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  • ANKARA: Saakashvili pulled trigger: Turkey between Russia & Georgia

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 4 2009


    Saakashvili pulled the trigger: Turkey between Russia and Georgia


    Turkey has been involved, historically and demographically, with many
    of the regions of `frozen conflict' in post-Soviet space. At this
    point, one might consider the position of Turkey as being at the
    epicenter of Euro-Atlantic and Russian extremes concerning the frozen
    conflicts.


    Georgia, since 1991, has been considered a valuable `strategic
    partner' by Turkey for several reasons. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip
    ErdoÄ?an's Caucasus Pact idea is a good opportunity to create an
    inclusive (Russia, Turkey, Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan) new
    foreign policy approach at this stage. This approach should be merged
    with the representation of all the frozen or unfrozen conflict areas,
    peoples, ethnic groups and regions included under the roof of such an
    alliance.

    Turkey and the `frozen conflicts' in former Soviet space

    Turkey has been involved, historically and demographically, with many
    of the regions of `frozen conflict' in post-Soviet space. The Gagauz
    question in Moldova, the status of Crimea and the resettlement of
    Crimean Tatars to their homeland in today's Ukraine, the Chechen
    problem, the Abkhazian and South Osetian questions, the issue of
    Ajarian autonomy, the relocation of Ahıska Turks in Georgia,
    the problems of Borchali Azeris in Georgia, the dispute over Nagorno
    Karabakh, and many other frozen conflicts concern not only the
    representatives of these ethnic groups within Turkey but also Turkish
    governments, due to the activities of lobbyists acting on these ethnic
    groups' behalf. In Turkey, many such lobbyists are well organized
    around advocacy and civil society organizations. They usually have a
    direct influence on both the Turkish public and on Turkey's
    administrations. Beyond the agitations of the lobbyists, the frozen
    conflicts themselves represent potential instability in the region, as
    was recently seen in the latest South Osetia (5 Days) War. The status
    of these regions as `instabilizers' is one of the reasons why Turkey,
    and probably the rest of the world, has had difficulty engaging in the
    economics and politics of the region. Another issue that characterizes
    the frozen conflicts is the existence of the former hegemon, Russia,
    as an integral part of all of them. This latter point is the reason
    why all these frozen conflicts have long been considered the major
    obstacle to Euro-Atlantic interests in post-Soviet space.[1] At this
    point, one might consider the position of Turkey as being at the
    epicenter of Euro-Atlantic and Russian extremes concerning the frozen
    conflicts.

    Turkey and Georgia

    Georgia, since 1991, has been considered a valuable `strategic
    partner' by Turkey for several reasons. The first reason really is
    strategic; having a weaker, friendly country between gigantic Russia
    and Turkey as a `buffer zone' makes good tactical sense. It is assumed
    that to be a neighbor of a superpower, old, new or reborn, is
    risky. Second, especially after the invasion of Azerbaijani
    territories by Armenia, and in the wake of the Nagorno Karabakh
    problem, Georgia was valued again as the only direct corridor by which
    Turkey could reach Azerbaijan, the Caspian Sea, and the rest of the
    Turkic republics. Thirdly, Georgia provides the best option for the
    transportation of Caspian energy riches to international markets via
    Turkey, bypassing both Russia and Iran. For a good part of the 1990s,
    the Georgian economy survived thanks to shuttle trade between Turkey's
    Black Sea provinces and its own. The Turkish military helped its
    Georgian counterparts in their ambitious effort to meet NATO standards
    in their military and defense infrastructure. In some cases, Turkey
    trained Georgian military officials, and some basic, non-sophisticated
    equipment was transferred by Turkey to Georgia. The
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan crude oil pipeline, Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum natural
    gas pipeline, and Kars-Tbilisi-Baku railway projects were all aimed to
    strengthen Turkey's ties with the Caucasus and the Caspian
    Basin. Georgia was seen as a key player in all these projects; the
    need to support Georgia has thus rarely been questioned, even during
    the Georgian civil war and the Abkhazian and South Osetian wars.

