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ANKARA: And Now, With Serbia, Too

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  • ANKARA: And Now, With Serbia, Too

    AND NOW, WITH SERBIA, TOO

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 28 2013

    by Yavuz Baydar

    Imagine if Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras goes to Nicosia and
    declares that "Cyprus is Greece, Greece is Cyprus!"

    Or, imagine if Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan, while visiting
    Nagorno-Karabakh, announces enthusiastically that "Armenia is
    Nagorno-Karabakh and Nagorno-Karabakh is Armenia!"

    This is more or less what Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    did in Kosovo. Having landed in Prizren, he said: "We all belong to
    a common history, common culture, common civilization; we are the
    people who are brethren of that structure. Do not forget, Turkey is
    Kosovo, Kosovo is Turkey!" He added that he "feels at home" when he
    visits Kosovo.

    Serbian Prime Minister Ivica DaA?iAâ~@¡ told reporters that Erdogan's
    statement represented "a direct provocation aimed at Serbia," and that
    "something of that kind should not be happening."

    The Serbian government said, "Such statements dealt direct harm to
    relations between Serbia and Turkey." Belgrade expressed its wish
    that the European Union will "via its relevant organs, and also in
    the capitals of all member countries" undertake appropriate measures
    towards Turkey, as is customary in similar situations - considering
    that it was "an act that disturbed the peace process in the southern
    Serbian province."

    "In the Republic of Serbia, such statements cannot be received as
    friendly. They depart from the assurances we get from our contacts
    with Turkey's top officials," said the Serbian Foreign Ministry.

    There were angry demonstrations in Belgrade, with nationalists shouting
    "Kosovo is Serbia." Sentiments even spilled over into Austria where
    the leader of the extreme-right Freedom Party (FPO), Heinz Christian
    Strache, countered that "Turkey is not Kosovo, Kosovo is not Turkey,"
    adding: "We fought for this several centuries ago, and it will always
    remain like this. First, Erdogan undermined European societies with a
    mass of its citizens, whom he calls 'his soldiers,' and now he openly
    expresses territorial pretensions in a sovereign European country -
    Serbia. This is absolutely unacceptable."

    The crisis has now reached the point of a big chill between Ankara
    and Belgrade. Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic said he was pulling
    out of the trilateral talks between Serbia, Turkey and Bosnia and
    Hercegovina. "I expect that reason will prevail in Turkey and Turkey
    will apologize to Serbia over this aggression without arms," he said.

    "Until then, as president of Serbia, I am freezing my participation
    at the trilateral meeting between Serbia, Bosnia and Hercegovina,
    and Turkey, because that is not a meeting of war rumbling but of
    democratic countries with statesmanly reason that leads to peace in
    the Balkans," he added.

    What is all this about? Storm in a teacup? Actually, there was nothing
    wrong with the first part of Erdogan's statement - the one about
    common this or that - but the second part is like sticking a knife
    into an open wound in Balkan history and Serbian national identity.

    Kosovo is at the centre of it, based on the infamous war between the
    Ottomans and Serbs in 1389. It is seen by Serbs as the "motherland."

    It is also where Slobodan Milosevic, a former Serbian president,
    made the famous speech that started the bloody Balkan wars in the
    early 1990s.

    Wisdom says, therefore, Kosovo is Kosovo.

    Whether read from a written text or ad-libbed, this incident only
    adds another element to the conviction that the primary enemy of
    Turkish foreign policy is tactlessness in rhetoric, fed by a delusion
    of grandeur.

    The subject is always the same.

    The ill consequences are spreading to a larger geography in Turkey's
    vicinity - the Middle East, the Caucasus and the Balkans - rapidly
    wasting its chances as a benevolent, influential, trusted, impartial,
    fair modern power.

    The crisis with Serbia only adds to the big troubles of whatever
    remains of the "zero problem neighbourhood" of Ankara. The phrase
    about Kosovo has caused huge damage to the good efforts of President
    Abdullah Gul and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to restore ties
    with Serbia since 2009. It is back to square one.

    Has it at all helped what remains of the reputation of Erdogan's
    once-fine initiative on the Alliance of Civilizations, its reputation?

    Absolutely not.

    And it only gets worse.

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