Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Talking Turkey About Turkey

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Talking Turkey About Turkey

    Huffington Post
    June 9 2010


    Talking Turkey About Turkey

    Leon T. Hadar.Journalist and foreign affairs analyst
    Posted: June 9, 2010 01:18 PM

    The international crisis over the Israeli raid on the on the Gaza
    "Peace Flotilla" was not yet over, but the usual suspects were already
    sending me emails with horrific pictures of the Armenian Genocide -
    and it was a Genocide - by the Turkish army in 1915 as well as other
    Turkey-bashing stuff providing details about the Turkish illegal
    occupation and colonization (150,000 settlers) of (northern) Cyprus
    and the government's brutal suppression of the Kurdish insurgency.

    And then there was the Grand Narrative. Turkey has become the New
    Iran, joining forces with Iran and Syria in an anti-American and
    anti-Israeli -- if not an anti-Semitic -- Islamofascist Axis of Evil
    that seeks to destroy the Jewish State as part of a long-term strategy
    of re-establishing the Ottoman Empire and a Global Caliphate.

    Mirror imaging these nightmare scenarios on the other side" "were
    predictions about the emergence of Turkey as a Middle Eastern
    "hegemon" or superpower that was challenging and counterbalancing the
    power of the pro-Israeli and anti-Muslim American Empire and helping
    create the foundations of a New Middle East and the Post-American
    World.

    Take it easy, guys. Chill out! Say "No!" to Broad Brushing.

    Indeed, there was a time when the ambitious academic or journalist
    would take his or her time before unleashing a new grand narrative
    that made sense of the changing global realities. But it seems that
    that in our 24/7 media environment any pseudo or real event tends to
    encourage bloggers and pundits to come up with "instant narratives"
    according to which this surprising electoral outcome or that
    unexpected violent encounter is a sign that The Stars Are Aligning,
    the Tectonic Plates Are Shifting and that The World As We Know It Is
    Coming To An End.

    The latest example of this kind of media's rush into instantaneous
    narrating has been the constant attempts to put the Gaza Flotilla
    crisis in some strategic and historical context, either on a
    micro-level (the Israeli blockade of Gaza; the Israeli military
    operation; the Turkish Islamist charity organization) or the macro one
    (the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; the Turkish-Israeli relationship;
    U.S. ties with Israel and Turkey).

    The problem is that some of these analyses have been painted with
    broad brush strokes, producing on all sides striking narratives --
    that happen to be wrong.

    Hence some American and Israeli commentators have suggested that under
    the leadership of the Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP)
    Turkey has been setting aside the secular and pro-Western orientation
    of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey and is being
    transformed into a radical Islamist state . Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his aides are supposedly pursuing a
    Neo-Ottomaniststrategy based on establishing close ties with the Arab
    World and de-legitimizing the Jewish State.

    The policy implication of such an account is that the U.S. and Israel
    have therefore no other choice but to regard Turkey -- like Iran -- as
    an assertive strategic and ideological power posing a direct threat to
    Western interests and the survival of Israel, which is quite different
    from the other narrative we have been exposed to until recently. That
    old narrative suggested that Turkey was led by a democratic Islamist
    political party - a Muslim version of Europe's Christian-Democratic
    parties -- and that the AKP and Erdogan were actually committed to the
    political and economic liberalization of Turkey (according to this
    story line the old secular and military elites were the
    anti-democrats) as well as to the winning a membership in the European
    Union (EU) while continuing to maintain close ties with Washington and
    Israel. In fact, not so long ago many of the neoconservative pundits
    who are now portraying Turkey as the New Iran were arguing that the
    electoral victories of the AKP and its moderate Western oriented
    policies at home and abroad demonstrated once again that promoting
    democracy and free elections in the Middle East would end-up advancing
    American values and interests.

    But if anything, the outcome of the process of political and economic
    liberalization in Turkey highlighted once again the fallacy behind the
    thinking that the American-led export of democracy will help bring the
    "good guys" into power. That neoconservative axiom helped drive the
    Bush Administration's Freedom Agenda the Middle East, including the
    ousting of Iraq's Saddam Hussein and the electoral victories of the
    religious Shiite parties as well as the election of Hamas in
    Palestine.

    In the case of Turkey, the election of the AKP, like that of its
    predecessor, the (now outlawed) Virtue Party, helped bring to power
    representatives of the formerly politically marginalized segments of
    Turkish society - including members of the rural population of
    Anatolia that have migrated to the large urban centers -- that tended
    to be more traditional in their political-cultural orientation while
    supportive not only of free election but also of some of the free
    market reforms pursued by the AKP governments that challenged the
    statist economic policies of the past and empowered a new generation
    of entrepreneurs while accelerating Turkish economic growth.

