Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey Looks Towards An Axis Of Power With Neighbours In The East

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

  • Turkey Looks Towards An Axis Of Power With Neighbours In The East

    TURKEY LOOKS TOWARDS AN AXIS OF POWER WITH NEIGHBOURS IN THE EAST
    by James Bone, Rome

    The Times
    September 20, 2011 Tuesday 11:06 AM GMT
    UK

    Turkey's Islamist-rooted Government describes its foreign policy as
    "Zero problems with the neighbours".

    As they say in journalism, don't believe anything until it's officially
    denied.

    Long encircled by difficult if not outright hostile countries,
    Turkey's foreign policy could now be better summarised as "Zero
    neighbours without problems".

    Buoyed by a booming economy, the country's increasingly self-confident
    government now finds itself at odds with Israel, the entire EU,
    Armenia, Syria, Iraq, and increasingly Iran.

    Yet its version of moderate Islam is touted as a "Turkish model"
    for the Arab Spring.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Prime Minister, who was once jailed for
    reciting a provocative pan-Islamic poem, was re-elected to a third
    term in June with an increased share of the vote.

    Despite the financial woes elsewhere, the Turkish economy grew 11.6
    per cent in the first quarter and 8.8 per cent in the second quarter.

    Mr Erdogan has just completed a victory lap of the Arab Spring
    countries of Egypt, Libya and Tunisia and is heading to the UN General
    Assembly and a meeting with President Obama.

    He recently became the first non-African leader to visit Somalia since
    the start of the civil war in 1991. He even had to be dissuaded from
    visiting Gaza, still under Israeli blockade.

    Revived as a secular state on the European model after the Ottoman
    defeat in the First World War, the country is now almost the smallest
    it has been geographically for six centuries (it was slightly smaller
    until it annexed Hatay province from Syria in 1939).

    For hundreds of years, the Ottoman Empire led the Sunni Muslim world
    as the Islamic Caliphate. In the WikiLeaks cables, a US diplomat
    describes the Turks' foreign policy as "neo-Ottoman" - a description
    they strongly disavow.

    Mr Erdogan, in Cairo last week, argued for a democratic and secular
    direction for the Arab Spring. His own reorientation away from the
    West towards Islamic countries and his drive to expand Turkey's role
    in its near-abroad, however, suggest he harbours revanchist dreams of
    restoring the Caliphate - not literally, but as a sphere of influence.

    If the Sunni majority prevails in Syria, Turkey will hold sway not just
    in Syria but also in neighbouring Lebanon and take over patronage of
    Hamas in Gaza. Ahmet Davutoglu, Turkey's Foreign Minister, told The
    New York Times that he was seeking a new power axis with a democratic
    Egypt to replace declining American power in the Middle East.

    Though this expansion is peaceful it could easily turn ugly - as it
    did in last year's flotilla to Gaza.

    Turkey is already bombing Kurdish rebel camps in northern Iraq; it is
    preparing to send its warships to protect Turkish claims to undersea
    gas off Cyprus; and it is reportedly considering the creation of a
    buffer zone inside Syria.

    Turkey's status as a rising power led George Friedman, founder of the
    Stratfor geopolitics website, to predict Turkey will become a world
    power set to challenge the US in his bestseller The Next 100 Years.

    There is persistent speculation that after three terms as Prime
    Minister, Mr Erdogan aspires to change Turkey from a parliamentary
    to a presidential system and become president himself.

    The post of Sultan is no longer available.

Working...
X