Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey's Neo-Ottoman Foreign Policy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey's Neo-Ottoman Foreign Policy

    TURKEY'S NEO-OTTOMAN FOREIGN POLICY - OPED

    Eurasia Review
    http://www.eurasiareview.com/15092011-turkeys-neo-ottoman-foreign-policy-oped/
    Sept 15 2011

    By Michael Weiss for RFE/RL

    How does Turkey's ruling Islamist party react when it gets a report
    it doesn't like from the United Nations?

    By yanking diplomats, threatening military conflict with a neighbor,
    and menacingly eyeing that neighbor's new yield of natural resources.

    If the General Assembly ever does something really provocative and
    votes on a resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide or the right
    of Kurdish self-determination, you can bet that Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan will make the prison guard in "Midnight Express"
    look like Florence Nightingale.

    Reacting to the leaked UN Palmer Report on the 2010 flotilla fiasco,
    which found that Israel's naval blockade of the Gaza Strip is legal
    and that the passengers aboard the "Mavi Marmara" were cruising
    for a bruising, Erdogan's government has taken to issuing thuggish
    pronunciamentos.

    At issue is the fact that Israel refused to apologize to Turkey for
    killing nine Turkish nationals in the Mediterranean.

    Israel reckons that to do so would be an insult to the commandos
    who abseiled onto the "Mavi Marmara" only to be bludgeoned, stabbed,
    and shot.

    Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP) has tried to have it both
    ways on the flotilla. It banned its own members from participating in
    order to distance itself from what was obviously a blockade-running
    provocation.

    Yet ranking AKP members are on the board of IHH, the Turkish "charity"
    that organized the event.

    Anatolian Chest-Poundings And Erdogan's refusal to let the 2011
    flotilla start out from Istanbul - at the urging of Washington -
    complicates the government's claims of having no control over a
    supposedly independent NGO. Needless to say, bilateral relations with
    Israel have gone from lousy to dire.

    "The eastern Mediterranean will no longer be a place where Israeli
    naval forces can freely exercise their bullying practices against
    civilian vessels," one Turkish official said, promising a military
    escort for all future "aid" ships to Gaza - assuming, that is, that
    these ships can outfox the savvy Israeli lawyers who made the sequel
    set-sail a busted flush.

    >From the sound of it, Turkey now wants to become the chief maritime
    bully. Part and parcel with its "more aggressive strategy" in the
    eastern Mediterranean is its attempt to stop Israel from mining its
    huge natural gas and oil fields, recent discoveries which some experts
    predict will make the Jewish state one of the largest - and wealthiest
    - energy exporters in the world.

    The threat by a NATO member to skirmish on the high seas with a major
    U.S. ally follows other Anatolian chest-poundings.

    Earlier in the week, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu,
    whose foreign policy vision used to be known as "no problems with
    the neighbors," announced that Ankara would be expelling all Israeli
    Embassy officials above the rank of second secretary.

    Erdogan wants to visit Gaza in the coming days to increase
    "international attention" on Israel's siege of the strip.

    This from the man who previously said that he doesn't think Hamas is
    a terrorist group.

    Erdogan's visit is sure to impress upon Palestinian President Mahmoud
    Abbas which party the AKP would like see ruling the Palestinian state
    the UN is about to recognize.

    A Dirty Little Secret Finally, Erdogan vowed to suspend all military
    relations and defense industry trade between Turkey and Israel.

    Years ago, this might have been significant. Yet here's a dirty little
    secret: Greece, which diplomatically facilitated the second flotilla's
    deep-sixing, is fast replacing Turkey as Israel's favorite regional
    military partner.

    Not only is flight distance between Israel and Greece the same as that
    between Israel and Iran, but the Hellenes have got S-300 antiaircraft
    missiles that the mullahs have been itching to buy from Russia in
    order to deter an Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear weapons program.

    Joint Israeli-Greek military exercises are therefore seen as very
    valuable at the moment.

    The Israelis and Palestinians have had their share of Turkish
    strong-arming, but so have the Syrians.

    Indeed, the reason that a Syrian National Council was hastily announced
    on Al-Jazeera late last month, following weeks of oppositionist
    wrangling and backbiting at a conference in Istanbul, is that a
    faction of Syrian youth activists had grown tired of seeing the AKP
    trying to make their revolution a Muslim Brotherhood-led affair.

    (What better way to minimize the Islamists than to appoint a secular
    French sociologist chairman of a transitional body, as the Syrian
    National Council voted last month?)

    Erdogan did happy business with Bashar al-Assad while he could, but
    he now wants to make sure that any post-Assad state consists of loyal
    Sunni ideologues.

    That'd be one way to undercut Iran's influence in the Middle East,
    and never mind that the people bleeding and dying in Syria are mostly
    apolitical kids who don't trust neo-Ottoman power brokers any more
    than they do former regime apologists.

    Turkish intelligence and the Muslim Brotherhood are also trying to
    co-opt the Syrian Free Army of rebel soldiers, according to Syrian
    sources.

    "They are the only ones connected to them," one opposition activist
    told me recently. "I'd rather the Syrian Free Army connect to the CIA.

    Tell your NATO friends that I extend them an open invitation to Syria."

    Michael Weiss is the communications director of The Henry Jackson
    Society, a foreign policy think tank based in London. The views
    expressed in this commentary are the author's own and do not
    necessarily reflect those of RFE/RL



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X