    The Ajaria Experience and Osetia Fiasco

    The general perception in the Turkish press is that Georgia's
    Saakashvili administration has failed to calculate the extent of the
    Russian reaction to its attempt to crack the self-declared South
    Osetian Republic.[2] But before considering the reverberations of
    Saakashvili's present actions, it may prove important to consider
    their political precedent. Many Turks have not even heard about
    Saakashvili's similar actions in Ajaria a couple of years ago. Ajaria
    was given to the Soviets in 1921 by the Kars Treaty between the
    Turkish Grand National Assembly and Soviet representatives from
    Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia. Article 6 of the treaty explicitly
    guaranteed the autonomy of the Muslim majority in Ajaria, which is why
    an Ajarian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was established in
    1921. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ajaria was ruled by
    an authoritarian former communist, Aslan Abashidze. Although Abashidze
    was not a separatist, he achieved a high degree of autonomy from
    Tbilisi, especially after the Georgian Civil War of 1992-1993.

    One of the first consolidation attempts on the part of Saakashvili
    administration in the spring of 2004 was to liquidate Ajaria by
    military means and force Abashidze to flee Moscow via the Turkish town
    of Trabzon. Although this development agitated some discussion among
    the Turkish intelligentsia about the rights of ` and guaranteurship of
    Turkey over ` the autonomy of Ajaria, Turkey took no steps and raised
    no vocal criticism of the issue. Since then, it is a well known fact
    that the Georgian cross was inserted into Ajaria's sovereign
    flag. Some might consider the success of the Saakashvili
    administration in `re-uniting Ajaria' with Georgia as an inspiration `
    or view it as a model for the current attempt to liquidate Osetian
    defacto independence.

    On the present occasion, Saakashvili's timing was quite perfect. The
    international arena was full of other matters. The very opening of the
    Olympics was a showcase for world leaders to meet each other and to
    appear before world public opinion. Unable to understand the timing
    and the use-of-force motives of Saakashvili, some major columnists in
    the Turkish media have started to make some analogies. One of them was
    quite extreme indeed. Ferai Tınç, in her column in
    Turkish daily Hurriyet asked Saakashvili: `Have the ones who shed a
    green light to Saddam for the invasion of Kuwait said to you that the
    Olympics are excellent timing?'3 The US and its allies were quite busy
    in Afghanistan in their search for more military manpower from NATO
    allies. They have asked Turkey repeatedly to increase the number of
    Turkish forces in Afghanistan and to send some major combat
    troops. Iraq still poses a major challenge for the US and her allies,
    including Georgia, a former troop contributor. The Georgian attack on
    Tskhinvali comes at a time when Iran-US nuclear disaccord is obvious
    and the international community is on the verge of taking new
    sanctions to force Iranians to give up their current position. The
    Georgian leadership might have calculated their attack against the
    separatist South Osetia as a new fait accompli just like their
    experience in Ajaria.

    Ahıska (Meskhetian) Turks and Turkey

    Quite unknown to the international public, the situation of the
    Ahıska Turks has been one of Turkey's major concerns in its
    relations with Georgia since 1991. The Ahıska Turks were one of
    several ethnic groups subjected to mass (and in some cases quite
    murderous) exile/deportation to Central Asia in 1944. Along with
    Crimean Tatars, Volga Germans, and Chechens, they were exiled to
    Central Asia and dispersed to more than four thousand locations in the
    former Soviet Union. In 1989 and 1990 the Ahıska Turks were
    targets of local ethnic violence in Central Asia and many of them left
    Uzbekistan for Azerbaijan, Kazakstan and Russia.[4] Vatan Society, the
    only representative institution of this very widely dispersed and
    impoverished population, spent a good deal of the 1990s and 2000s
    searching for ways to resettle the Ahıska Turks in their
    homeland in Georgia. Georgian authorities had one condition for this:
    Ahıska Turks were required to declare that they were ethnic
    Georgians.

