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Turkey: Seeking An Outlet For Expansion

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  • Turkey: Seeking An Outlet For Expansion

    TURKEY: SEEKING AN OUTLET FOR EXPANSION

    Stratfor
    Dec 12 2007

    Summary

    Turkey is flexing its muscles as it seeks an avenue to expand.

    Analysis

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul arrived in Kazakhstan on Dec. 12
    for a three-day visit primarily aimed at furthering Turkish business
    interests in the region. The visit is symptomatic of a country seeking
    an outlet for its rising power and ambition.

    Turkey is a rising power economically, militarily and politically,
    with an economy worth some $400 billion and the second-largest military
    in NATO. Yet it is also a country rather conflicted about its place
    in the world. Since the end of World War I the Turks have existed in
    a sort of cultural limbo, shunning their Islamic and imperial past,
    yet being denied full membership in the West in general, and the
    European Union in specific.

    Over the past decade, the Turks have come to terms with the idea
    that they have made it as far into Europe as Europe will allow:
    They enjoy a customs union with the European Union, an agreement
    functionally equivalent to the U.S.-Mexico relationship via NAFTA. But
    EU membership is out of the question. Now, they are casting about
    for a new national goal.

    The lands surrounding modern Turkey echo with the voices of Turkey's
    imperial past. All provide certain opportunities for the expansion of
    Turkish influence, yet none of the options leap out as being obvious --
    and none will be easy.

    In Central Asia, cultural links to the region's Turkic peoples may give
    the Turks access -- but the Russians have deeper and more recent ties,
    while the Chinese are splashing around more money. The Balkans provide
    Turkey a chance to leverage NATO links and cultural connections and
    force the Europeans to treat them with respect, but ultimately it is
    Brussels and Washington who most reliably shape events in Southeastern
    Europe. Working in the Caucasus helps buffer Turkey against a resurging
    Russia, but there is strong competition from not only Russia, but
    also Iran and Armenia. The only reason Iraqi Kurdistan has proven
    so hot-button in recent months is because the Turks perceive Kurdish
    autonomy across their southern border as a direct threat to the unity
    of Turkey itself. Like in its other spheres of potential interest,
    Turkey has no particular advantage in operating to its south either.

    Yet Turkish power continues to rise, and it is only a matter of
    time before it seeks an outlet. Its economy has stabilized after
    a 2001 crash, and has grown strongly ever since. The government is
    consolidated under a single party to a degree absent since the time
    of Kemal Ataturk. The military is strong, flexible and deployable.

    This broad-spectrum strength allows Turkey to have its fingers in a lot
    of different pots. The only thing lacking is a strategic decision by
    the Turks about which direction is most important to Turkey. Once that
    decision is made, there are no internal barriers to Turkish movement.

    http://www.stratfor.com/products/premiu m/read_article.php?id=299886&selected=Analyses
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