Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: The End Of The 'Zero Problems' Policy?

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

  • ANKARA: The End Of The 'Zero Problems' Policy?

    THE END OF THE 'ZERO PROBLEMS' POLICY?

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 27 2011
    Turkey

    "Turkey is increasingly bolstering its position in the region after
    it severed its ties with Syria after jarring with the Bashar al-Assad
    administration and drawn ire from Iran after agreeing to host NATO's
    missile shield project and souring its relations with Iraq after
    launching cross-border military operations into northern Iraq.

    A statement released by the Turkish Foreign Ministry on the matter
    said: 'Our previous "zero problems with neighbors" policy has proved
    inefficient. We'll try this new policy for some time and see the
    outcome.' It was further stressed that new diplomatic crises with
    Greece, Bulgaria, Russia, Armenia and, if possible, with Georgia
    were planned."

    The above-mentioned paragraph comes from a lengthy fictional news story
    (see http://www.zaytung.com/haberdetay.asp?newsid=136680) from Zaytung,
    a website that sports intelligently designed fictional humorous news
    stories. If something has been caught on the radar of black humor,
    then we have to take that matter very seriously. Indeed, if a matter
    that has become the subject matter of humor has a dimension of reality
    that cannot be ignored, humor may become the most painful expression
    of reality. Let us leave humor to humorists and ask our lingering
    question directly: Has Turkey really put an end to its policy of zero
    problems with neighbors?

    The "yes" answer seems to stick, particularly given the entirety of
    problems that have recently emerged with some of our neighbors. Until
    very recently, Turkey's repressive state apparatus which was waging
    war even against its own citizens through its anti-democratic
    practices has been able to recruit legitimacy to its despotic
    existence and its indifference to demands for democracy and freedoms
    by imposing rigid security-oriented paradigms under the pretext of
    external threats. Since 2002, however, this despotic character of
    the state could be hindered to some extent to make democratization
    less unfettered, all thanks to Turkey's new foreign policy. This new
    foreign policy mentality that seeks to bring peace and stability to
    the region and stresses Turkey's soft power --aptly named the "zero
    problems with neighbors" policy -- made it possible to put an end to
    the dominance in the system enjoyed by the anti-democratic security
    elite which had in the past meddled with the Turkish democracy directly
    three times and indirectly two times.

    During this process, the distorted motto "Turks do not have friends
    other than Turks" has been discarded by Turkey, which has now increased
    mutual dependence to become a favorable and reliable partner in the
    region. And, ignoring the problem-ridden areas between itself and
    its neighbors, Turkey has managed to multiply potential areas for
    cooperation with its neighbors. Starting to tailor its foreign policy
    with the appeal of its friendship and cooperation that now rest on its
    new diplomatic mindset rather than on the threatening power of its army
    or its animosity, Turkey has been able to transition to a different
    plane of bilateral relations with Iran, Iraq, Syria, Greece and Russia,
    with which it had very problematic ties in the past. Thus, flights to
    and from these countries have increased and the volume of mutual trade
    with them has skyrocketed while visa requirements have been mutually
    abolished with some of them, making borders insignificant. Despite
    its problematic past with them, Turkey has started to hold high-level
    strategic meetings in the form of joint cabinet meetings with Syria,
    Iraq, Greece and even with Russia. Turkey has always been happy with
    and optimistic about this new process and it has always prided itself
    on being the driving force of this process.

    As a matter of fact, as of today, Turkey has not had a change of
    heart. There is currently nothing to justify the assumption that
    Turkey will opt for an animosity-centered discourse instead of a
    peace-oriented one, under favorable conditions. Yet, Turkey has had
    to make a choice in light of the developments collectively known as
    the Arab Spring. Should it have maintained good relations with the
    regimes of the countries with which it had entertained extremely
    good relations until very recently or should it have sided with the
    people who were being targeted by these regimes? With an unerring
    decision, Turkey chose to support the victimized people at the
    expense of growing bitter with the regimes, which it believes will
    not be sustainable in the medium or long term. All problems Turkey is
    currently having with Iran and Syria and might be having in the near
    future with other anti-democratic Arab regimes are the inevitable
    outcome of the Arab Spring. At the expense of risking its short and
    medium-term national interests, Turkey has made a choice in favor of
    supporting the democratization and liberalization of the countries in
    the region. And it has spent all the credit it has earned through its
    zero problems policy to tell these countries through advice that they
    should listen to their people's demands for democracy and implement
    reforms. The responsibility for failing to take heed of this advice
    does not belong to Turkey.

    The deadlock in Turkey's relations with Israel is in fact nothing but
    a legacy of the time when it was pursuing its zero problems policy. It
    was no longer possible for Turkey, which was cementing strong ties
    of friendship with its neighbors and the Arab world, to prolong its
    special high-level relations with Israel, which was unreasonably
    continuing to stage violent attacks against Palestinians. Moreover,
    with the Israeli side leaving its friendly guise and spearheading
    anti-Turkish propaganda, other problems have occurred as well. It is
    no coincidence that Israel, the Greek Cypriots and Greece are acting
    in unison with one another in the eastern Mediterranean. The Arab
    Spring and tremors it caused have triggered a major shift of balances
    across the Middle East. The bad thing, however, is that the region
    stands in the middle of a risky transition process as the disrupted
    balances cannot be restored. In this process, the high prospects
    of the peoples' voice becoming louder for democracy represent the
    greatest opportunity for Turkey, but this should be seen as a risk
    for the anti-democratic trio of Israel, Iran and other Arab regimes,
    which seemingly have clashing interests.

    To sum up, my point is that Turkey has never jettisoned its zero
    problems policy. Instead, this policy went temporarily stagnant due
    to the Arab Spring and the turmoil it sparked in various parts of
    the region. Turkey will resume its zero problems policy after the
    people in the region start to reshape their regimes through emergent
    democratic channels that will be available to their expectations and
    demands. It is for this reason that Turkey has never targeted the
    people in the region with its occasionally threatening rhetoric that
    does not befit it but which it is sometimes compelled to use. On the
    contrary, this rhetoric is aimed at the regimes that oppress their
    own people, and even resort to using arms against them. The tension
    in our relations with Israel is the outcome of the latter's acting
    without common sense. No one should doubt that it is Turkey which
    has understood it better and earlier that the policy of zero problems
    with neighbors is not an option but a must for peaceful coexistence
    in the region. Turkey should still do its best to minimize as soon
    as possible the number of countries that may potentially grow hostile
    to it. If possible, it must even bring this number down to zero.

Working...
X