OPINION: SYRIA, EGYPT REVEAL ERDOGANS HIDDEN AGENDA
The Tripoli Post, Libya
November 26, 2013 Tuesday
- by Nicola Nasser
The eruption of the Syrian conflict early in 2011 heralded the demise
of Turkey's officially pronounced strategy of "Zero Problems with
Neighbours," but more importantly, it revealed a "hidden agenda" in
Turkish foreign policy under the government of Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan.
What Sreeram Chaulia, the Dean of the Jindal School of International
Affairs in India's Sonipat, described as a "creeping hidden agenda"
(http://rt.com ) on Sept. 15, 2013) is covered up ideologically as
"Islamist."
But in a more in-depth insight it is unfolding as neo-Ottomanism
that is pragmatically using "Islamisation," both of Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk's legacy internally and Turkey's foreign policy regionally,
as a tool to revive the Ottoman Empire that once was.
Invoking his country's former imperial grandeur, Foreign Minister
Ahmet Davotoglu had written: "As in the sixteenth century ... we
will once again make the Balkans, the Caucasus, and the Middle East,
together with Turkey, the centre of world politics in the future. That
is the goal of Turkish foreign policy and we will achieve it."
(Emphasis added)
Quoted by Hillel Fradkin and Lewis Libby, writing in last March/April
edition of www.worldaffairsjournal.org , the goal of Erdogan's AKP
ruling party for 2023, as proclaimed by its recent Fourth General
Congress, is: "A great nation, a great power."
Erdogan urged the youth of Turkey to look not only to 2023, but to
2071 as well when Turkey "will reach the level of our Ottoman and
Seljuk ancestors by the year 2071" as he said in December last year.
"2071 will mark one thousand years since the Battle of Manzikert,"
when the Seljuk Turks defeated the Byzantine Empire and heralded the
advent of the Ottoman one, according to Fradkin and Libby.
Some six months ago, Davotoglu felt so confident and optimistic to
assess that "it was now finally possible to revise the order imposed"
by the British - French Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916 to divide the
Arab legacy of the Ottoman Empire between them.
Davotoglu knows very well that Pan-Arabs have been ever since
struggling unsuccessfully so far to unite as a nation and discard the
legacy of the Sykes-Picot Agreement, but not to recur to the Ottoman
status quo ante.
But he knows as well that Islamist political movements like the Muslim
Brotherhood International (MBI) and the Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami
(Islamic Party of Liberation) were originally founded in Egypt and
Palestine respectively in response to the collapse of the Ottoman
Islamic caliphate.
However, Erdogan's Islamist credentials cannot be excluded as simply a
sham; his background, his practices in office since 2002 as well as his
regional policies since the eruption of the Syrian conflict less than
three years ago all reveal that he does believe in his version of Islam
per se as the right tool to pursue his Ottoman not so-"hidden agenda."
Erdogan obviously is seeking to recruit Muslims as merely "soldiers"
who will fight not for Islam per se, but for his neo-Ottomanism
ambitions. Early enough in December 1997, he was given a 10-month
prison sentence for voicing a poem that read: "The mosques are our
barracks, the domes our helmets, the minarets our bayonets and the
faithful our soldiers;" the poem was considered a violation of Kemalism
by the secular judiciary.
Deceiving 'Window of Opportunity'
However, Erdogan's Machiavellianism finds no contradiction between
his Islamist outreach and his promotion of the "Turkish model," which
sells what is termed as the "moderate" Sunni Islam within the context
of Ataturk's secular and liberal state as both an alternative to the
conservative tribal-religious states in the Arabian Peninsula and to
the sectarian rival of the conservative Shiite theocracy in Iran.
He perceived in the latest US withdrawal of focus from the Middle
East towards the Pacific Ocean a resulting regional power vacuum
providing him with an historic window of opportunity to fill the
perceived vacuum.
"Weakening of Europe and the US' waning influence in the Middle East"
were seen by the leadership of Erdogan's ruling party "as a new
chance to establish Turkey as an influential player in the region,"
Gunter Seufert wrote in the German Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik
(SWP) on October 14.
The US and Israel, in earnest to recruit Turkey against Iran, nurtured
Erdogan's illusion of regional leadership.
He deluded himself with the unrealistic belief that Turkey could
stand up to and sidestep the rising stars of the emerging Russian
international polar, the emerging Iranian regional polar and the
traditional regional players of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, let alone
Iraq and Syria should they survive their current internal strife.