    After 2003-2004, with the Saakashvili administration in power, there
    appeared to be new hope for the Ahıska Turks. Turkey had
    already received minor numbers of Ahıska Turk refugees since
    1991. However, the major point for Turkey was to assure over half a
    million Ahıska Turks that Turkey would help finance their
    relocation. In due course, numerous conferences and official
    gatherings were held concerning the situation of the Ahıska
    Turks. Saakashvili, during his May 2004 visit to Turkey, accordingly
    met with most of the representatives of the Ahıska Turks and
    promised to do everything possible in order to secure their
    resettlement.[5] Since then almost nothing has been achieved and no
    steps have been taken by the Georgian administration on the part of
    the proposed resettlement, a situation which continues to cause
    resentment in Turkey. Moreover, in accordance with Georgia's
    commitments to the European Union, the Ahıska Turks were
    obliged to apply for resettlement by the end of 2008. There have been
    very few applications to date, due both to the bureaucratic
    difficulties imposed by the Georgian administration and also to
    uncertainties regarding the recognition of the ethnic and religious
    identities of the applicants. Especially after the August 2008 South
    Osetia war, the near future appears to hold few prospects of any
    progress toward the resettlement of Ahıska Turks in their
    homeland.[6] This gridlock naturally places further anti-Georgian
    pressure on Turkish governments domestically through the mobilization
    of civil society organizations working on behalf of the Ahıska
    Turks.

    The Caucasian Diaspora in Turkey

    Both Abkhazians and Osetians are a part of greater
    Causasian/Circassian diaspora in Turkey. Circassians in particular are
    quite famous for their solidarity and public spirit. After fighting
    against the Tsarist armies for a century, they found refuge in the
    Ottoman Empire throughout the 1900s in several waves of immigration,
    and were settled in disparate regions all over the Empire. The
    descendants of the Ottoman Circassians are to be found in Israel,
    Jordan, Syria, Greece, Macedonia, and even Bulgaria. But the bulks of
    the Circassians have remained within the borders of Anatolia and have
    taken important initiatives throughout the republican era.

    Especially during the first Chechen War (1994-1996) the Circassians
    showed their solidarity to a great extent. Immense aid and media
    campaigns bombarded the Turkish public. Governments during this period
    felt the pressure of this public barrage acutely, and took action both
    by accepting Chechen refugees and by declining to impose strict
    control over the type of `aid' going through Turkey to Chechnya. But,
    during the second Chechen War, with multiple factors (i.e., the
    appearance of a visible `Jihadist' influence there, changes in the
    international dynamiycs, and the different governments both in Russia
    and Turkey), Circassian solidarity with Chechnya waned. In contrast,
    the solidarity concerning Abkhazian and South Osetian causes has
    maintained its strength since the beginning of the 1990s. One of the
    major civil societal platforms of the Circassian diaspora in Turkey is
    called as the Federation of Caucasian Associations. The memorandum
    this group published on the 9th of August concerning the South Osetia
    war was entitled `Memorandum Concerning the Invasion of South Osetia
    by Georgia'. The title alone serves to explain the stance of the
    Turkish Circassian community on the issue. A similar protest was
    published by another group, the Friends of Abkhazia in Turkey. Of
    course, the stance reflected in these documents is expected to have an
    impact on the government and political parties; it should also be
    expected that Turkish public opinion will be shaped in part by the
    lenses of such an approach.[7]

    Georgians in Turkey

    There is a tiny Georgian minority in Turkey. Although politically
    quite active over the years, it is difficult to argue that they have
    shown a similar solidarity to that enjoyed by the Circassians. Turkish
    Georgians are Muslim descendants of Ajarians who stayed or preferred
    to stay on this side of the border during and after the 1921
    delimitation. Probably for the first time in Turkish history, Turkish
    Georgians have organized a protest meeting in Istanbul in support of
    Georgia. Although outnumbered by the Circassians, they are expected to
    have an influence over politicians of Black Sea origin, probably
    including the prime minister himself. Given the long-standing
    historical and demographic concerns raised by both sides, Turkey needs
    an approach that will satisfy Turkish Georgians as well as the
    Ahıska Turks.

    Kosovo's Impact and Saakashvili as a Leader

    Although Turkey was one of the first countries to recognize the
    independence of Kosovo, none of the Turkic republics followed suit. In
    this respect they have chosen to stick with Russia. Both the Kosovo
    War of 1999 and Kosovo's independence in 2008 were considered
    important backlashes against Russian diplomacy and power politics. If
    one includes Tbilisi's `unequivocal geopolitical choice in favor of
    the West' and NATO[8] it might be easier to understand how Georgia
    could become the very fragile target of Russian `diplomacy.'
    Saakashvili has given the best opportunity to Russia for challenging
    the new world order.[9] Without any short-term prospects for EU
    membership, decorating or furnishing almost all state institutions in
    Georgia with EU flags not only demonstrates Georgian leadership's
    commitment to this cause: it sends a message to Russia. But this
    gesture is tragicomic as well. The author, just a couple of months
    ago, saw many ruined schools and hospitals in the Georgian countryside
    with brand new Georgian and EU flags in front of them. Russia is
    exactly ready to do anything possible to see a more pro-Russian or a
    more `independent' administration in Georgia.

