Of Cooperation Dominates Turkic Summit

    SPIRIT OF COOPERATION DOMINATES TURKIC SUMMIT
    Mevlut Katik

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Nov 20 2006

    The results of the November 17 summit of the leaders of Turkic-speaking
    nations exceeded the expectations of many diplomats and political
    analysts. The presidents of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
    and Turkey took the first steps toward the creation of a Turkic
    commonwealth, giving an enthusiastic endorsement to efforts aimed at
    strengthening energy and security ties.

    The four leaders, along with Turkmenistan's envoy to Turkey, gathered
    at the Turkish Mediterranean resort city of Antalya for the summit,
    the eighth such gathering of its kind, but the first held in five
    years. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Officials
    from Uzbekistan, who had been slated to attend, ended up boycotting
    the event due to a breakdown in relations with Turkey.

    The participants signed a declaration committing the Turkic states
    to strengthen economic and transport ties, while stressing "the
    importance of the joint fight against terrorism, the proliferation
    of weapons of mass destruction, drug smuggling, weapons smuggling,
    human smuggling and other organize crimes." The statement also
    endorsed the concepts of Turkey's accession to the European Union,
    and a peace settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict that leaves
    the territory under Azerbaijan's control.

    "We declare that we support peaceful solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict in accordance with the principle of territorial integrity
    of Azerbaijan, and that we will further support fraternal Azerbaijan
    in this dispute," Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer said. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The four leaders underlined both the "increasing importance of the
    Caspian Basin for the energy security of Europe" and the "strategic
    importance of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan [BTC] oil pipeline opening and
    the [expected] completion of the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum [BTE] natural
    gas pipeline." They also stressed the importance of the possible
    addition of trans-Caspian transportation routes to both the BTC
    and the BTE. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Sezer
    stressed in his opening speech the importance of involving energy-rich
    Turkmenistan in the summit process, and vowed that Ankara would work
    to facilitate energy exports from the Caspian Basin to Europe via
    Turkey. Turkic leaders underlined in the Antalya declaration that
    "increasing energy cooperation would positively and directly contribute
    to economic and political stability" in Eurasia.

    Kazakshtani President Nursultan Nazarbayev took observers, and even
    many participants, by surprise by proposing the creation of a Turkic
    parliamentary assembly. Nazarbayev went on to nominate former Turkish
    president and prime minister Suleyman Demirel to serve as the proposed
    assembly's first chairman.

    Nazarbayev's proposal was indicative of his interest in exploring the
    feasibility of a full-blown Turkic commonwealth. "We have to discuss
    it," Kazakshtani Foreign Minister Foreign Minister Kasymzhomart
    Tokayev told EurasiaNet, referring to the commonwealth possibility.

    It would appear that Nazarbayev, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
    and Kyrgyzstani leader Kurmanbek Bakiyev now see closer cooperation
    as a way to leverage the collective influence of "200 million Turks,"
    as Nazarbayev put it, in pursit of specific policy aims.

    "The problem of one Turkic speaking nation must be the problem of other
    Turkic speaking nations," the Anatolia news agency quoted Aliyev as
    saying. Observers interpreted his comments as meaning Turkic states
    should collectively push for results in Turkey's EU accession process
    and Azerbaijan's Karabakh peace talks that are satisfactory to Ankara
    and Baku respectively.

    If the Turkic states actually opted to coordinate diplomatic action,
    they might have the collective muscle to alter the existing equilibrium
    in many geopolitical matters. In the case of Turkey's troubled drive
    to join the EU, for example, a Turkic commonwealth could influence
    Brussels' decision-making calculus by playing the energy card, letting
    it be known that a rebuff of Ankara could hinder the EU's access to
    Central Asian energy supplies.

    Kyrgyzstani diplomats also stressed that closer cooperation would
    enhance Bishkek's international profile. Kanat Tursunkulov, a top
    Kyrgyz Foreign Ministry official, said President Bakiyev's attendance
    at the summit, despite the "recent troubles" in Bishkek, underscored
    the Kyrgyz government's position that closer cooperation among Turkic
    states is a top political priority. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    Commenting on the outcome of the summit, a top Turkish diplomat
    said, "The era of romantic embracing has ended; the era of concrete
    cooperation has started." Nazarbayev, Aliyev and Bakiyev all quietly
    expressed a desire for their respective countries to host to the next
    Turkic summit. At the same time, participants emphasized a need to
    proceed cautiously, seeking to dispel any impression that they are
    rushing toward institutionalizing the group.

    Beyond the steps toward closer cooperation, the Turkic summit will be
    remembered for the public airing of a diplomatic feud between Turkey
    and Uzbekistan. Some news reports claimed that Uzbek officials stayed
    away from the gathering to protest the final declaration's wording on
    the Karabakh settlement. However, a senior Turkish official said the
    reason for Tashkent's displeasure was Turkey's decision to join the
    United States in supporting a draft measure in UN General Assembly's
    Human Rights Council that would condemn human rights violations
    in Uzbekistan.

    The official was outspoken in his criticism of both Uzbekistan's
    rights behavior and Tashkent's reaction to Ankara's vote. "It is
    time that some countries learned that democracy and human rights
    are essential to integrate into the global system," he said. "Turkey
    will persistently work to promote democracy and human rights for the
    region`s own benefit."

    Turkey's decision to vote for the draft Human Rights Council
    resolution was "a reflection of our ideals and understanding of
    the importance of democracy and respect for human rights," the
    official continued. "Turkey has been criticized for similar reasons
    [human rights violations] in the past, but we never turned it into
    a bilateral issue, and chose to make improvemenst in our [democracy
    and human right] records instead."

    Such blunt talk would appear to mark a significant shift in Turkish
    policy, as Turkish officials had unitl now avoided open criticism of
    Uzbek government action. It may be that Turkey's desire to meet EU
    accession criteria, especially the need to bolster its human rights
    credentials, is playing a role in the adoption of a toughter line
    toward Tashkent. The official also indicated that Ankara is growing
    tired of Uzbek President Islam Karimov's demands. "They [Uzbek
    officials] also accuse us of supporting the Uzbek opposition, citing
    [the fact that] opposition leader Mohammad Solih freely travels to and
    lives in Turkey. Mr. Solih is free to travel anywhere he wants to go,
    and travels to Norway, Britain and the United States. Why is Turkey
    being singled out?" the official said.

    Editor's Note: Mevlut Katik is a London-based journalist and analyst.

    He reported this piece from Antalya where the summit took place.
Working...
X