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ANKARA: Davutoglu: Turkey's Finest Foreign Minister Of Republican Er

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  • ANKARA: Davutoglu: Turkey's Finest Foreign Minister Of Republican Er

    DAVUTOGLU: TURKEY'S FINEST FOREIGN MINISTER OF REPUBLICAN ERA
    By Richard Falk

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 2 2009
    Turkey

    It has been my privilege to know Ahmet Davutoglu since he was a young
    professor teaching in Malaysia in the early 1990s.

    At that time I was immediately struck by his keen understanding of
    the importance of culture and civilization for the proper conduct
    of international relations. Mr. Davutoglu was definitely not just
    one more realist foreign policy analyst with a good grounding in
    the mainstream tradition of Western political thought covering
    the conceptual ground that connects Machiavelli to Kissinger. This
    tradition was preoccupied with the management of power, and there
    is no doubt that Davutoglu had a sophisticated understanding about
    how to cope with power and conflict in world politics. Yet what made
    him more intriguing and distinguished him from many other intelligent
    interpreters of the changing global scene was his recognition of the
    significance of non-Western thought as forming an essential basis for
    the shaping of historically relevant policy to enable a government
    to meet the challenges of the contemporary world.

    Davutoglu returned to Turkey a few years later, and began teaching
    university courses. More impressively, he founded a voluntary program
    of advanced studies for doctoral students in the social sciences
    and humanities from all over the country. He led this effort by way
    of a foundation for arts, culture, and science that started in a
    modest building, but from its outset established an exciting and
    innovative learning community that combined an intrinsic love of
    knowledge and ideas with a search for practical wisdom that would
    enable Turkey to fulfill its potential as a national, regional and
    global actor. Davutoglu led this educational effort, emphasizing
    in the teaching program the importance of history and culture, and
    what is sometimes called macro-history, or the comparative study of
    civilizations, examining the broad sweep of the rise and fall of
    civilizations through time and across space. In this illuminating
    spirit of inquiry, the role of Turkey was interpreted within a wider
    cultural and historical context of past, present, and future. Such an
    approach acted as a corrective to a narrowly conceived nationalism
    that never looked back further than the ideas and guidance of the
    founder of the modern Turkish state, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

    >From such a perspective, the interpretation of the place of Turkey
    in the modern world of the late 20th and early 21st centuries was
    of preeminent importance. It was Davutoglu's particular insight that
    Turkey, in order to move creatively forward into the future, needed
    to recapture an understanding of and a pride in the achievements of
    its pre-republican past and especially the extraordinary capacity
    of the Ottoman Empire to encompass diverse peoples while exhibiting
    respect for distinct cultures and religions. I found this way of
    thinking congenial. It represented a refreshing enlargement upon the
    non-historical forms of strategic thought that seemed so prominent
    at the time in Turkey, and was almost entirely derivative from the
    way world politics was conceived in the United States. Davutoglu as a
    scholar was striving for an approach that came directly to terms with
    Turkey's hopes and aspirations for the future, turning to philosophy,
    culture and history for this deepening of his understanding. In this
    same spirit, it was his consistent desire to expose students and the
    intelligent public in Turkey to similar styles of global thinking from
    other parts of the world. His foundation organized several conferences
    in the last decade that brought to Turkey leading thinkers from all
    over the world. Such events exhibited Davutoglu's commitment to the
    establishment of a cross-cultural community of scholars dedicated to
    a universalizing vision of a peaceful and just world.

    In his notable scholarly publications, these features of Davutoglu's
    thoughts gained attention for his ideas. His book on "strategic depth"
    as the foundation of a constructive approach to security is one of
    the outstanding formulations of the way sovereign states should pursue
    their interests with respect to their region and the world. Although
    the book is now about 10 years old and is not available in English, it
    has gone through many printings, and is being translated into a variety
    of foreign languages. It is one of the most significant contributions
    to the literature of international relations, and although imprinted
    with the geopolitics of the Cold War and its globalization sequel,
    it retains great relevance to the relations of Turkey to an evolving
    world order. Davutoglu has expressed frustration that his public
    duties have prevented him from either revising "Stratejik Derinlik"
    or following it up with a second book on "cultural depth" that would
    have given his published work a more accurate reflection of his
    original approach to international relations in our time.

    Against such a background, it may not seem surprising that Davutoglu
    has had such a major impact on Turkish foreign policy, initially as
    chief advisor to the top AK Party leadership, and since May of 2008,
    as foreign minister. Usually there is not a very good fit between
    influential professors and successful government service. What has
    made Davutoglu an exception is his unusual combination of social and
    diplomatic skills and an absence of political ambition. Staying aloof
    from party politics, yet aligned with the AK Party policy outlook,
    has managed to give him a unique place on the Turkish scene, which
    is at once independent and yet exceedingly influential with political
    leaders, with the public, and in foreign capitals.

    Even before becoming foreign minister, it was widely appreciated in
    the media and in the diplomatic community that Davutoglu has been
    the architect of Turkish foreign policy ever since the AK Party
    was elected in 2002. His initial main portfolio involved a focus on
    achieving Turkish membership in the European Union. It was always
    Davutoglu's view that such membership was not only beneficial to
    Turkey, including establishing a stronger foundation for genuine
    democracy at home, but also that it presented Europe with a unique
    opportunity to become a dynamic force in a post-colonial world,
    enjoying multi-civilizational legitimacy in a world order where the
    West could no longer play an effective role unless it could claim an
    identity and recruit the participation of the rising peoples of the
    East. Although Davutoglu's hopes for greater European receptivity to
    Turkey have undoubtedly been disappointed by the unanticipated surge of
    Islamophobia in several European countries, as well as the unfortunate
    admission of Cyprus to the EU in 2004, he continues to believe that
    the goal of Turkish membership is attainable and desirable. This
    Turkish quest for EU membership continues, with its ups and downs,
    and has had its own benefits, providing all along strong support for
    domestic moves to strengthen democracy and human rights in Turkey.

