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ISTANBUL: A growing front of enemies

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  • ISTANBUL: A growing front of enemies

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 1 2011


    A growing front of enemies

    by ABDÃ`LHAMÄ°T BÄ°LÄ°CÄ°


    Until recently, Turkey captured a style of foreign policy that
    exceeded Ankara's dreams. As Turkey developed relations with both the
    East and the West, it also turned into a country applauded by both
    sides.

    Turkey was one of the few countries in the world able to form
    dialogues simultaneously with nations which were not only each other's
    opposites, but also often engaged in direct conflict with one another.
    It was capable of talking not only to Shiites in Iraq, but also having
    warm relations with the Sunnis there. And just as it was able to talk
    to a Saudi Arabia nervous about Tehran's nuclear machinations, it was
    also able to maintain a dialogue with Iran. Its good relations with
    Hezbollah did not prevent the establishment of a relationship of trust
    with the Lebanese Sunnis. And as normal relations with Israel
    continued, liaisons with Syria rose to a level of strategic
    partnership; in fact, Turkey did everything it could to see peace
    flourish between these two countries.

    2004, the year that Turkish relations with the European Union were at
    its peak, was also the year that for the first time ever, a Turkish
    citizen was elected as the General Secretary, through democratic
    selection, of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

    The same year that Ankara began efforts to see relations with Armenia
    normalize (in order to transcend the genocide allegations constantly
    placed in front of Turkey by the West), was also the year that the
    Turkish Cooperation Council was formed at a summit held in Nakhchivan,
    hosted by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

    And during a time when Turkish-US relations developed positively under
    the definition of `model partnership' (despite the many crises
    occurring between Ankara and Washington during the Bush
    administration), Russia was on its way to becoming Turkey's biggest
    foreign trade partner.

    Those with the greatest parts in this stunning tableau of
    accomplishments were President Abdullah Gül, Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an and the foreign ministers during those periods, Ali
    Babacan and Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu -- in other words, the Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party) leaders. In order to realize a foreign
    policy which appeared impossible, they worked day and night.

    After all, in order to carry out these initiatives in an atmosphere
    dominated by the mentalities like `Turks have no friends outside of
    other Turks,' and `We are surrounded by enemies' took enormous
    theoretical and physical efforts. Some of the concepts which came into
    play in the literature of diplomacy at this time were ideas such as
    `multi-dimensional foreign policy,' `zero problems with neighbors' and
    `central country.' And Turkey turned from an inactive country, where
    government planes would be rusting on the ground in Ankara, to a
    country whose foreign ministers are spending most of the month abroad.
    in the political sense where names associated with foreign policy were
    spending the majority of the month outside of the country.

    Concepts that had once dominated Turkey's security-focused stance on
    foreign policy, such as `casus belli' and `red lines,' were replaced
    concepts based more on cooperation and alliance, such as `reciprocal
    dependence,' `winning friends,' `standing straight and strong without
    glowering,' and `win-win.' The goal at hand became solving seemingly
    intractable problems and maximizing relationships by getting rid of
    hostilities as much as possible, as well as becoming a leader in
    solving not just the problems in which we held a side, but all the
    problems plaguing the region.

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