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ISTANBUL: From no problems with neighbors to no friends

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  • ISTANBUL: From no problems with neighbors to no friends

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    Jan 1 2012


    >From no problems with neighbors to no friends

    YUSUF KANLI
    Monday,January 2 2012, Your time is 9:45:55 PM


    The year 2011 was more than different, definitely for Turkey. Perhaps
    no one would think decades of absolute governments with leaders who
    appeared strong as the legendary steel of Japanese swords would fall
    apart within days or weeks.

    What happened, and indeed what is still continuing to happen in the
    Arab neighborhood, is a multifaceted challenge to Turkey, as the
    developments are at the same time shaping the future of this country.

    As rightly put by President Abdullah Gül at a recent conference,
    perhaps Turkey has never been faced with so many challenges at the
    same time, which are not only important, but also giving priority to
    Turks as much as other peoples of this geography. The `No problems
    with neighbors' foreign policy strategy of Foreign Minister Ahmet
    DavutoÄ?lu unfortunately evolved in the past year into a `No friends'
    reality.

    2011 was a year when -- contrary to the post expectation of improved
    relations with Armenia -- a resolution to the Cyprus problem,
    furthering intimate relations with Damascus of brother Bashar
    al-Assad, enhancing peaceful influence in Libya and beyond, and such
    lofty rhetoric of previous years fell victim to `proactive' and
    `pro-American' foreign policy objectives and ambitions Turkey would
    become a regional and perhaps global game setter.

    The year started with Turkey firmly allied to Colonel Moammar Gadhafi
    and yelling `What's the place of NATO in Libya?' Half way through the
    year Turkey was proudly participating in the French and the British
    led American-orchestrated Libyan operation of NATO. As if that was not
    enough, to win back the sympathy of yesterday's rebels who were
    inclined to have `brotherly relations' with Paris and London rather
    than Ankara, $ 300 million in cash was carried in bags to Benghazi to
    buy back their loyalty.

    Syrian relations also showed a similar U-turn. After a six-hour long
    meeting with al-Assad, Foreign Minister Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu concluded the
    Alevite leader of predominantly Sunni Syria was not sincere in his
    pledges of stopping use of indiscriminate force, or indeed brutality,
    towards civilians. Thus, yesterday's `brother Assad' became `dictator
    Assad' and Ankara, which has traditionally opposed sanctions on its
    neighbors because of spillover impacts on Turkish border areas,
    pioneered sanctions on Damascus.

    Armenian relations could not be kept in the fridge like the previous
    year when the so-called protocols of friendly relations remained in
    the Foreign Ministry's dusty archives of `caduceus documents.'

    Palace in Paris, a handful of French politicians initiated a process
    of criminalizing opposition to Armenian charges of genocide; relations
    of Ankara not only with Armenia but France as well, seriously derailed

    Furthermore, it does not require fortune telling capabilities to
    estimate the probable impacts of the derailment on overall
    Turkey-European Union relations, particularly in view of the upcoming
    Greek Cypriot term presidency in the second half of the New Year.

    We shall continue on Wednesday¦
    January/02/2012

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