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ANKARA: Remedy For The Al-Qa'Idah Scourge

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  • ANKARA: Remedy For The Al-Qa'Idah Scourge

    REMEDY FOR THE AL-QA'IDAH SCOURGE

    Taraf, Turkey
    Aug 2 2013

    Column Ceyda Karan

    This is not so unusual in foreign policy. Every politician with no
    vision who sees peoples as playing cards in the game of imperialism and
    who sees himself in a magnifying glass does it. He complains only when
    he starts paying a price instead of others. Just look at the adventures
    of the United States since Vietnam. It is hard to enumerate all the
    occasions that illustrate this arrogance but let us talk about the
    best known one of recent years, namely Al-Qa'idah. After all, that is
    the scourge we face. In truth this is also the story of how a foreign
    policy vision that started out with aspirations of "zero problems"
    was "zeroed out." To start now rather than saying that redressing
    deficiencies will take a long time [sentence as published].

    There are not too many people who do not know this but let us
    summarize: Groups that swear allegiance to Al-Qa'idah - the local
    people generally call them the "Al-Nusra Front" - and that receive
    logistical support from the Gulf through Turkey in the name of
    "freeing" Syria are now swarming on Syria's northern border or along
    our longest border. I will not get into the "very deep" ideological
    distinctions between them over whether there should or should not be
    a caliphate. In sum, these groups dream of establishing a Salafi state.

    Until a few month ago, we were being told: "You exaggerate too much.

    There are only a few foreign fighters. The real force is the Free
    Syrian Army." Today, [Turkish] support for Al-Nusra is out in the
    open. Consequently, it is hard to tell whether we should laugh or
    cry at explanations by government sources to the effect that "we
    support them out of necessity because they are superior militarily
    and economically."

    Here is a dejA vu of the US trauma in Afghanistan. Syrian dictator
    Bashar al-Asad must be snickering somewhere. Faced with open attacks
    by Al-Nusra, Syrian Kurds have mobilized. A Kurdish-Arab war is
    being imposed in the region. Westerners, chiefly the United States,
    are perturbed. Ankara does not know what to do. Just take a look at
    PYD [Democratic Union Party] Salih Muslim's visit [to Turkey]. Is
    Turkey a mediator, a big brother, a regional giant who is worried
    that the crow it has fed may gouge its own eye, or a country that
    is reluctantly providing support for a Kurdish state in Rojava and
    therefore the West Kurdistan project?

    Whether you like it or not, Syrian Kurds have seized an important
    and historical opportunity. They will not allow Al-Nusra to take it
    away from them. This is an existential fight. In truth, the fight is
    against raving fanatics whom we oppose together and who are sworn to
    establish a permanent presence in the region. These people are prepared
    to perpetrate every form of terrorism. They are also prepared to bite
    the hand that feeds them.

    Some people have upset the applecart. More correctly, some people
    dreamed of apples in the cart but realized that they are bad after
    getting their hands on them. Imagine that we got the message in
    Somalia, from which we have not spared any assistance as part of
    our African overture. The Al-Qa'idah-affiliated Al-Shabab struck our
    embassy there.

    Now we have to sort the rice in Dimyat as we are about to lose the
    bulgur at home [a play on an old adage meaning "figure out what went
    wrong as we try to save what little we had"]. As you know, Dimyat
    [Damietta] is in Egypt, the place where we have run a deep policy
    against the coup and where no one has listened to our condemnatory
    statements. Let us say that it is normal for Westerners not to take
    note. However, not even a single Arab country has paid attention. The
    Al-Jazeera television station of our ally Qatar has suddenly been
    labelled a "bad boy" because of its Egypt reporting. Jingoistic
    habits are useless if the only function of the media is "agitation
    and propaganda."

    For example, the "one minute" sallies staged against Israel would not
    save the day in these circumstances because the probable response
    will be: "Men with sticks in their hands are killing your youth in
    your streets."

    A foreign policy that is weak and isolated but that maintains its
    defiance is not policy. The only remedy to the hopelessness in
    relations with Gulf countries, Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Armenia, Russia,
    the EU, and even the United States is a new direction. The way to
    do that is clear: Cleanse the region of "Al-Qa'idah elements"; stop
    patronizing the Kurds on the other side of the border and turning
    them into enemies while making peace with Kurds at home; put an end
    to the rhetoric of "Ottoman legacy" in relations with the countries
    of the region; and develop the parameters of a new harmony with the
    EU instead of engaging in arrogant acts of defiance.

    Most importantly, this is the time to think about what Turkey
    "inspires."

    [Translated from Turkish]

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