    The Turkish media, especially those sources closest to the government,
    are full of accusations against Saakashvili. There is almost no doubt
    among the Turkish public that he is responsible for all these
    messes. One writer queries, `Do you see how an irresponsible,
    ambitious, hasty [person], no statesmen at all, employing nationalism
    and religious symbols without any control, a clamorous leader, has
    forced his country, his allies and his enemies into huge turmoil? He
    has taken one of the most sensitive regions of the world to the brink
    of a major war.' [10]

    These accusations are not without basis in fact. Moreover,
    Saakashvili's chauvinistic policy against the Muslim population
    (Ajaras, Azeris, Ahıska Turks and others), Abkhazians and
    Osetians also raises concerns in Turkey.[11] The one major promise
    made by the Saakashvili administration to the Georgian people was to
    enter into the EU and NATO quickly. For this purpose, Saakashvili
    needed to eliminate South Osetian and Abkhazian demands and he was
    also asked by the EU to help the Ahıska Turks resettle their
    homeland. But he preferred to allocate approximately 70% of the
    national budget to military build-up. While the countryside was quite
    miserable economically, Tbilisi started to look like a surreally
    reborn historic city. Perhaps even more troubling, Saakashvili did not
    hesitate to use disproportionate police force against democratically
    demonstrating opposition members last year. Saakashvili has failed to
    create civilian jobs, preferring to invest in the military and the
    state. Not surprisingly, Saakashvili lost support from his people
    during last winter's presidential elections and during the May 2008
    parliamentary elections. It was the Saakashvili administration that
    opened Pandora's Box by beginning to bomb South Osetia as a result of
    a search for a fait accompli or a miscalculation.

    Saakashvili, until now, has not behaved with the dignity of a
    president of a great people but rather has acted as a war
    correspondent for CNN. One day sees him declaring war, the other
    declaring ceasefire, and the following day begging the international
    community for help. He might once have secured the full-fledged
    support of poor Georgians in this catastrophe by employing his
    extremely religious and nationalistic slogans. He is a caricature
    now. Failing to consult his allies, his neighbors and his own domestic
    opposition, Saakashvili is now the target of nearly everyone. This
    situation marks a total discreditation of his leadership qualities. It
    should not be forgotten that it was Saakashvili who pulled the
    trigger.

    Turkey in this Equation

    Turkey has close historical, strategic, economic and ethnic linkages
    to all parties in the confrontation. Therefore, Turkey has to take all
    of these into consideration. The following points could be relevant
    for Turkish crisis management and the reformulation of Turkish foreign
    policy concerning the region:

    Turkey should refrain from taking the initiative or in fact any direct
    action toward mediating the conflict. Any involvement stands to have
    important results in both the domestic and international politics of
    the country. A Turkish initiative might alienate Russia, an important
    economic and energy partner internationally. It would definitely
    alienate members of the domestic Circassian diaspora and the political
    elites in the country who support their cause. Any expression of open
    political sympathy with the Georgian administration would alienate the
    nationalist civil society and political powers in Turkey that are in
    close contact with the Ahıska Turks and Borchali Azeris in
    Georgia.

    Turkey should bring the humanitarian side of the current catastrophe
    to the forefront. War-torn Georgian regions, devastated South Osetia,
    and economically backward Abkhazia should be the direct recipients of
    Turkish aid campaigns and investment. Humanitarian support would
    satisfy domestic lobbies and Russia alike. Turkey should accept
    refugees from Georgia's war-torn regions in the short run and should
    establish direct economic relations with Abkhazia and South
    Osetia. This should include direct flights from Istanbul to Sokhumi
    and Tskhinvali. The future of these regions should be liberated from
    the decisions of chauvinistic and irresponsible parties' personal
    decisions.

