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ANKARA: Nationalist Credentials

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  • ANKARA: Nationalist Credentials

    NATIONALIST CREDENTIALS

    Hurriyet
    March 21 2010
    Turkey

    Much has been said and written on the remarks by Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan on the possible deportation of undocumented Armenian
    workers from Turkey. I agree with all those who have called these
    comments deeply offensive and morally and politically unacceptable.

    The prime minister should be ashamed and, yes, it would be a sign of
    regained self-control, if he would apologize.

    I have the impression, watching the damage control efforts by some
    leading Justice and Development Party, or AKP, politicians, that many
    in his own party think their number one has gone too far. Maybe even,
    deep down, the AKP leader has acknowledged that he grossly overstepped
    the limits of decent political discourse. That would explain his
    ongoing efforts, unconvincingly, to talk his way out of his gaffe.

    After all the public indignation, one question remains unanswered. Why
    did he make this comment? I am not convinced by the critics who claim
    that it is the authoritarian personality or the hot-tempered character
    of the prime minister or his infamous lack of diplomatic skills that
    explain the faux pas.

    I am afraid his remarks are part of a bigger plan. Of course,
    his threat to retaliate against American and Swedish lawmakers by
    expelling poor Armenian women, was ill-considered. But the effort to
    show that he is tough on people and countries that hurt the feelings
    of many Turks is well thought-out. And it is no coincidence, that it
    is Turkey's Armenia policy that is being used to bolster the AKP's
    nationalist credentials.

    When Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu signed the Turkey-Armenia
    protocols last October, I praised the vision and the courage of the
    government. But I also warned that they were picking another fight
    with the same determined, nationalist opponents. The people who opposed
    the Armenian opening, then, were the same people who strongly objected
    to the Kurdish opening, the reform of the judiciary, the changing of
    the Constitution or pushing back the influence of the military. They
    still do so today.

    My fear is that the government has come to the conclusion that the
    attempt to make a new start with Armenia is one fight too much. They
    want to get out of this one in order to hopefully win some of the
    other up-hill struggles they've got themselves in to.

    That would explain why, since the signing of the protocols, the
    prime minister and some other AKP leaders, with the exception of the
    foreign minister, have done their utmost to frustrate the rapprochement
    between Turkey and Armenia. By linking the ratification in parliament
    to a solution of the Karabach conflict. By blowing a ruling of the
    Armenian Constitutional Court out of proportions. By threatening to
    stop the whole process after the adoption of genocide recognition
    resolutions in the American and Swedish parliaments.

    The last act in this well-calculated endeavor to get out of this
    undertaking was the shot-from-the-hip last week. In the eyes of the
    governing party, the Armenian opening has become a liability. It
    could put a good result at the next elections in danger because the
    nationalist part of the AKP electorate does not like it and because
    the opposition parties would undoubtedly try to exploit this bid for
    reconciliation as another proof of the AKP's lack of true patriotism.

    One year before the elections, electoral opportunism has taken
    precedence over long-term benefits. Let's face it. What would the
    AKP lose if they give up on the Armenian initiative? Yes, they would
    lose respect and admiration abroad. But the AKP strategists realize
    that foreign praise does not win you national elections.

    Turkish democrats would be disappointed, of course. But would they, as
    a result, vote for parties that have even worse democratic credentials?

    The fight to win the 2011 elections has started and Turkish-Armenian
    relations are the first casualty.
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