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Turkey FM Davutoglu: 'Zero Problems With Neighbors'

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  • Turkey FM Davutoglu: 'Zero Problems With Neighbors'

    TURKEY FM DAVUTOGLU: 'ZERO PROBLEMS WITH NEIGHBORS'

    Novinite.com
    Nov 24 2009
    Bulgaria

    Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu describes his country's
    foreign policy as "zero problems with neighbors"; critics call it
    "neo-Ottoman" expansionism. Photo by BGNES Turkey is exercising
    a delicately-balanced foreign policy, looking on the one hand for
    European Union recognition, while re-exerting its influence on old
    neighbors.

    The Turkish ruling Justice & Development (AK) party is re-engaging with
    territories once ruled by the sultans, from the Balkans to Baghdad,
    in a drive to return Turkey to a place among the leadership of the
    Muslim world and the top ranks of international diplomacy.

    Ahmet Davutoglu, foreign minister and architect of the policy, rejects
    the expansionist tag of "neo-Ottoman" bandied about by AK critics,
    preferring his well-used slogan, "zero problems with neighbors". The
    US and the European Union praise this unobjectionable aim: to act as
    a force for stability in an unstable region.

    Turkey has long mattered - as NATO ally, friend of Israel, EU applicant
    and energy route to the west. But its growing economic strength and
    diplomatic reach give it influence over some of the toughest issues
    facing Washington and other capitals - from frozen conflicts in the
    Caucasus to Iran's nuclear ambitions to the threat of disintegration
    in Iraq.

    "We are neither surprised by nor disturbed by an activist Turkish
    agenda in the Middle East," Philip Gordon, assistant secretary at
    the US State Department, said recently in Ankara.

    Yet the speed and scope of Turkey's diplomatic endeavors have left
    both Turkish and western observers wondering whether it can juggle
    all its new interests.

    In a month of frenetic activity, Mr Davutoglu has staged a show of
    friendship with Syria, ending visa restrictions on a border once
    patrolled by Turkish tanks; paid a high-profile visit to Iraq's
    Kurdistan region, long shunned as a threat to Turkish unity; and
    signed a landmark deal to mend relations with Armenia.

    "Today we, children of the Ottomans, are here to show interest in
    the development of Mosul just as our ancestors showed centuries ago,"
    Zafer Caglayan, trade minister, said as he opened a consulate in the
    northern Iraqi city last month.

    Turkish diplomats claim credit, in the last year alone, for mediating
    between Israel and Syria, hosting talks between Afghanistan and
    Pakistan, and liaising with Sunni militants in Iraq.

    But Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a prime minister who scorns diplomatic
    niceties, and his senior ministers, have shown the potential for new
    friendships to damage old ones.

    Mr Davutoglu is touring European capitals this month, employing
    Ottoman-tinged rhetoric to persuade people that Turkey's European
    vocation is unchanged.

    "You cannot understand the history of at least 15 European capitals
    without exploring the Ottoman archives," he told an audience in Spain
    this week.

    A lack of enthusiasm for Herman van Rompuy's appointment last week
    as president of the European Council reflects not just worries over
    his past opposition to Turkey's candidacy but a preference for a
    heavyweight leader who would want Europe to play a bigger part on
    the world stage.

    Ibrahim Kalin, Mr Erdogan's chief foreign policy adviser, argues that
    Turkish activism is not a reaction to disappointments in the EU but
    simply "a fully rational attempt to seize new spaces of opportunity"
    - including the EU's virtual absence from geopolitics.

    Katinka Barysch of the Centre for European Reform, a London think-tank,
    says: "As a long-standing Nato member and a country negotiating for EU
    membership, Turkey is expected to align itself with the US and Europe."

    "As a regional power, Turkey will want to act independently and avoid
    antagonizing its neighbors. It is not clear how long Ankara will be
    able to avoid tough choices."
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