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There Is A Turkish Remedy For Anti-Americanism In Turkey

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  • There Is A Turkish Remedy For Anti-Americanism In Turkey

    THERE IS A TURKISH REMEDY FOR ANTI-AMERICANISM IN TURKEY
    Soner Cagaptay

    Daily Star
    April 24 2009
    Lebanon

    President Barack Obama's visit to Turkey could not have gone better
    in terms of winning Turkish hearts and minds. Obama did all the right
    things, visiting Ataturk's mausoleum, the Blue Mosque and the Turkish
    Parliament, capturing the complexity of a country that is Turkish by
    birth, Muslim in culture and Western in its political identity.

    Yet Washington still faces a challenge among the Turks: after a
    debilitating downturn in recent years, America's favorability rating
    is at rock bottom. Obama should be concerned about this phenomenon
    that, if it continues to be ignored, will eat into the foundations of
    the new United States-Turkish relationship that he wants to promote
    on key issues, including Iraq, Iran and Pakistan. As serious as the
    problem is, though, Turkish anti-Americanism can be fixed.

    Obama cannot and should not ignore anti-Americanism in Turkey, because
    as a democracy, Turkish politics and politicians are ultimately
    accountable to public opinion. Washington can sustain cooperation
    with all sorts of authoritarian Muslim states, such as Egypt,
    despite pervasive anti-Americanism in those countries, because
    these authoritarian regimes do not care for public opinion. In
    Turkey, however, these sentiments will sooner or later erode,
    reshape and then cripple governmental cooperation with the United
    States. Anti-Americanism in Turkey presents a larger, more immediate
    challenge to the Obama administration than it does in other Muslim
    majority societies.

    Obamamania will help face this challenge. According to a recent poll
    by Infacto, whereas only 9 percent of Turks thought favorably of the
    US president four years ago, at the time George W. Bush, today 39
    percent have a positive view of Barack Obama. However, this jolt has
    not lifted America's standing in Turkey to match political ambitions
    for long-term and grand cooperation with Ankara as laid out by Obama's
    speech to the Turkish Parliament on April 6. The Infacto poll also
    shows that 44 percent of Turks view the United States as the biggest
    threat to Turkey.

    Lately, the United States has done the right things to win Turkish
    hearts and minds. First, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, during her
    March visit to Turkey, and then Obama gave the Turks a needed bear hug,
    emphasizing that the United States likes the Turks, respects their
    faith and supports their Western vocation. Washington is assisting
    Turkey in its struggle against the terror attacks of the Kurdistan
    Workers Party (PKK), a key security concern for many Turks. Obama has
    even shied away from his campaign promise to support the "Armenian
    Genocide" bill in the US Congress, which many Turks find extremely
    offensive.

    At this stage, there is little more that Washington can do to charm
    the Turks. As I learned during a recent sabbatical in Turkey, the
    Turks form their views of the world based upon what they hear from
    their leadership. Turkey is a rare fence-sitting country between East
    and West, in which pro-American and Western statements have the same
    weight in shaping public views as do views that oppose the United
    States and the West.

    Since the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) assumed power
    in 2002, the Turks have not heard anything positive about the West
    from their leadership. In fact, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan has often lambasted the West, suggesting, for instance, that
    "the West uses terrorism to sell Turkey weapons" or that "Turkey
    has borrowed only immoral stuff from the West." Anti-Americanism has
    become pervasive in Turkey as not just the AKP, but also even secular
    and nationalist leaders now vehemently voice such views.

    The United States cannot stop entrenched anti-Americanism altogether;
    only the Turkish leadership can do that. Hence, the first step toward
    combating anti-Americanism would be zero anti-American and anti-Western
    rhetoric from opinion makers in Turkey, whether they are on the
    side of the government or on the side of the opposition. By avoiding
    anti-American rhetoric, the Turkish leadership could demonstrate that
    it is ready to receive Obama's extended olive branch.

    The next step is targeting existing anti-Americanism, which can be
    alleviated precisely because the Turks are a fence-sitting people. What
    the Turks hear about the United States and the West shapes their
    views. In battling anti-Americanism, the Turkish leadership needs to
    highlight for the Turks the common interests of Turkey and the US,
    such as a stable Iraq; shared institutions, such as NATO; and shared
    values, such as democracy. Ankara should also give Washington major
    credit for intelligence assistance to Turkey in its attempt to stop
    the terror attacks launched by the PKK. Many Turks are not only unaware
    of this fact, but also think that the United States supports the PKK,
    as many news reports and government allegations have insinuated. The
    situation on the PKK shows best how Turkish views of the United States
    can be distorted.

    Barack Obama should not despair when faced with evidence of
    anti-Americanism in Turkey. This is indeed an immediate and big
    problem, but it can be fixed. There is a Turkish solution to
    anti-Americanism in Turkey.

    Soner Cagaptay is a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for
    Near East Policy and the author of "Islam, Secularism and Nationalism
    in Modern Turkey: Who Is a Turk?" This commentary first appeared at
    bitterlemons-international.org, an online newsletter that publishes
    articles on Middle Eastern and Islamic issues.
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