For sure, his allies in the Muslim Brotherhood International (MBI) and
his thinly veiled Machiavellian logistical support of al-Qaeda - linked
terrorist organisations are not and will not be a counter balance.
He first focused his Arab outreach on promoting the "Turkish model,"
especially during the early months of the so-called "Arab Spring,"
as the example he hoped will be followed by the revolting masses,
which would have positioned him in the place of the regional mentor
and leader.
But while the eruption of the Syrian conflict compelled him to reveal
his Islamist "hidden agenda" and his alliance with the MBI, the removal
of MBI last July from power in Egypt with all its geopolitical weight,
supported by the other regional Arab heavy weight of Saudi Arabia,
took him off guard and dispelled his ambitions for regional leadership,
but more importantly revealed more his neo-Ottoman "hidden agenda"
and pushed him to drop all the secular and liberal pretensions of his
"Turkish model" rhetoric.
'Arab Idol' No More
Erdogan and his foreign policy engineer Davotoglu tried as well to
exploit the Arab and Muslim adoption of the Palestine Question as
the central item on their foreign policy agendas.
Since Erdogan's encounter with the Israeli President Shimon Peres
at the Economic Summit in Davos in January 2009, the Israeli attack
on the Turkish humanitarian aid boat to Gaza, Mavi Marmara, the next
year and Turkey's courting of the Islamic Resistance Movement "Hamas,"
the de facto rulers of the Israeli besieged Palestinian Gaza Strip,
at the same time Gaza was targeted by the Israeli Operation Cast Lead
in 2008-2009 then targeted again in the Israeli Operation Pillar
of Defence in 2012, Turkey's premier became the Arab idol who was
invited to attend Arab League summit and ministerial meetings.
However, in interviews with ResearchTurkey, CNN Turk and other media
outlets, Abdullatif Sener, a founder of Erdogan's AKP party who served
as deputy prime minister and minister of finance in successive AKP
governments for about seven years before he broke out with Erdogan
in 2008, highlighted Erdogan's Machiavellianism and questioned the
sincerity and credibility of his Islamic, Palestinian and Arab public
posturing.
"Erdogan acts without considering religion even at some basic issues
but he hands down sharp religious messages ... I consider the AK Party
not as an Islamic party but as a party which collect votes by using
Islamic discourses," Sener said, adding that, "the role in Middle
East was assigned to him" and "the strongest logistic support" to
Islamists who have "been carrying out terrorist activities" in Syria
"is provided by Turkey" of Erdogan.
In an interview with CNN Turk, Sener dropped a bombshell when he
pointed out that the AKP's spat with Israel was "controlled." During
the diplomatic boycott of Israel many tenders were granted to Israeli
companies and Turkey has agreed to grant partner status to Israel in
NATO: "If the concern of the AKP is to confront Israel then why do
they serve to the benefit of Israel?" In another interview he said
that the NATO radar systems installed in Malatya are there to protect
Israel against Iran.
Sener argued that the biggest winner of the collapse of the Syrian
government of President Bashar al-Assad would be Israel because it
will weaken Lebanon's Hizbullah and Iran, yet Erdogan's Turkey is
the most ardent supporter of a regime change in Syria, he said.
Erdogan's Syrian policy was the death knell to his strategy of "Zero
Problems with Neighbours;" the bloody terrorist swamp of the Syrian
conflict has drowned it in its quicksand.
Liz Sly's story in the Washington Post on this November 17 highlighted
how his Syrian policies "have gone awry" and counterproductive by
"putting al-Qaeda on NATO's (Turkish) borders for the first time."
With his MBI alliance, he alienated Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE,
in addition to the other Arab heavy weights of Syria, Iraq and Algeria
and was left with "zero friends" in the region.
According to Gunter Seufert, Turkey's overall foreign policy, not
only with regards to Syria, "has hit the brick wall" because the
leadership of Erdogan's ruling party "has viewed global political
shifts through an ideologically (i.e. Islamist) tinted lens."
Backpedalling too late
Now it seems Erdogan's "Turkey is already carefully backpedalling"
on its foreign policy," said Seufert. It "wants to reconnect" with
Iran and "Washington's request to end support for radical groups in
Syria did not fall on deaf Turkish ears."
