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ICG: Turkey's Crises Over Israel And Iran

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  • ICG: Turkey's Crises Over Israel And Iran

    TURKEY'S CRISES OVER ISRAEL AND IRAN

    International Crisis Group
    http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/europe/turkey-cyprus/turkey/208-turkeys-crises-over-israel-and-iran.aspx
    Sept 8 2010

    Damage to Turkey's relations with Israel and suspicions in Western
    capitals about its relationship with Iran have dealt setbacks to
    Ankara's "zero-problem" foreign policy. At the same time, there have
    been many misconceptions about Turkey's new engagement in the Middle
    East, which aims to build regional peace and prosperity. From a Turkish
    perspective, Israel and Iran issues have separate dynamics and involve
    more collaboration and shared goals with Western partners than is
    usually acknowledged. Ankara's share of the blame for the falling
    out with Western friends and Israel has been exaggerated, but there
    are problems in the government's formulation and presentation of its
    foreign policy. These include short-sightedness, heated rhetoric,
    over-reach and distraction from Turkey's core conflict-resolution
    challenges in its immediate neigh­bourhood, including a Cyprus
    settlement, normalisation with Armenia, resolution of new Kurdish
    tensions and commitment to EU convergence.

    Turkey-Israel relations are at a nadir after Israeli commandos
    killed eight Turks and a U.S. citizen of Turkish descent on 31
    May 2010, as they seized a ship that Ankara had discouraged from
    sailing but said it ultimately could not stop from trying to break
    the blockade on Gaza. The U.S. and EU member states should back UN
    Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's four-person, UN-led panel of enquiry
    into the tragic incident. Israel should work to normalise its important
    relationship with Turkey, including, if its soldiers are found to have
    used excessive force or committed crimes, by prosecuting suspects,
    and finding ways to give Turkey satisfaction in the matter. For its
    part, Turkey should use the current enquiries to satisfy Israeli
    and international opinion about the Turkish activists' intentions
    and play its part to improve relations with Israel by moving away
    from maximalist demands and confrontational rhetoric. Previously
    good ties gave Turkey a unique status as a potentially effective
    mediator in the Middle East, including in Arab-Israeli peace talks,
    but frayed relations with Israel and the U.S. need to be set right
    if this potential is to be realised.

    Turkey is also being criticised for its attempts to mediate with Iran
    over its nuclear program, especially after voting against additional
    sanctions on 9 June at the UN Security Council. But Turkey's "no"
    was not to reining in any Iranian nuclear military ambitions. Ankara
    argues that it (and Brazil) believed it had U.S. encouragement to
    negotiate the swap of a substantial amount of Iran's low-enriched
    uranium stockpile, as set out in the 17 May Tehran Agreement. It voted
    as it did in the Security Council, it says, to protect its negotiating
    leverage and to retain the Tehran Agreement as a possible way forward.

    The U.S. and EU states should put aside simplistic cliches about
    Turkey "turning East", "joining an Islamist bloc" or "turning its
    back on the West". Turkey's new foreign engagement has been first and
    foremost economic, with Christian and Muslim countries in Eurasia,
    the Balkans, Africa and the Middle East alike. The bulk of its trade
    and investment, its social, popular and educational connections,
    and the source of its intellectual and economic innovation all remain
    inextricably linked to EU states and the U.S.

    Turkey also shares most of its Western partners' goals in the
    Middle East, such as no nuclear weapons proliferation in the region,
    including Iran; a just solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
    that respects the full rights of both parties; and the elimination
    of al-Qaeda. It should find more ways to speak out for these common
    objectives. At the same time, its Western partners should recognise
    that due to geography and history, Turkey will reasonably pursue them
    at times with its own tactics and methodology.

    Ankara can achieve more through a good working relationship with the
    EU and the U.S. than if it tries to forge ahead alone. The government
    and public opinion should avoid presuming, as they sometimes seem
    tempted, that the U.S. needs Turkey more than it needs Israel,
    or that personal relations with President Obama will substitute
    for policy substance. Even though Turkey is clearly becoming a
    stronger international player, cooperation with Washington and EU
    convergence are keys to its regional prominence and have contributed
    to its economic growth, boom in trade with neighbours and improved
    respect for human rights, as well as Istanbul's growing reputation
    as a glamorous regional hub. Turkish leaders should also tone down
    populist or militant rhetoric, since it undermines allies' trust,
    and resume more quiet dialogue with Israel to regain its unique
    ability to speak with confidence to all parties in its region.

    Turkey has changed greatly over the past two decades, becoming
    richer and more self-confident, no longer dependent on Washington or
    Brussels alone. While Ankara should not exaggerate its own importance
    or capacities, its Western partners should recognise its genuine
    significance in its region and beyond and spend more time talking to
    it quietly, constructively and at high-levels. To this end, Washington
    and Ankara in particular might usefully consider establishing new
    mechanisms for regular dialogue and better coordination on the full
    range of their shared foreign policy interests, including in the
    Middle East. Moreover, while Turkey remains committed to its EU path,
    France and Germany must keep its membership perspectives credible,
    if all are to take maximum advantage of their shared Middle East goals.

    These commonalities remain a strong basis for cooperating to increase
    stability and diminish conflicts in the region.




    From: A. Papazian
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