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ANKARA: Turkish Foreign Policy Under The Spotlight In Wake Of Â~@~Xg

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  • ANKARA: Turkish Foreign Policy Under The Spotlight In Wake Of Â~@~Xg

    TURKISH FOREIGN POLICY UNDER THE SPOTLIGHT IN WAKE OF 'GENOCIDE' BILLS

    Today's Zaman
    March 15 2010
    Turkey

    Turkey's domestic agenda has been full of challenging issues such as a
    series of discoveries of alleged coup plots to topple the government
    and a yet-to-be-achieved compromise on a constitutional amendment
    package, but now all the attention is focused outward.

    Only a week after a US congressional committee labeled the killings
    of Anatolian Armenians during World War I genocide at the cost of
    damaging bilateral relations between Ankara and Washington, with
    Ankara recalling its ambassador to the US, the Swedish parliament
    branded the same killings as genocide last Thursday. On Friday,
    Turkey's ambassador to Sweden returned to Ä°stanbul. Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan also cancelled an upcoming summit between Turkey
    and Sweden. Turkey's recent moves have put Turkish foreign policy
    and its long-praised main actors, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu,
    the intellectual architect of the Justice and Development Party's (AK
    Party) foreign policy, and Prime Minister Erdogan under the spotlight.

    Radikal's Oral CalıÅ~_lar has concerns that these recent moves would
    mean a step back for Turkish foreign policy. Stating that the AK
    Party government has been trying to prove that they want to change the
    course of Turkish foreign policy and that they "enjoy reiterating that
    they follow a zero-problem policy with neighbors," he says, however,
    recent developments imply that Turkey has returned to "traditional
    foreign policy." "They [the government] recalled the ambassadors to the
    countries where 'genocide' bills were approved, and it is still unclear
    when they will return. It seems that in the following days 'genocide'
    bills could also be passed in some other European countries. If we show
    similar reactions, it will be inevitable that we will have diplomatic
    problems with many leading European countries [many of whom support
    Turkey's EU bid and are trying to improve relations with Turkey],"
    he says. CalıÅ~_lar labels Turkey's recent style of diplomacy
    "furious." "One cannot help thinking that when looking at this new
    furious approach, there was no need for Davutoglu.

    This policy can best be implemented by [Republican People's Party
    (CHP) Deputy Chairman] Onur Oymen. Bring him to the post and put an
    end to everything," he complains, referring to Oymen's praising of
    a tragic massacre in Dersim (now Tunceli) in 1937.

    Taraf daily Editor-in-Chief Ahmet Altan also criticizes Erdogan and
    Davutoglu for their recent stances, saying they have been recently
    putting on an unsuccessful act, unlike their past performance. "If
    we continue to act with Erdogan and Davutoglu's narrow-mindedness,
    our prime ministers will not be able to find a country to visit
    in the future because they are narrowing their world more and more
    with ordinary statements and gestures that lack creativity. Just as
    they were getting ready to be included among the brightest stars of
    diplomacy, they have plunged in with simplistic attitudes, he says.

    Stating that Erdogan and Davutoglu are pushing themselves and Turkey
    towards isolation, Altan says both they and Turkey will lose if they
    carry on with these policies. "It would be very easy in a country that
    has broken off its ties from the world to stage coups and cause trouble
    for the civilian government by judicial and military means," he warns.
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