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ANKARA: Instead Of Short Passes

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  • ANKARA: Instead Of Short Passes

    INSTEAD OF SHORT PASSES
    Ekrem Dumanli

    Today's Zaman
    Oct 31 2007

    Alright, we are seriously hurt by the terrorism of the Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK) and we want something to be done immediately.

    However, it is vital that we keep in mind that he who reacts in a
    moment of anger brings destruction upon himself. The greatness of
    states is brought out in such critical periods. A country with a
    long historical experience cannot challenge everyone by shouting and
    screaming like ignorant youths. Every strategic move has a plan B and
    a plan C. Unfortunately Turkey's alternative methods are crippled by
    daily reactions.

    Take the cross-border operation debate as an example. Is it really a
    solution? Let's say it is; is it such a deep and extensive solution
    that it will wipe out the PKK, and even root out the sources it
    feeds on? Is what matters satisfying our incited national feelings
    or generating reasonable, consistent and logical policies for the
    perpetuation of the state? According to some, Turkey will carry out
    a cross-border incursion, and that's it. This is preposterous! Of
    course, a cross-border operation may be carried out; however, putting
    all hope in a cross-border operation means laying the groundwork
    for great frustration because the terrorist group is trying to gain
    strength by exploiting a heap of neglected problems and is supported
    by foreign forces.

    Turkey can never determine its foreign policies based on a single
    alternative. Those whom we are supposed to meet without any mediators,
    those who are the third parties and those who have to take a stance
    against PKK terrorism in the international arena... there are meetings
    to be had with each one of them, and the message Turkey needs to give
    each one of them is different.

    What is currently being debated is whether Talabani would be received
    with a military ceremony if he came to Turkey, and how he would greet
    the military unit present to welcome him on that visit as well as
    how the unit would respond. You cannot cause diplomacy to clog up
    like this! Let Turkey not speak to the president of Iraq and let us
    come to the verge of war with Iraq; is this what we really want? If
    we close all diplomatic channels with Iraqi officials, our options
    are reduced to almost none; we are then left with a single choice --
    and that might not be a remedy for our troubles. You might not like
    the person who is currently the head of the Iraqi state, you might
    even hate him; however, when you act as if such a person doesn't even
    exist, you force yourself into taking a certain number of steps only
    and you deprive yourself of all the alternatives. On the other hand,
    there are many hated heads of state whose behavior gets on normal
    people's nerves, but we meet with them all the same.

    We suffer the same trauma in the Armenian trouble. There is a country
    called Armenia right next to our northeastern border. It is in need
    of Turkey for everything and it has to remain friends with Turkey.

    The geopolitical situation urges you to get along well with this
    country. However, you try to resolve the Armenian problem by totally
    disregarding Armenia, and you try to close all diplomatic channels.

    Of course, Armenia has made grave mistakes. Is it possible to get
    those mistakes rectified by severing diplomatic ties or by leaving
    the door ajar and imposing some sanctions on them by means of coming
    into direct contact with them through that half-open diplomatic door?

    We need to contemplate these; be calm and cool-headed, and focus on
    new diplomatic expansions instead of pushing logic and strategy to
    the background.

    Nobody is telling you to make concessions that will bring harm to
    the interests of the country -- and nobody can. However, we should
    push every single opportunity that comes our way in order to make
    Turkey's serious stance felt. The most productive choices emanate
    from pushing the diplomatic channels to the bitter end. When you try
    all diplomatic channels, even a deadlock you may end up with opens
    up new paths for you, eliminating opportunities others are likely to
    use as a right to object to you.

    I have to bitterly note that Turkey's foreign policies are still
    being pushed into the narrow frame of its domestic politics. Even
    the most vital issues are used as instruments to create new camps
    in society. So long as this disorganization persists within, it will
    be very difficult to express ourselves in the international arena. I
    wish we could see the entire field with a broader horizon rather than
    remaining in confined areas, and take steps accordingly.
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