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ANKARA: Obama, hope, change and headaches

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  • ANKARA: Obama, hope, change and headaches

    Zaman Online, Turkey
    July 27 2008

    Obama, hope, change and headaches

    ANDREW FINKEL


    The two trips could not have been more different. When President
    George W. Bush came to ?Ä?°stanbul for a NATO summit in 2004, the city
    was locked down tighter than Baghdad's Green Zone. It was not a visit
    to the city and its people, but a bubble descending from outer
    space. Security was tight enough for Barack Obama as he scooted
    through northern Europe, but it's tight when the Rolling Stones go on
    tour, which is what the presidential nominee's speech in front of
    200,000 Berliners vaguely resembled. He is not president yet, but the
    election seems Obama's to lose, not McCain's to win, and it's the
    brave soul who believes he will drop the ball.
    The Obama message, "the world doesn't have to hate the US," was
    intended to win him a greater share of the center of the center ground
    next November. Inadvertently, he confirmed that he had Europe's
    vote. "O-barmy for Barack" was plastered over the front page of
    (London's) The Sun alongside the higher-brow press. This popularity,
    and an Obama presidency in general, poses a curious challenge for
    Turkey -- and not for the bizarre reason that he might refrain from
    twisting the arm of the House of Representatives if it tried to
    recognize an Armenian genocide. The truth is that Turkey has grown
    strangely comfortable with an unpopular American president.

    Although President Bush does not actually appear as a co-defendant on
    the charge sheet in front of the Constitutional Court, the United
    States is named as being behind some of the misdeeds for which the
    prosecutor wants the governing Justice and Development Party (AK
    Party) shut down. The prosecutor's office, in common with the sinister
    Ergenekon plotters (who paradoxically are themselves up for trial),
    sees Washington as trying to turn Turkey into a tame Islamic state
    that can do its bidding to implement a Greater Middle East Project. It
    will come as something of a shock to have a US president who renounces
    imperial ambitions and intends to do what Turkey publicly wants but
    privately fears: allow the Iraqis to solve their own problems
    themselves. And imagine Ankara having to blame its own policies and
    not Washington's sinister intentions for trouble in its own Southeast.

    For a little while at least, Turkey might even be forced to suspend
    its faith in plots and conspiracies. For a little while, too, those
    who believe they can manipulate Turkish public opinion with plots and
    conspiracies might decide they might need to adopt a different
    strategy.

    Those weaned in Turkey on the politics of conspiracy and cynicism are
    not about to take Obama's commitment to change seriously. They pray he
    is not the goody-two-shoes he appears. In time, America will be up to
    its old tricks, they speculate, even if its new president looks
    trimmer in his suit and has a far less goofy smile. But then Turkey
    will be desperately out of step, certainly with the crowds who cheered
    Obama in Berlin, and probably with the rest of the world. A
    charismatic Obama will set a tone that will leave many Turkish
    politicians feeling like the homely girl at the ball who doesn't get
    asked to dance. Imagine Deniz Baykal declaring to adoring throngs that
    he believes in change or Devlet Bah?Ã?§eli (famous for having thrown a
    hangman's noose into the crowd at an election rally) campaigning on a
    program of hope. And of course, a snap poll is no remote possibility
    in Turkey if the Constitutional Court does its worst. Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdo?Ä?an has always been a feel-good candidate, at
    least for those who voted him in, and certainly when his party came to
    power in 2002 it brought with it an expectation of great
    transformation. However even if the judges decide to acquit both him
    and his party, he will have been bruised by the whole affair. Next to
    Bush, he looked spruce, but he will have to consider how to be in the
    same room as Obama without looking like yesterday's man.


    27.07.2008
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