Turkey: The land of 'zero problems' has an awful lot of problems
Posted By Joshua Keating Thursday, December 22, 2011 - 3:13 PM
Turkey, today, took the dramatic step of cutting off diplomatic ties
with France over a new law passed by the French government that would
criminalize genocide denial, including the 1915 slaughter [should
read: genocide] of Armenians by Ottoman Turks. Yigal Schliefer writes,
"Add France to the countries that Turkey now has strained relations
with."
The list does seem to be getting pretty long. In Dec. 2010, Turkish
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told Foreign Policy that "We have to have
zero problems with our neighbors." The phrase "zero problems" has
become a shorthand for Turkey's non-aligned approach to international
relations under Davutoglu and Recep Tayyip Erdogan. But of course,
Turkey actually has problems with quite a few countries, including its
neighbors. Here are just a few:
Israel: Turkey expelled the Israeli ambassador after a U.N. report
this year held Israeli forces responsible for last year's Gaza
flotilla raid.
Syria: Condemnation of Bashar al-Assad's crackdown on protesters.
Cyprus: Over the unresolved issue of Northern Cyprus [should read:
Turkish-occupied northern Cyprus].
Greece: Longstanding historial tensions as well as new plans to build
a border fence to prevent immigration into Europe.
Iraq: Turkish troops have repeatedly crossed into Iraqi territory to
hunt PKK militants.
Armenia: A promising-looking peace [should read:
let's-victimize-the-genocided-nation-even-more] accord stalled in
2010.
The European Union: Over its long-suffering membership bid.
United States: A variety of issues including Israel policy and
periodic attempts to recognize the Armenian genocide.
Iran: Support for the PKK and a proposed U.S. radar system in Turkey.
Russia: Disputes over gas prices.
Canada: Ambassador recalled after Canadian officials participated in
Armenian genocide event in 2009.
Argentina: Recognition of the Armenian genocide.
Not all of these are disputes that Turkey started or is solely
responsible for. But Davutoglu's vision of a conflict-minimizing
foreign policy doesn't seem to be panning out quite as hoped. It's
also clear that the policy of cutting off ties with countries that
dare to use the "G" word about a nearly century-old incident [read: I,
Joshua Keating, once again committed holocaust denial!] isn't helping
matters.
http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/12/22/turkey_the_land_of_zero_problems_has_an_awful_lot_ of_problems#comment-907836
Posted By Joshua Keating Thursday, December 22, 2011 - 3:13 PM
Turkey, today, took the dramatic step of cutting off diplomatic ties
with France over a new law passed by the French government that would
criminalize genocide denial, including the 1915 slaughter [should
read: genocide] of Armenians by Ottoman Turks. Yigal Schliefer writes,
"Add France to the countries that Turkey now has strained relations
with."
The list does seem to be getting pretty long. In Dec. 2010, Turkish
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told Foreign Policy that "We have to have
zero problems with our neighbors." The phrase "zero problems" has
become a shorthand for Turkey's non-aligned approach to international
relations under Davutoglu and Recep Tayyip Erdogan. But of course,
Turkey actually has problems with quite a few countries, including its
neighbors. Here are just a few:
Israel: Turkey expelled the Israeli ambassador after a U.N. report
this year held Israeli forces responsible for last year's Gaza
flotilla raid.
Syria: Condemnation of Bashar al-Assad's crackdown on protesters.
Cyprus: Over the unresolved issue of Northern Cyprus [should read:
Turkish-occupied northern Cyprus].
Greece: Longstanding historial tensions as well as new plans to build
a border fence to prevent immigration into Europe.
Iraq: Turkish troops have repeatedly crossed into Iraqi territory to
hunt PKK militants.
Armenia: A promising-looking peace [should read:
let's-victimize-the-genocided-nation-even-more] accord stalled in
2010.
The European Union: Over its long-suffering membership bid.
United States: A variety of issues including Israel policy and
periodic attempts to recognize the Armenian genocide.
Iran: Support for the PKK and a proposed U.S. radar system in Turkey.
Russia: Disputes over gas prices.
Canada: Ambassador recalled after Canadian officials participated in
Armenian genocide event in 2009.
Argentina: Recognition of the Armenian genocide.
Not all of these are disputes that Turkey started or is solely
responsible for. But Davutoglu's vision of a conflict-minimizing
foreign policy doesn't seem to be panning out quite as hoped. It's
also clear that the policy of cutting off ties with countries that
dare to use the "G" word about a nearly century-old incident [read: I,
Joshua Keating, once again committed holocaust denial!] isn't helping
matters.
http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/12/22/turkey_the_land_of_zero_problems_has_an_awful_lot_ of_problems#comment-907836