    To apply terms from the context of American politics, political and
    economic power in Turkey started shifting to its own variety of
    America's "red states" -- less secular and statist and wiht a more
    nationalist and populist electorate, a mixed bag of ideological
    positions and political agendas that were neither "pro" nor "anti"
    Western, but reflected the evolving values of a new empowered Turkish
    majority that include eroding the power of the military; modifying the
    secular Kemalist policy; and integrating the Kurds into society.

    These and other domestic political changes created in turn the
    foundations for a more independent foreign policy that was neither
    "pro" or "anti" American (or "anti" Israeli) but displayed both the
    new sources of Turkish power, symbolized by its membership in the
    G-20, as well the constraints operating on it: continuing the drive to
    join the EU, Turkey's largest market (a process that also provided
    incentives for domestic reforms); maintaining the membership in the
    U.S.-led NATO, including taking part in the mission in Afghanistan (a
    clear reflection of the commitment to strong ties with the Americans);
    strengthening economic and diplomatic ties with the Arab neighbors (as
    well as with Iran and the Caucus) as part of a strategy aimed at
    stressing the Turkish regional leadership role while pursuing military
    cooperation with Israel.

    >From that perspective, Turkish policies were very pragmatic,
    recognizing the limits -- pressure from the military and the secular
    middle class and concerns over national interests -- on the ability of
    the AKP to advance a more Islamist agenda at home and abroad. In fact,
    much of the government's foreign policy seem to be based less on
    Islamist ideology and more on Realpolitik considerations and economic
    interests. Ankara refused to permit the U.S to use its territory to
    deploy troops into Iraq but has worked closely with the current
    government in Baghdad and improved relations with Iran and Syria as
    part of a strategy to deny Kurdish guerrillas safe havens in these
    countries. Moreover, Turkish effort to exert more influence in the
    Middle East was in itself a response to the mess created by American
    policy in Iraq, Lebanon and Israel/Palestine and the rest of the
    Middle East.

    And contrary to spin in Washington that portrayed Turkey (and Brazil,
    another close U.S. ally) as trying to sabotage attempts by the U.S.
    and its allies to end Iran's nuclear military program, the accord
    reached with Tehran -- under which the Iranians agreed to deposit 1200
    kg of low grade uranium in Turkey to be exchanged for 120 kg of higher
    grade uranium in nuclear fuel rods -- was very much in line with
    earlier UN proposals and seemed to complement American diplomacy.

    Nor was the general direction of the Turkish policy towards Israel a
    demonstration of a new anti-Israeli approach. The serious diplomacy on
    the part of Erdogan that centered on the idea that Turkey could serve
    as a mediator between Syria and Israelmade a lot of strategic sense,
    especially at a time when Washington's power in the region has been
    eroding in the aftermath of the Iraq War, and offered long-term
    benefits to all those involved in the process, including the Israelis.
    At the same time, the 2008 Israeli military operation in Gaza, which
    led to the collapse of the Israeli-Syrian talks under Turkish
    auspices, ran contrary to the interests of Turkey which was trying to
    co-opt the Islamist movement of Hamas and persuade it to moderate its
    positions. The television images of Palestinian civilian casualties in
    Gaza helped ignite anti-Israeli sentiments on the government to
    condemn the Israeli operation that gained more traction following
    infantile Israeli responses. In a way, the current tensions over the
    Israeli raid on the Gaza "Peace Flotilla" are a continuation of the
    disagreements between Ankara and Jerusalem over the policy towards
    Hamas.

    But the current crisis also demonstrated the need on the part of the
    Israelis and the Turks to refrain from turning these policy
    disagreements into a wide-ranging "civilizational" conflict. Israel
    needs to recognize and support Turkey's determination to play a more
    activist diplomatic role and take advantage of it and refrain from
    trying to demonize Turkey as an Islamofascist entity. At the end of
    the day, Israel has more at stake than Turkey in repairing the
    bilateral relations between Ankara and Jerusalem.

    At the same time, Erdogan and the AKP should understand that that
    Turkey does not have the capability to serve as an all powerful
    regional hegemon, and that any attempt to move in that direction will
    ignite anti-Turkey backlash from regional and global players. In any
    case, trying to serve as a mediator between the Israelis and the Arabs
    could prove to be a difficult and thankless job -- if not a mission
    impossible -- as the Americans and other powers have already
    discovered, and that trying to compensate for their diplomatic
    weakness by displaying Islamist bravado could backfire against the
    Turks and will certainly not accelerate the establishment of a New
    Middle East anytime soon. In short, Turkey is not as threatening as
    its detractors warn nor as powerful as many Turks and their new fans
    believe.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/leon-t-hadar/talking-turkey-about-turk_b_606152.html.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X