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  • Window to The Future

    `Window to the Future'
    What you need to know about the person shaping Turkey's muscular new foreign
    policy.

    Newsweek Web Exclusive
    Nov 28, 2009

    Expect to hear a lot more of the name Ahmet Davutoglu. The former university
    professor who became Turkey's foreign minister last year is the man behind
    Ankara's landmark new diplomatic outreach, including a previously
    unimaginable rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia and a new warmth with
    Syria.

    Some Western analysts are dismayed at these developments, interpreting them
    as a sign that Turkey is turning East at the expense of the West. The
    mild-mannered Davutoglu typically gets angry at these suggestions, saying
    these comments come from those who begrudge Turkey its expanding role in the
    region.

    Yet while Davutoglu is no stranger to Turkish politics-he began serving as
    chief foreign-policy adviser to the ruling AKP in 2002-he remains something
    of a cipher, even in his home country. To remedy that, NEWSWEEK's
    Turkish-language partner, NEWSWEEK Türkiye, recently examined the forces
    that shaped Davutoglu and how he is changing relationships with Turkey's
    neighbors in the Middle East, the Balkans, and the Caucasus.

    Some of the highlights from the magazine's comprehensive profile, written by
    Yenal Bilgici with reporting by Semin Gümüsel and Nevra Yaraç:

    Davutoglu risked the deadly Izmit earthquake to save the manuscript of his
    signature book, Strategic Depth: Turkey's International Position, which lays
    out the conceptual framework for what he now calls his "zero problems with
    neighbors"policy. When the shaking started on Aug. 17, 1999, he managed to
    flee his endangered Istanbul home unharmed-but then ignored warnings of
    aftershocks to dash back into the house and eject the computer disk
    containing his years of work. Now in its 30th printing, the book brought him
    national and international recognition.

    The foreign minister is a somewhat reluctant politician. After Turkey's
    ruling AKP won the elections of 2002, he turned down requests to serve in
    the government and opted instead to continue his university work while
    serving as an adviser to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Five years
    later, he was on the verge of a full-time return to academia when rebels
    from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) attacked the Daglica military post
    in Turkey's eastern city of Hakkari, killing 13 soldiers. "I cannot leave
    now," Davutoglu told his inner circle. Instead, he stayed on to take up the
    position of foreign minister and facilitate recent agreements aimed at
    granting long-denied rights to the Kurdish minority and ending two decades
    of attacks by the PKK.

    The peripatetic minister went to 13 countries in October alone, raising
    Turkey's diplomatic profile to its highest level in years. Indeed, Davutoglu
    won unprecedented praise in Arabic media, like the London-based Al-Hayat
    newspaper, where a columnist begged the foreign minister to help solve
    Lebanon's problems as well. "You carry ideas, aspirations, solutions, and
    medicine in your luggage," wrote the columnist. "You are the window to the
    future."

    Davutoglu may be known for his temperate demeanor, but he has little
    patience with Ankara's political elites and their unassertive approach to
    diplomacy. "These rootless elites are conditioned to not being noticed and
    not taking initiative rather than coming to the front and being decisive
    during critical periods," he wrote in an uncharacteristically sharp tone in
    Strategic Depth. "They think of being passive as a safer and risk-free
    policy." These criticisms, writes Bilgici in NEWSWEEK Türkiye, are a
    beginner's guide to understanding Davutoglu and his policy. The second
    pointer to his character: the minister's constant use-and embodiment-of the
    term "self-confidence."

    Davutoglu is also known for his work ethic and self discipline. A family
    friend told NEWSWEEK Türkiye that, while working on his book, the professor
    once spent three straight days without leaving his chair. A former student
    says Davutoglu believes that sleeping eight hours a night is a luxury. "We
    do not have the right to sleep this much," he frequently told the student.

    Davutoglu's conscientiousness manifested itself at a relatively early age.
    As a high-school student at the prestigious Istanbul High School for Boys,
    where he was taught by German teachers who had come to Turkey during World
    War II, he presented his teachers with ambitious reading lists of dense
    philosophical and scientific works that he thought would serve him well in
    the future. His instructors advised him and his friends to go out and play
    ball for a while instead. Davutoglu took the advice to heart; even after
    he'd become a professor, he continued to play soccer with his students (as a
    highly regarded forward), right up until he was appointed foreign minister.

    While honing his soccer prowess, Davutoglu was refining his language and
    academic skills too. In addition to the German learned in high school, he
    took all-English programs to graduate from the economics and political
    sciences department of Bogazici University. He learned Arabic while studying
    on a scholarship in Jordan, worked on his doctoral thesis at Cairo
    University, and learned Bahasa Malaysia while a professor at Malaysia's
    International Islamic University. His thesis, a comparative analysis between
    Western and Islamic political theories and images, was published in 1993 by
    American University Press with the title Alternative Paradigms: The Impact
    of Islamic and Western Weltanschauungs on Political Theory. Davutoglu's
    postdoctoral work included critiques of the theories of Samuel Huntington
    (clash of civilizations) and Francis Fukuyama (end of history).

    Colleagues say that Davutoglu's oratorical skills are equal to his writing
    ability. "There is no one the minister cannot make drop their guard in 10
    minutes," one high-ranking team member told NEWSWEEK Türkiye. One example:
    when Ankara refused to allow U.S.-led forces cross Turkish territory for the
    2003 invasion into Iraq, a local Jewish leader came over to read Davutoglu
    the riot act. The visitor initially said he could only stay 10
    minutes-partly because he needed to prepare for a fast the following day-but
    ended up spending three hours with Davutoglu after being won over by the
    minister's erudite discourse about Jewish culture, history, and the
    background to the upcoming fast. Next time, the Jewish leader said, he'd
    like to stay for the day.

    Davutoglu is not without his critics, who have accused him of double
    standards for criticizing Israel's actions in Gaza while failing to condemn
    the approach of a fellow Muslim-Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir-in Darfur.
    But even those who don't support him see him as a statesman who is both a
    thinker and a doer. And right now, he's the talk of more than just Ankara.

    Find this article at
    http://www.newsweek.com/id/224713
    © 2009
    From: Baghdasarian
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