"Reconnecting" with Iran and its Iraqi ruling sectarian brethren
will alienate further the Saudis who could not tolerate similar
reconnection by their historical and strategic US ally and who were
already furious over Erdogan's alliance with the Qatari financed and
US sponsored Muslim Brotherhood and did not hesitate to publicly risk
a rift with their US ally over the removal of the MBI from power in
Egypt five months ago.
Within this context came Davotoglu's recent visit to Baghdad, which
"highlighted the need for great cooperation between Turkey and Iraq
against the Sunni-Shiite conflict," according to www.turkishweekly.net
on this November 13. Moreover, he "personally" wanted "to spend the
month of Muharram every year in (the Iraqi Shiite holy places of)
Karbala and Najaf with our (Shiite) brothers there."
Within the same "backpedalling" context came Erdogan's playing the host
last week to the president of the Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government,
Massoud Barzani, not in Ankara, but in Diyarbakir, which Turkish Kurds
cherish as their capital in the same way Iraqi Kurds cherish Kirkuk.
However, on the same day of Barzani's visit Erdogan ruled out the
possibility of granting Turkish Kurds their universal right of
self-determination when he announced "Islamic brotherhood" as the
solution for the Kurdish ethnic conflict in Turkey, while his deputy,
Bulent Arinc, announced that "a general amnesty" for Kurdish detainees
"is not on today's agenda."
Three days earlier, on November 15, Turkish President Abdullah
Gul said, "Turkey cannot permit (the) fait accompli" of declaring
a Kurdish provisional self-rule along its southern borders in Syria
that his prime minister's counterproductive policies created together
with an al-Qaeda-dominated northeastern strip of Syrian land.
Erdogan's neo-Ottomanism charged by his Islamist sectarian ideology
as a tool has backfired to alienate both Sunni and Shiite regional
environment, the Syrian, Iraqi, Egyptian, Emirati, Saudi and Lebanese
Arabs, Kurds, Armenians, Israelis and Iranians as well as Turkish
and regional liberals and secularists.
His foreign policy is in shambles with a heavy economic price as
shown by the recent 13.2% devaluation of the Turkish lira against
the US dollar.
"Backpedalling" might be too late to get Erdogan and his party through
the upcoming local elections next March and the presidential elections
which will follow in August next year.
(Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Birzeit, West
Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
http://www.tripolipost.com/articledetail.asp?c=5&i=10821
From: A. Papazian
The Tripoli Post, Libya
November 26, 2013 Tuesday
- by Nicola Nasser
The eruption of the Syrian conflict early in 2011 heralded the demise
of Turkey's officially pronounced strategy of "Zero Problems with
Neighbours," but more importantly, it revealed a "hidden agenda" in
Turkish foreign policy under the government of Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan.
What Sreeram Chaulia, the Dean of the Jindal School of International
Affairs in India's Sonipat, described as a "creeping hidden agenda"
(http://rt.com ) on Sept. 15, 2013) is covered up ideologically as
"Islamist."
But in a more in-depth insight it is unfolding as neo-Ottomanism
that is pragmatically using "Islamisation," both of Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk's legacy internally and Turkey's foreign policy regionally,
as a tool to revive the Ottoman Empire that once was.
Invoking his country's former imperial grandeur, Foreign Minister
Ahmet Davotoglu had written: "As in the sixteenth century ... we
will once again make the Balkans, the Caucasus, and the Middle East,
together with Turkey, the centre of world politics in the future. That
is the goal of Turkish foreign policy and we will achieve it."
(Emphasis added)
Quoted by Hillel Fradkin and Lewis Libby, writing in last March/April
edition of www.worldaffairsjournal.org , the goal of Erdogan's AKP
ruling party for 2023, as proclaimed by its recent Fourth General
Congress, is: "A great nation, a great power."
Erdogan urged the youth of Turkey to look not only to 2023, but to
2071 as well when Turkey "will reach the level of our Ottoman and
Seljuk ancestors by the year 2071" as he said in December last year.
"2071 will mark one thousand years since the Battle of Manzikert,"
when the Seljuk Turks defeated the Byzantine Empire and heralded the
advent of the Ottoman one, according to Fradkin and Libby.
Some six months ago, Davotoglu felt so confident and optimistic to
assess that "it was now finally possible to revise the order imposed"
by the British - French Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916 to divide the
Arab legacy of the Ottoman Empire between them.
Davotoglu knows very well that Pan-Arabs have been ever since
struggling unsuccessfully so far to unite as a nation and discard the
legacy of the Sykes-Picot Agreement, but not to recur to the Ottoman
status quo ante.
