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  • Turkey's New Role Examined

    TURKEY'S NEW ROLE EXAMINED

    Arab News
    Sept 16 2009
    Saudi Arabia

    Turkey is basking in the glory of its resurrection as a major regional
    power while Ankara seeks to fulfill the needs and goals of its growing
    geo-strategic importance. It's a major turn-around in the foreign
    policy agenda of the 86-year-old western oriented, secular republic
    which had risen from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire.

    Last week one of the primary architects of this new approach, both
    at home and in the region, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, met in
    Amman with a small group of Jordanian politicians, intellectuals and
    journalists during a short visit to the Hashemite Kingdom. Around a
    sahoor meal, the lean, soft-spoken, head of Turkish diplomacy exchanged
    views and answered questions on his country's role and objectives in
    regional politics.

    A renowned academic, political scientist, former ambassador and
    a history buff, Davutoglu took time to explain Turkey's political
    mission philosophy adopted by the ruling government of the Justice
    and Development Party (AKP) since it took office seven years ago. It
    is a philosophy that is embodied in six main principles.

    First is the recognition that no foreign policy can be active
    unless peace and harmony have been achieved at home. To do this the
    Islamist-led government is trying to strike a delicate balance between
    security and freedom while building a strong economy. For Davutoglu
    Turkey cannot give the impression that it is a strong nation while
    its citizens go hungry, and by the same token it cannot claim domestic
    security if personal freedoms are denied.

    Recently the government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan took steps to meet
    some of the major concerns of Turkey's Kurdish minority as part of an
    effort to launch national reconciliation and end decades of friction
    and civil strife.

    The second principle that Ankara is eagerly implementing is to have
    zero problems with its neighbors. Bordered by eight countries and
    evolving regions; Europe, the Balkans, the Middle East, Asia and the
    Mediterranean, Turkey has managed to normalize relations with most
    of its neighbors; the most recent attempt to be launched is with
    Armenia. In most cases these relations have progressed from bad to
    very good as is the case with Syria and Iraq in particular. It can
    be said that Ankara had closed the chapter on its role in Cold War
    politics, which had polarized the world for decades.

    Maintaining good relations with neighbors serves the goal of speeding
    up regional economic integration and interdependence in the view of
    Davutoglu, thus fulfilling the grand objective of achieving peace
    and prosperity for all.

    The third principle has to do with Turkey's unique geopolitical
    assets, being a Eurasian country with access to the Black Sea,
    the Mediterranean and vital sea routes, and with its rich Ottoman
    history and linkage to former subjects in the Balkans, Europe, the
    Middle East and North Africa. Turkey, a country of over 70 million,
    is multiethnic and multicultural, and it has taken it upon itself to
    use pluralistic background to reach out to its neighbors and play a key
    role in conflict resolution and prevention and in regional security.

    As a result the fourth principle necessitates that Turkey maintains a
    proactive role in all the alliances, associations and groups that it
    belongs to. It does not sacrifice one at the expense of the other, nor
    does it value one over the other. As such Turkey's strategic objective
    to become a full member of the European Union does not mean that it
    forgoes its relations with Asia and the Middle East. Its alliance
    with the United States, through NATO, has not damaged its relations
    with Iran, and by the same token Turkey's sympathy and support of
    Palestinian rights has not turned Israel into an enemy.

    The fifth principle that Davutoglu outlined is Turkey's pursuance of
    an active role in all regional and international forums with the aim
    of reflecting the country's growing political and economic roles.

    And the sixth principle is to change negative perceptions of Turkey
    around the world and to remove stereotypical associations. It is a
    mission that Davutoglu enjoys defending as he explains Turkey's rise
    as an economic power and its recognition as a developed country. Most
    importantly he makes the point that modern Turks have now reconciled
    themselves with the Ottoman legacy; that the Turkish republic that
    was set up by Mustafa Kamal Ataturk is an extension of the rich and
    great Ottoman past.

    He tells his Jordanian hosts that Turkey's relations with the Arab
    world are vital and that the acrimonies of the past belong in the past
    and should never spoil the work needed to build a common future. He
    allays fears that Turkey's growing regional role will be at the
    expense of Arabs and their national aspirations. He rejects accusations
    that Turkey's dominance in regional politics is a manifestation of a
    neo-Ottoman desire to rule former subjects. Turkey looks at its Arab
    neighbors as equals and as neighbors and in Ankara's view stability
    and peace in the Arab world can only serve his country's own national
    security.

    It is this belief which he uses to justify Turkey's genuine interest
    to mediate in the Arab-Israeli conflict, or to intervene in the
    recent tension between Syria and Iraq, or to attend the meetings
    of the foreign minister at the Arab League in Cairo, or to invite
    the foreign ministers of the GCC countries to hold a meeting in
    Ankara. For Arabs Turkey's active role counterbalances that of Iran,
    which is viewed with suspicion by many.

    Ankara is following a diplomacy that seeks positive and proactive
    results, especially in a region that has been exhausted by futile
    politics and conspiracies. Turkey's role in the region has set itself
    apart and even the skeptics cannot find a reason to discredit it so
    far. It can be said that Turkey, which for decades estranged itself
    from its eastern and southern neighbors, has rediscovered its identity
    and reconciled itself with its past. The Arabs can learn a great deal
    from such an experiment.

    -- Osama Al Sharif is a veteran journalist and a political commentator
    based in Amman.
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