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ICG: Turkey And The Middle East: Ambitions And Constraints

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  • ICG: Turkey And The Middle East: Ambitions And Constraints

    TURKEY AND THE MIDDLE EAST: AMBITIONS AND CONSTRAINTS

    International Crisis Group
    April 7 2010

    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

    Turkey is launching initiative after ambitious initiative aimed
    at stabilising the Middle East. Building on the successes of its
    normalisation with Syria and Iraq, it is facilitating efforts to reduce
    conflicts, expanding visa-free travel, ramping up trade, integrating
    infrastructure, forging strategic relationships and engaging in
    multilateral regional platforms. For some, this new activism is
    evidence that Turkey is turning from its traditional allies in Europe
    and the United States. In fact, its increased role in the Middle East
    is a complement to and even dependent on its ties to the West.

    This report assesses Turkey's growing engagement with the Middle East
    within the broader frame of Turkish foreign and trade policy. The
    process is still in its infancy, faces official scepticism in Arab
    governments and has divided opinion among Turkey's Western allies.

    Yet, the attempts to grow the regional economy, create interdependence
    and foster peace have positive potential. At a time when negotiations
    to join the European Union (EU) have faltered, Ankara has adopted
    early EU gradualist integration tactics for post-Second World War
    peace in Europe as a model for strengthening long-term stability and
    healing the divisions of the Middle East.

    Turkey's self-declared "zero-problem" foreign policy to end disputes
    with its neighbours has worked well in Syria and Iraq, and its
    facilitation role in some Middle East conflicts has booked some
    success, for instance in hosting Syria-Israel proximity talks in 2008.

    Ankara has been less effective, however, in intractable matters
    like the dispute between Fatah and Hamas. The sharpening tone of
    Turkey-Israel relations has raised Turkish leaders' popularity among
    Middle Eastern publics but has undermined trust among traditional
    allies in Washington, Brussels and even some Arab capitals.

    Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, AKP)
    leaders' rhetoric, and their new regional activism extending from
    Persian Gulf states to Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Organisation of
    the Islamic Conference (OIC), have given rise to perceptions that they
    have changed Turkey's fundamental Westward direction to become part of
    an Islamist bloc, are attempting to revive the Ottoman Empire or have
    "turned to the East". These are incorrect. The basic trends in the
    country's regional activism seen today were well established before
    AKP came to power, and NATO membership and the relationship with the
    U.S. remain pillars of Turkish policy.

    While Turkey is bitter over attacks by France, Germany and others on
    its EU negotiation process between 2005 and 2008, half of its trade
    is still with the EU, and less than one quarter of its exports go to
    Middle East states - a proportion typical for the past twenty years.

    The global nature of Turkey's realignment is underlined by the fact
    that Russia and Greece have been among the biggest beneficiaries of
    its regional trade boom.

    Nevertheless, since the end of the Cold War, Turkey has been shifting
    its foreign policy priority from hard security concerns to soft
    power and commercial interests and moving away from being a kind of
    NATO-backed regional gendarme to a more independent player determined
    to use a plethora of regional integration tools in order to be taken
    seriously on its own account. Turkey's U.S. and EU partners should
    support these efforts towards stabilisation through integration.

    Ankara has many balls in the air and sometimes promises more than it
    can deliver, over-sells what it has achieved and seeks a role far
    away when critical problems remain unsolved at home. Turkey's new
    prominence is partly attributable to confusion in the region after the
    U.S. invasion of Iraq, a situation that is not necessarily permanent.

    Some Middle Eastern governments are also wary of the impact on their
    own publics of emotional Turkish rhetoric against Israel or about
    implicit claims to represent the whole Muslim world.

    Turkey should sustain the positive dynamics of its balanced
    relationships with all actors in the neighbourhood and its efforts
    to apply innovatively the tactics of early EU-style integration
    with Middle East neighbours. While doing so, however, it should
    pay attention to messaging, both internationally, to ensure that
    gains with Middle Eastern public opinion are not undercut by loss of
    trust among traditional allies, and domestically, to ensure that all
    Turkish constituencies are included, informed and committed to new
    regional projects over the long term. Also, it will gain credibility
    and sustainability for its ambitions if it can solve disputes close
    to home first, like Cyprus and Armenia.

    Middle Eastern elites worry about any sign of Ankara turning its back
    on its EU accession process. Much of their recent fascination with
    Turkey's achievements derives from the higher standards, greater
    prosperity, broader democracy, legitimacy of civilian rulers,
    advances towards real secularism and successful reforms that have
    resulted from negotiating for membership of the EU. At the same time,
    Turkey and its leaders enjoy unprecedented popularity and prestige in
    Middle Eastern public opinion, notably thanks to their readiness to
    stand up to Israel. Turkey's new strength, its experience in building
    a strong modern economy and its ambition to trade and integrate with
    its neighbours offer a better chance than most to bring more stability
    and reduce the conflicts that have plagued the Middle East for so long.
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