But he knows as well that Islamist political movements like the Muslim
Brotherhood International (MBI) and the Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami
(Islamic Party of Liberation) were originally founded in Egypt and
Palestine respectively in response to the collapse of the Ottoman
Islamic caliphate.
However, Erdogan's Islamist credentials cannot be excluded as simply a
sham; his background, his practices in office since 2002 as well as his
regional policies since the eruption of the Syrian conflict less than
three years ago all reveal that he does believe in his version of Islam
per se as the right tool to pursue his Ottoman not so-"hidden agenda."
Erdogan obviously is seeking to recruit Muslims as merely "soldiers"
who will fight not for Islam per se, but for his neo-Ottomanism
ambitions. Early enough in December 1997, he was given a 10-month
prison sentence for voicing a poem that read: "The mosques are our
barracks, the domes our helmets, the minarets our bayonets and the
faithful our soldiers;" the poem was considered a violation of Kemalism
by the secular judiciary.
Deceiving 'Window of Opportunity'
However, Erdogan's Machiavellianism finds no contradiction between
his Islamist outreach and his promotion of the "Turkish model," which
sells what is termed as the "moderate" Sunni Islam within the context
of Ataturk's secular and liberal state as both an alternative to the
conservative tribal-religious states in the Arabian Peninsula and to
the sectarian rival of the conservative Shiite theocracy in Iran.
He perceived in the latest US withdrawal of focus from the Middle
East towards the Pacific Ocean a resulting regional power vacuum
providing him with an historic window of opportunity to fill the
perceived vacuum.
"Weakening of Europe and the US' waning influence in the Middle East"
were seen by the leadership of Erdogan's ruling party "as a new
chance to establish Turkey as an influential player in the region,"
Gunter Seufert wrote in the German Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik
(SWP) on October 14.
The US and Israel, in earnest to recruit Turkey against Iran, nurtured
Erdogan's illusion of regional leadership.
He deluded himself with the unrealistic belief that Turkey could
stand up to and sidestep the rising stars of the emerging Russian
international polar, the emerging Iranian regional polar and the
traditional regional players of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, let alone
Iraq and Syria should they survive their current internal strife.
For sure, his allies in the Muslim Brotherhood International (MBI) and
his thinly veiled Machiavellian logistical support of al-Qaeda - linked
terrorist organisations are not and will not be a counter balance.
He first focused his Arab outreach on promoting the "Turkish model,"
especially during the early months of the so-called "Arab Spring,"
as the example he hoped will be followed by the revolting masses,
which would have positioned him in the place of the regional mentor
and leader.
But while the eruption of the Syrian conflict compelled him to reveal
his Islamist "hidden agenda" and his alliance with the MBI, the removal
of MBI last July from power in Egypt with all its geopolitical weight,
supported by the other regional Arab heavy weight of Saudi Arabia,
took him off guard and dispelled his ambitions for regional leadership,
but more importantly revealed more his neo-Ottoman "hidden agenda"
and pushed him to drop all the secular and liberal pretensions of his
"Turkish model" rhetoric.
'Arab Idol' No More
Erdogan and his foreign policy engineer Davotoglu tried as well to
exploit the Arab and Muslim adoption of the Palestine Question as
the central item on their foreign policy agendas.
Since Erdogan's encounter with the Israeli President Shimon Peres
at the Economic Summit in Davos in January 2009, the Israeli attack
on the Turkish humanitarian aid boat to Gaza, Mavi Marmara, the next
year and Turkey's courting of the Islamic Resistance Movement "Hamas,"
the de facto rulers of the Israeli besieged Palestinian Gaza Strip,
at the same time Gaza was targeted by the Israeli Operation Cast Lead
in 2008-2009 then targeted again in the Israeli Operation Pillar
of Defence in 2012, Turkey's premier became the Arab idol who was
invited to attend Arab League summit and ministerial meetings.
However, in interviews with ResearchTurkey, CNN Turk and other media
outlets, Abdullatif Sener, a founder of Erdogan's AKP party who served
as deputy prime minister and minister of finance in successive AKP
governments for about seven years before he broke out with Erdogan
in 2008, highlighted Erdogan's Machiavellianism and questioned the
sincerity and credibility of his Islamic, Palestinian and Arab public
posturing.
