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Turkey Has Role To Play

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  • Turkey Has Role To Play

    TURKEY HAS ROLE TO PLAY
    By George S. Hishmeh
    [email protected]

    Gulf News
    http://gulfnews.com/opinions/columnists/turke y-has-role-to-play-1.532314
    Nov 25 2009
    UAE

    Erdogan's condemnation of Israeli strikes on Gaza has helped to usher
    in a new spirit of Turkish cooperation with neighbouring countries

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.Image Credit: APA new
    bright star seems to have risen above the Arab world, heralding new
    relationships that could benefit the region as a whole.

    The Arab change of heart towards Turkey, the successor of the dreaded
    Ottoman Empire, a colonial regime that ruled the Arab world for
    centuries and collapsed about 90 years ago, came when the moderate
    Islamist Justice and Development Party was elected five years ago. And
    for the first time in nearly 100 years, Turkish troops descended
    on Lebanon as part of a UN peacekeeping force following Israel's
    occupation of the Shiite-dominated South Lebanon.

    But what has impressed Arabs recently has been Turkey's protests
    against Israeli policies, especially its brutal assault on Gaza last
    December, which left about 1,400 Palestinians dead and, in the opinion
    of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict's
    Goldstone Report, amounted to war crimes. In the aftermath, Turkey
    cancelled joint air force exercises and there have been unconfirmed
    reports that Turkey may stop buying Israeli arms.

    Turkey's new focus on its neighbours is also believed to be a
    reaction to the lackadaisical attitude of the European Union, which
    has yet to act on Turkey's 10-year-old application for membership
    in the 27-member organisation. This is over and above US President
    Barack Obama's symbolic gesture in visiting Turkey in April, which
    is believed to have underlined Turkey's geostrategic importance,
    emphasising the country's role as a bridge between East and West and
    acknowledging its mediation in the Arab-Israeli conflict.

    "For all the country's wounded pride, Turkish officials and analysts
    insist Turkey has no intention of abandoning the West," reported The
    New York Times earlier this month. "Rather than reorienting Turkish
    foreign policy toward the East, Egemen Bagis, Turkey's minister
    for European Union affairs, argued in an interview that the recent
    outreach to its neighbours including the opening of its border with
    Syria, the signing of a historic agreement with Armenia to establish
    normal diplomatic relations and the engagement of Iran was helping
    Turkey become a more effective interlocutor for its Western allies."

    Benefit

    Whether or not this is the case, the Arab world certainly stands to
    benefit from improved ties with Turkey.

    Dr Clovis Maksoud, a former Arab League ambassador and director of the
    Centre for the Global South at the American University in Washington,
    believes that the "improved relations between Arabs and others are
    determined by those who constitute either an actual or potential
    deterrence for Israel's intransigence and impunity concerning
    Palestinian rights."

    He adds, "This is particularly true when the Arab deterrent to Israeli
    aggression is relatively dysfunctional in view of the peace treaties,
    especially between Egypt and Israel. The broad perception becomes
    that Turkey in some form is taking the task of filling a deficit
    in Arab deterrence. This does not mean that Israel is breaking some
    of its strategic alliances, however, it is diminishing dramatically
    developments of these alliances."

    There is no doubt that the ability of Arab governments to influence
    Western governments is virtually nil, as evidenced in the case of the
    Obama administration, which to date has been impervious to Arab, and
    particularly Palestinian pleas to proceed with the peace negotiations.

    More to the point, the refusal of the Obama administration to challenge
    the rightist government of Israel has been bewildering. Is this a
    result of US timidity or, as optimists continue to believe, does
    Obama have something up his sleeve that will be revealed in due course?

    Either way, the current impasse has given Turkey, under the able
    leadership of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President
    Abdullah Gul, who once lived and worked in Saudi Arabia, a golden
    opportunity to develop strong ties with its Arab neighbours.

    More developments are expected when the Turkish leader visits
    Washington for talks with Obama next month.
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