Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

West Shouldn't Ignore Turkey's New Shifting Diplomacy: New York Time

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • West Shouldn't Ignore Turkey's New Shifting Diplomacy: New York Time

    WEST SHOULDN'T IGNORE TURKEY'S NEW SHIFTING DIPLOMACY: NEW YORK TIMES

    Tert.am
    30.11.09

    Turkey has finally shrugged off the straightjacket of a tight U.S.
    alliance, grown virtually indifferent to E.U. membership and turned
    its focus toward its former Ottoman neighbors in Asia and the Middle
    East, writes Alastair Crooke in the New York Times.

    Though not primarily meant as a snub to the West, this shift does
    nonetheless reflect growing discomfort and frustration with U.S. and
    E.U. policy, from the support of Israel's action in Gaza to Iran to
    the frustrated impasse of the European accession process. It also
    resonates more closely with the Islamic renaissance that has been
    taking place within Turkey.

    If Turkey continues successfully down this path, it will be as
    strategically significant for the balance of power in the region as
    the emergence of Iran as a pre-eminent power thanks to the collapse
    of the Soviet Union and the later destruction of Sunni dominance in
    Iraq by the U.S. invasion.

    In recent months, a spate of new agreements have been signed by
    Turkey with Iraq, Iran and Syria that suggest a nascent commonality
    of political vision. A new treaty with Armenia further signals how
    seriously Ankara means its "zero problem" good neighbour policy.

    More importantly, however, the agreements with Iraq, Iran and Syria
    reflect a joint economic interest. The "northern tier" of Middle
    Eastern states are poised to become the principal supplier of natural
    gas to central Europe once the Nabucco pipeline is completed - thus not
    only displacing Russia in that role but gradually eclipsing the primacy
    of Saudi Arabia as a geostrategic kingpin due to its oil reserves.

    Taken together with the economic stagnation and succession crisis
    that has incapacitated Egypt, it is clear, according to Crooke,
    that the so-called moderate "southern tier" Middle Eastern states
    that have been so central to American policies are becoming a weak
    and unreliable link indeed.

    Political players in the region can't but notice the drift of power
    from erstwhile U.S. allies Egypt and Saudi Arabia toward the northern
    tier states, and are starting to readjust to the new power reality.

    This can most clearly be seen in Lebanon, where a growing procession
    of former U.S. allies and critics of the Syrian government, including
    Prime Minister Saad Hariri, Walid Jumblat and, reportedly, some of
    the March 14 movement's Christian leaders, are making their pilgrimage
    to Damascus. That message is not lost on others in the region.

    If the Obama administration is not fully cognizant of these
    developments, its awareness will surely be raised as it attempts to
    mobilize the world for a new round of punitive sanctions against Iran.

    These sanctions are likely to fail not only because Russia and China
    won't go along in any serious way, but precisely because the much
    touted "alliance of moderate pro-Western Arab states" is turning out
    to be a paper tiger.

    In Turkey, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has not only embraced
    the legitimacy of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's election, but has insisted
    as well on the right of Iran as a sovereign nation to enrich uranium.

    Unlike Western leaders, he doesn't at all seem inordinately worried
    about Iran's course.

    The U.S. and Europe are going to have to grapple with the pending
    replacement of its "southern tier" allies in the Middle East by the
    rising clout of the "northern tier" states. It would be best to make
    this adjustment sooner rather than later. None of the issues that
    matter to the West - the nuclearization of Iran, Israel's security,
    the future of energy supplies - can be solved by ignoring the emergent
    reality of a new Middle East.
Working...
X