"Erdogan acts without considering religion even at some basic issues
but he hands down sharp religious messages ... I consider the AK Party
not as an Islamic party but as a party which collect votes by using
Islamic discourses," Sener said, adding that, "the role in Middle
East was assigned to him" and "the strongest logistic support" to
Islamists who have "been carrying out terrorist activities" in Syria
"is provided by Turkey" of Erdogan.
In an interview with CNN Turk, Sener dropped a bombshell when he
pointed out that the AKP's spat with Israel was "controlled." During
the diplomatic boycott of Israel many tenders were granted to Israeli
companies and Turkey has agreed to grant partner status to Israel in
NATO: "If the concern of the AKP is to confront Israel then why do
they serve to the benefit of Israel?" In another interview he said
that the NATO radar systems installed in Malatya are there to protect
Israel against Iran.
Sener argued that the biggest winner of the collapse of the Syrian
government of President Bashar al-Assad would be Israel because it
will weaken Lebanon's Hizbullah and Iran, yet Erdogan's Turkey is
the most ardent supporter of a regime change in Syria, he said.
Erdogan's Syrian policy was the death knell to his strategy of "Zero
Problems with Neighbours;" the bloody terrorist swamp of the Syrian
conflict has drowned it in its quicksand.
Liz Sly's story in the Washington Post on this November 17 highlighted
how his Syrian policies "have gone awry" and counterproductive by
"putting al-Qaeda on NATO's (Turkish) borders for the first time."
With his MBI alliance, he alienated Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE,
in addition to the other Arab heavy weights of Syria, Iraq and Algeria
and was left with "zero friends" in the region.
According to Gunter Seufert, Turkey's overall foreign policy, not
only with regards to Syria, "has hit the brick wall" because the
leadership of Erdogan's ruling party "has viewed global political
shifts through an ideologically (i.e. Islamist) tinted lens."
Backpedalling too late
Now it seems Erdogan's "Turkey is already carefully backpedalling"
on its foreign policy," said Seufert. It "wants to reconnect" with
Iran and "Washington's request to end support for radical groups in
Syria did not fall on deaf Turkish ears."
"Reconnecting" with Iran and its Iraqi ruling sectarian brethren
will alienate further the Saudis who could not tolerate similar
reconnection by their historical and strategic US ally and who were
already furious over Erdogan's alliance with the Qatari financed and
US sponsored Muslim Brotherhood and did not hesitate to publicly risk
a rift with their US ally over the removal of the MBI from power in
Egypt five months ago.
Within this context came Davotoglu's recent visit to Baghdad, which
"highlighted the need for great cooperation between Turkey and Iraq
against the Sunni-Shiite conflict," according to www.turkishweekly.net
on this November 13. Moreover, he "personally" wanted "to spend the
month of Muharram every year in (the Iraqi Shiite holy places of)
Karbala and Najaf with our (Shiite) brothers there."
Within the same "backpedalling" context came Erdogan's playing the host
last week to the president of the Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government,
Massoud Barzani, not in Ankara, but in Diyarbakir, which Turkish Kurds
cherish as their capital in the same way Iraqi Kurds cherish Kirkuk.
However, on the same day of Barzani's visit Erdogan ruled out the
possibility of granting Turkish Kurds their universal right of
self-determination when he announced "Islamic brotherhood" as the
solution for the Kurdish ethnic conflict in Turkey, while his deputy,
Bulent Arinc, announced that "a general amnesty" for Kurdish detainees
"is not on today's agenda."
Three days earlier, on November 15, Turkish President Abdullah
Gul said, "Turkey cannot permit (the) fait accompli" of declaring
a Kurdish provisional self-rule along its southern borders in Syria
that his prime minister's counterproductive policies created together
with an al-Qaeda-dominated northeastern strip of Syrian land.
Erdogan's neo-Ottomanism charged by his Islamist sectarian ideology
as a tool has backfired to alienate both Sunni and Shiite regional
environment, the Syrian, Iraqi, Egyptian, Emirati, Saudi and Lebanese
Arabs, Kurds, Armenians, Israelis and Iranians as well as Turkish
and regional liberals and secularists.
His foreign policy is in shambles with a heavy economic price as
shown by the recent 13.2% devaluation of the Turkish lira against
the US dollar.
"Backpedalling" might be too late to get Erdogan and his party through
the upcoming local elections next March and the presidential elections
which will follow in August next year.
(Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Birzeit, West
Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
http://www.tripolipost.com/articledetail.asp?c=5&i=10821
From: A. Papazian