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ISTANBUL: Opportunism

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  • ISTANBUL: Opportunism

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    June 24 2010

    Opportunism

    Thursday, June 24, 2010
    YUSUF KANLI


    The Justice and Development Party, or AKP, government of Turkey will
    perhaps be remembered as the worst and most opportunist government
    this country has ever had in its republican history.

    This is not necessarily because of bad policies or approaches the AKP
    government has developed over the past eight years or because of its a
    resolutions in various problem areas. It is instead because of the
    cheeky attitude of the AKP, its monkey business tactics `a result
    perhaps of its overwhelming parliamentary strength that has buried it
    deep in a majoritarian obsession ` and the AKP's tendancy to give
    prominence to Islamist solidarity, allied solidarity and respect to
    obligations or, as is said in diplomacy, to pacta sunt servanda. These
    leanings should be blamed for the current fiasco that is Turkish
    policy from relations with Europe to ties with the United States, our
    Middle East policies, the struggle against separatist terrorism or
    domestic issues such as rampant unemployment, poverty, nepotism,
    narcissism and corruption of all kinds.

    If a government pledges to the European Union to open up ports and
    airports to the Greek Cypriot government in exchange for a date for
    starting accession talks while being aware it cannot deliver such a
    promise ` at least until after Greek Cypriots agree to lift the
    isolation measures they have been inposing on Turkish Cypriots ` can
    that government be considered an `honest player?'

    If a government is warned many times by Israel that it cannot allow a
    rupture of its blockade of Gaza and that, if needed, it would use
    force to maintain the blockade it considered vital for its national
    security, and if that government not only fails to adequately warn its
    citizens participating in a Turkish-led international humanitarian aid
    flotilla that making such a trip would place their security under
    serious risk, can it wash off its responsibility for the brutal murder
    of nine Turkish citizens onboard a Turkish humanitarian flotilla and
    place the entire responsibility on the Israeli state?

    In the Cyprus example, the AKP was just trying to save the day in an
    opportunist manner, assuming they would `think of the need to comply
    with our pledge when the day comes¦' Regarding the Armenian protocols,
    obviously the AKP government was banking on the idea that Yerevan
    would not be able to get the protocols endorsed by its parliament and
    thus would find itself in a difficult position in the eyes of the
    international community. In the Gaza sham, partly because of domestic
    political reasons ` the Turkish foundation leading the international
    humanitarian aid flotilla was supportive of the Felicity or Saadet
    Party, the chief Islamist-conservative contender of the AKP ` but
    mostly because of Islamist solidarity feelings and the neo-Ottomanist
    regional hegemony aspirations, the AKP turned a blind eye to the
    imminent threat and thus to the murder of nine Turkish nationals, one
    of them a Turkish-American.

    The `opening' the AKP government started two years ago as a `Kurdish
    opening,' which gradually evolved into a shy `democratic opening' and
    then into a `Peace and Brotherhood Project,' was perhaps the wisest
    move ever taken by a Turkish government to bring an end to the
    25-year-old separatist violence in this country. The project was
    launched as an ambiguous but indeed empty one, and it was said at the
    time that it would be filled through contributions from all segments
    of Turkish politics as well as NGOs and civil society establishments.
    But the government did not even engage in discussions with the main
    opposition party over what it aims to achieve with the opening.

    The project, which was launched ambiguously, remained ambiguous
    throughout the past two years, and even the government and the
    die-hard supporters of the project could not come up with an
    explanation as to what it included. With the tent-court created at the
    Habur border gate area and a heroic welcome ceremony extended to the
    returning `not so criminal' members of the separatist gang, the
    `opening' became a real `closure.' Yet even today, after the surge of
    separatist terrorism, the prime minister continues its lofty rhetoric
    saying the government is determined to continue the opening, which
    unfortunately has served no other purpose but further widening
    polarization of the Turkish society.

    Remember what Abraham Lincoln said, `You can fool all the people some
    of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool
    all the people all the time.' Perhaps someone should remind the AKP of
    this famous Lincoln quotation.




    From: A. Papazian
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