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What Obama's Win Means To Turks And The World

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  • What Obama's Win Means To Turks And The World

    WHAT OBAMA'S WIN MEANS TO TURKS AND THE WORLD
    Asli Aydintasbas

    Forbes
    Nov 7 2008
    NY

    Istanbul, Turkey - Fatma, our cleaning lady, walked in yesterday--all
    smiles and with a newspaper in hand. "He won. That dark guy made it!"

    Fatma is from a remote village in the Black Sea region of Turkey and
    moved to the big city here only a few years ago for her children's
    education. "My son--9-years-old--was saying [Barack Obama] is just
    like us. They showed pictures from his village, and his family has
    just one cow and are really poor."

    For Fatma, the new U.S. president is also from poor village stock and
    came to the big city and made it against all odds. When her two sons
    watched the American election results, there was an understanding
    that they, too, could grow up to become presidents here in Turkey--a
    message that somehow was never communicated so openly to a Turkish kid.

    Of course, Barack Obama hardly has anything in common with Fatma, or
    with thousands of Turks cheering his election victory on Tuesday. He
    also doesn't have that much in common with the millions of Middle
    Easterners, Europeans, Chinese or South Asians who are jubilant about
    his election. But somehow, a black American with a Muslim middle name
    and a unique family history elected to the highest office in United
    States, against all odds, has come to personify the individual dreams
    of people around the world.

    A good friend tells me he came home to find his mother sobbing with
    joy at Obama's victory. Another friend said she put her 4-year-old
    daughter to bed explaining about the new president-elect and how the
    world will be a better place from now on.

    "Wow," I think when I hear these stories. It has been so long
    since people talked about anything American in loving terms. Here
    in Turkey--a longtime U.S. ally--anti-Americanism skyrocketed with
    the Iraq war and the subsequent upsurge in Kurdish terrorism, and it
    seemed there was almost nothing the Bush administration could do to
    reverse that trend. Global anti-Americanism was not solely due to an
    unpopular George Bush at the White House, but also due to annoyance
    at the American public for twice electing him. From global warming to
    inflation, it seemed that Turks, Europeans and Muslims were willing
    to blame America for all their ills.

    But is it possible that this trend has changed overnight? Why are
    people sobbing about Obama's victory if they hated the United States
    a minute ago? One wonders if there is something Freudian about the
    need to disown a parent so that you can love him again. The world
    has been angry at the U.S. for so long that it suddenly feels like
    hugging a sibling that you, unwillingly and out of hurt feelings,
    had stopped talking to.

    At the more official level, Turkey hoped for a Republican win for fears
    that an Obama administration would fulfill a campaign pledge to pass
    a law recognizing the 1915 massacres of Armenians in the eastern part
    of the Ottoman Empire as "genocide." "Obama will be tough for us,"
    a senior member of the government told me last week. "But," he added
    ardently, "it would be great for the world."

    Despite Ankara's stance that a McCain win would make Turkish-American
    relations smoother, I knew of only one Turk who wasn't rooting for
    Obama--a Turkish-American who said that he too was torn but that
    an Obama administration could result in a tumultuous period for
    Turkish-U.S. relations.

    In the run-up to the elections, I was often interviewed by Turkish
    television as a journalist who covered the United States for
    years. Most commentators would ask me something that many friends
    also asked: "Ah, but even if he is ahead in the polls, would Obama
    be 'allowed' to win?"--revealing Turkey's own fears about a darker
    invisible hand meddling in the democratic process, as occasionally
    happens here.

    Right before the polls opened on Election Day, a popular talk show host
    looked at me on the air in disbelief "So you think Obama could win, and
    you don't think that there is a deep state in America that decides on
    these major national issues?" I looked naive, and almost incredulous,
    trying to explain for the umpteenth time that day that if Barack Obama
    were elected, it would be largely thanks to the power of the people
    who want genuine change in America and in American foreign policy.

    Instead, I should have said something more conspiracy-minded, like "If
    Obama is elected, it means the American deep state has decided it can
    better achieve global domination through him." Maybe that sounds more
    convincing than just people-power--in places where people lack power.

    Asli Aydintasbas is an Istanbul-based journalist and former Ankara
    bureau chief of the newspaper Sabah.
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