    In the medium and long term, Turkey should take the initiative to
    re-build Georgia with huge grants. However this time the grants should
    concentrate on building the country's civilian infrastructure, such as
    schools, hospitals, and electricity and water investments. The
    humanitarian-centered approach should also be valid for this
    re-building attempt. Within this context, Turkey and Western allies
    should allocate funds to invite thousands of Georgian, Abkhazian,
    Osetian, Azeri, Ahıska, Mingrealian all other ethnic students
    to complete their higher education in the liberal democracies of the
    West.

    In the post-war re-formulation of Turkish foreign policy, the
    Tbilisicentered approach should be replaced by a multi-faceted
    approach, including the creation of political ties with Abkhazia,
    South Osetia and Ajaria. If Turkey fails to make such connections,
    those regions are destined to establish ties only with the Russian
    Federation, currently the only country in the world struggling to
    explain the problems of the region's people. This burden should be
    lifted from the shoulders of Russia. Power politics and Russia's
    ambitions for hegemony arguable shadow Russia's humanitarian aid to
    those regions.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip ErdoÄ?an's Caucasus Pact idea is a
    good opportunity to create an inclusive (Russia, Turkey, Georgia,
    Armenia, and Azerbaijan) new foreign policy approach at this
    stage. This approach should be merged with the representation of all
    the frozen or unfrozen conflict areas, peoples, ethnic groups and
    regions included under the roof of such an alliance. ErdoÄ?an's
    approach could be productively supported by economic and energy
    concerns and, perhaps more importantly, with more humanitarian and
    inter-ethnic dialogue patterns.

    If Turkey could develop such an inclusive approach, not only
    establishing relations with the `centers' of the nation states but
    also with the `problematic regions' by capitalizing on its historical
    and ethnic heritage, it would succeed in establishing secure links
    between its allies in the West and those regions without alienating
    any regional power.

    ------------------------------------------ ----------------------

    SETA Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research
    [1]Vladimir Socor, `The Frozen Conflicts: A Challenge to Euro-Atlantic
    Interests,' Report prepared by the German Marshall Fund of the United
    States, on the occasion of the NATO Summit 2004.

    [2] Semih İdiz, `Türkiye'yi Batı'ya iten
    Rusya'dır,' Milliyet, 11 August 2008.

    [3] Ferai Tınç, `Gürcü Lideri Kim
    İtti?' Hürriyet, 11.8.2008.

    [4] Calep Daniloff, `The Exile of the Meskheti Turks: Still Homesick
    Half a Century Later,' Azerbaijan International, Spring 1997, (5.1)
    pp. 12-16.

    [5] The speech of Turkish MP Ensar Ã-Ä?üt at the
    Turkish Grand National Assembly, 22nd term, 2nd legislative year,
    110th session, July 6, 2004.

    [6] Ã?aÄ?rı Erhan, `Gürcistan'daki Durum
    Ahıska Türklerinin
    Dönü& #xC5;?ünü İmkansız
    Kıl&#xC4 ;±yor,' ASAM Analysis, 11 August 2008.

    [7] This point of view has a long precedent: the Federation has
    declared that the inclusion of South Osetia and Abkhazia in Georgia in
    the first place were criminal acts on the part of Stalin, who acted in
    order to promote his home country Georgia within the Soviet Union. See
    Kafkas Dernekleri Federasyonu, `Gürcistan'ın
    Gün ey Osetya'yı Ä°Å?gali Nedeni Ä°le
    Yayınladı&#xC 4;?ımız Bidiridir,'
    9.8.2008. However the historical background of the inclusion of these
    two regions into the lands of Georgia is a bit different.

    [8] Igor Torbakov, `New Caucasus War: All Sides are Likely to Lose,'
    Upcoming article by Dr. Torbakov sent to the author in 11.8.2008.

    [9] Fehmi Koru, `Dikkatle ve Ä°htiyatla,' Yeni Å?afak, 12
    August 2008.

    [10] İbrahim Karagül, `Bir Delinin
    BaÅ?ımıza AçtıÄ?ı
    Bela ya Bakın,' Yeni Å?afak, 12 August 2008.

    [11] Hakan Albayrak, `SaakaÅ?vili ve Å?ovenist Siyasetin
    Ä°flası,' Yeni Å?afak, 11 August 2008.
    [*] PhD International Relations, Bilkent University,
    Ankara. [email protected]



    26 August 2008, Tuesday
    HASAN ALI KARASAR
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