    As foreign minister, Davutoglu has exhibited the qualities of energy,
    intelligence, political savvy, moral concern, self-confidence (without
    arrogance) and historically grounded vision that one encounters in
    his scholarship and lectures. It is hard to think of a world figure
    that has had a more positive impact in a shorter time. Davutoglu's
    signature approach of "zero problems with the neighbors" has been
    consistently successful in establishing better Turkish relations
    throughout the region, and challenging a country such as Egypt for
    regional leadership, even among Arab governments. Less noticed, but as
    important, is Davutoglu's tireless search for non-violent approaches
    to conflict management based on identifying and maximizing the common
    ground between adversaries. This diplomacy of reconciliation brings
    an urgently needed stabilizing influence to the inflamed politics
    of the Middle East, but also brings Turkey respect, stature and
    expanding economic and diplomatic opportunities in the region and
    world. Perhaps most notable in this regard are the growing economic
    links, especially in relation to energy, with both Russia and Iran,
    countries that have often in the past been at odds with Turkey.

    Turkey: an important ally

    It is particularly notable that Turkey embarked on these controversial
    initiatives without harming its strategically central relationship
    with the United States. Quite the contrary: Turkey is more than ever
    treated by Washington as an important ally, as exhibited by President
    Obama's early visit, but to a far greater extent than in the past,
    Turkey is now also respected as an independent actor with its own
    agenda and priorities that may diverge from that of the United States
    in particular instances. It was an expression of this new mutuality
    that led Richard Holbrooke, the US special envoy for Afghanistan, to
    say during his recent visit to Istanbul that it was up to Turkey to
    decide whether to send additional troops to Afghanistan. This seems
    like the natural thing to do in the relations among sovereign states,
    but it contrasted with the heavy-handed approach of the Bush years,
    where American officials, most prominently Paul Wolfowitz, lectured
    Turkey in public on their responsibilities to do whatever the White
    House desired. Of course, this changed atmosphere generally reflects
    a more multilateralist foreign policy in the United States, but it
    is also a recognition that Turkey is now an independent force in
    world affairs, not just an appendage of NATO or the West, which was
    the case during the Cold War and in the 1990s. Davutoglu deserves
    major credit for conceptualizing this change in the perception and
    treatment of Turkey, as well as through its expression in practical,
    day to day foreign policy decisions.

    It is important to appreciate that Davutoglu took career risks while
    serving as chief foreign policy advisor that showed a willingness to
    put principle ahead of personal ambition. Davutoglu tried very hard
    to find and enlarge the common ground and dormant mutual interests
    in the most intractable, sensitive, and dangerous regional conflict,
    that of Israel/Palestine and Israel/the Arab world. He did his best
    to broker Israel/Syria negotiations, encouraging an agreement that
    would end Israeli occupation of the Golan Heights and some kind of
    diplomatic normalcy between the two countries.

    And more controversially, but no less constructively, Davutoglu tried
    hard to soften Hamas' posture as an uncompromising and violent element
    in the Palestinian struggle, and at the same time to encourage Israel
    to treat Hamas as a political actor, not a terrorist organization,
    after Hamas gained political power through the 2006 elections in
    Gaza, and declared its intention to establish, at first unilaterally,
    a cease-fire. Israel, as well as the United States and the EU, refused
    to drop the terrorist label, and instead put deadly pressure on the 1.5
    million Palestinians living in Gaza. A devastating humanitarian ordeal
    has resulted in Gaza from this refusal to respect the outcome of the
    elections, and is continuing with no end in sight. In retrospect,
    so much suffering might have been avoided if Davutoglu's approach
    had succeeded. Additionally, the outlook for peace between the two
    peoples would have been far brighter than it is today. In this sense,
    Davutoglu's foreign policy disappointments during the past several
    years are as deserving of our admiration as his successes.

    There is no doubt in my mind that Turkey is extremely fortunate to
    have Ahmet Davutoglu as its foreign minister, and it is a tribute
    to the elected leadership in Ankara that so much responsibility has
    been entrusted to someone without party affiliations, of independent
    character and of scholarly temperament. Much has been made of
    Davutoglu's emphasis on "strategic depth," but I believe he will be
    in the end most remembered for his "moral depth." By moral depth, I
    mean a dedicated concern for seeking peaceful resolution of conflict
    through mediation and compromise, based on mutual respect for legal
    rights and a commitment to justice. Although it is far too early in
    his tenure to make any final appraisal with confidence, it is not too
    soon to think that fusing strategic depth with moral depth will turn
    out to be a memorable dimension of Davutoglu's legacy. If so, it is
    likely to underpin an eventual judgment that Ahmet Davutoglu should
    be regarded as Turkey's finest foreign minister of the Republican era.

    *Richard Falk is a professor emeritus of international law and practice
    at Princeton University and the UN's special rapporteur on the occupied
    Palestinian territories.
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