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  • Turkey Has A Rough Road Ahead

    TURKEY HAS A ROUGH ROAD AHEAD
    By Robert M Cutler

    Middle East
    Aug 28, 2008

    MONTREAL - The realities of Turkey's economy and politics would
    alone have killed off the summer revival in the country's stock
    markets. Russia's invasion of Georgia, on Turkey's back doorstep,
    made sure.

    The benchmark ISE National 100 Index gained as much as 28% from
    the start of July to August 4 in the run-up to the Constitutional
    Court decision not to ban the Justice and Development Party of Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The index has since fallen from around
    the 43,000 mark to under the 41,500 level I identified this month as
    the lower bound of a band of resistances stretching up to 45,500 and
    dating from the first half of 2006.

    (See Turkey ruling spurs (brief) stock revival, Asia Times Online,
    August 8, 2008).

    Turkey is trying to elaborate a new and autonomous foreign policy in
    unprecedented conditions. For this to be successful, two things are
    necessary. These are a settling-down of its international region - the
    Georgia invasion making that look even less likely than previously -
    and a settling-down of its domestic politics. That also is not certain.

    The government is seeking to deepen its energy ties with Iran in the
    hope that Europe will decide to decrease its energy dependence on
    Russia by increasing such dependence on Iran. Yet Iran is conspicuous
    by its absence from Turkey's recent proposal to est ablish a Caucasus
    Stability and Cooperation Platform (CSCP), which would include Turkey,
    Russia and the three South Caucasus states, and perhaps others such
    as the US, at least as observers.

    Such a forum is not a new idea. The CSCP is the same idea that Turkey's
    president Suleiman Demirel proposed in 1999-2000, when it was called
    the Caucasus Stability Pact, only to see it abandoned by the subsequent
    government in Ankara headed by his longtime rival Bulent Ecevit.

    What is clear is that the CSCP initiative was a surprise to many
    players.

    This is not a fatal flaw but is surely a sign that it has not been
    adequately prepared. Especially, it is not clear where it would fit
    into the alphabet soup of regional and transregional organizations
    already concerned with the region, or in the current parlance what its
    "added value" would be.

    One Turkish analyst has suggested that Erdogan is looking for
    political cover to improve relations with eastern neighbor Armenia,
    to ameliorate the economic situation in eastern Turkey. This would
    be why he visited Baku to discuss the proposal with Armenia's own
    eastern neighbor, Azerbaijan, which seems less antagonistic to the
    idea than earlier in the decade, because it is clear that Turkey's
    blockade of Armenia only increases the latter's dependence on Russia.

    (The blockade was instituted in the early 1990s initially due to a
    dispute involving the Nagorno Karabagh region.) But Erdogan risks
    creating the impression that he welcomes Russia's participation in
    the CSCP to decrease Western influence in the region.

    That impression is enhanced by the warmth of his welcome last week to
    Iran's President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, whom he permitted among other
    things to avoid paying respects at the Ataturk monument, a visit
    that is diplomatically de rigueur for all foreign heads of state as a
    mark of respect to the founder of the Republic of Turkey, and to be
    filmed at length by television cameras at prayer in a major Turkish
    mosque. Turkish commentators have remarked that this latter gesture,
    beyond disrespecting the secularism of Turkish political modernity,
    violates the intimacy of prayer under Islamic religious tradition.

    That meeting did not lead to the conclusion of an energy contract,
    but one should not think that that failure is the result of pressure
    from the US, which is hostile to Iran's nuclear program. Rather, as
    the Turkish energy ministry stated, the problem is with the conditions
    of Tehran's buy-back contracts. The Iranian oil minister retorted
    that Turkey was "not informed about the culture of the buy-back
    contracts". According to him, "the price ceiling of the contract is
    determined after carrying out tenders". Almost needless to say, this
    is an unorthodox perspective. Nor is Turkey uninformed after years of
    experience with problems of Iranian (non)fulfillment of past contracts.

    Turkish economic advisor s correctly see dangers arising from commodity
    price increases, financing costs and the absence of production
    guarantees and insurance costs. Also the present constitution
    of the Iranian state forbids recognition of jurisdiction of any
    international court or arbitration procedure. Not just Turkey but
    every potential foreign investor in the energy sector in Iran faces
    all these hurdles. Iran has only itself to blame for the absence of
    Western investment.

    The CSCP initiative is Turkey's attempt to provide that Russia's
    invasion of Georgia does not make additional South Caucasus energy
    pipelines impossible.

    That Russian troops did not destroy Azerbaijan-owned energy
    infrastructure on Georgia's Black Sea coast, but some reports have
    put that down only to a saving telephone call from Azerbaijan's
    President Ilham Aliev to his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev. The
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline, terminating on the Turkish
    Mediterranean coast, was closed when Russia launched its invasion
    because of a Kurdish-claimed sabotage of the pipeline, although it
    is scheduled to reopen in the near future.

    Oil from Kazakhstan, to the east of the Caspian Sea, crosses Georgia
    by rail for export. Just this week such a train exploded after hitting
    a mine on the newly restored main east-west railway in the country,
    a mine that was not there before the Russian invasion. After years
    of discussion, Kazakhstan agreed just this summer with Azerbaijan
    on the 0Aterms for contributing crude from the Tengiz and Kashagan
    deposits in Kazakhstan into the BTC.

    That is in greater doubt now, as is a trans-Caspian gas pipeline from
    Kazakhstan's southern neighbor Turkmenistan crossing the South Caucasus
    into Turkey and from there to Europe. Likewise, Russian energy giant
    Gazprom's now-repeated offer to buy all of Azerbaijan's natural gas
    production, for piping through Russia to foreign markets, acquires
    a new profile under conditions of continuing Russian occupation of
    Georgian territory.

    Turkey had a rough economic road ahead even before the Russian invasion
    of Georgia. The country's long-term foreign currency debt is rated
    several notches below investment grade. No current initiative will
    contribute to solving the most glaring economic problem facing the
    government, the current account deficit, which was US$1.5 billion
    in 2002 (the year that Erdogan's party came to power), rose to $37
    billion in 2007 and is estimated to exceed $50 billion by the end of
    the current year.

    These days, especially in the Caspian/Black Sea region, pipelines
    are not big moneymakers. Rather, they are treated as services to
    the consortium that owns the gas or oil being transported. The CSCP
    will not solve Turkey's basic economic problems, which arise from its
    domestic financial and social evolution over the past six years. The
    outlook cannot be optimistic in the context of the worldwide economic
    downturn now20beginning.

    Robert M Cutler is Senior Research Fellow, Institute of European,
    Russian and Eurasian Studies, Carleton University, Canada.
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