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ANKARA: Obama's Presidency And Its Meaning For Turkey

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  • ANKARA: Obama's Presidency And Its Meaning For Turkey

    OBAMA'S PRESIDENCY AND ITS MEANING FOR TURKEY
    [email protected]

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 14 2008
    Turkey

    It would not be an overstatement to argue that not only the US but
    also the rest of the world embraced President-elect Barack Obama's
    message of hope and change.

    Apparently, it was not only the 300 million Americans at home who
    suffered to a great extent from eight years of Bush and neocon
    policies as the world welcomed the victory of the skinny black man
    with great joy.

    Among countless celebrations in different parts of the world, the one
    in Van, a relatively remote Eastern province in Turkey, was a perfect
    indicator of the meaning of Obama's election as the first black (or
    better, African-American, in accordance with American brand political
    correctness) president of the United States. Following Obama's victory,
    the people of Van sacrificed 44 sheep for the 44th president of the
    US. Given the fact that Turks have not done such a gesture for an
    American politician since Clinton won the hearts of people in the
    aftermath of the 1999 earthquake, how could we explain such a huge
    welcome for a politician whose policies have not yet been tested?

    The response seems to be clear: Just the election alone of a black
    man -- read: "member of an underrepresented, discriminated and
    less-privileged group" -- into the single most important office in
    the world meant that the sociologically black everywhere finally felt
    victorious. Sure, Obama's election is a huge psychological threshold
    for African-Americans and other minorities in America, but just his
    identity constitutes a paradigm shift for those who feel "black"
    all around the world.

    Aside from such a historic change coupled with his rhetoric
    along the same lines, should we expect much change from the Obama
    administration? I do not think so. Despite his unconventionally
    diverse background for an American president, Obama has not followed
    a completely different path from his predecessors. As an alumnus of
    Ivy League schools Columbia and Harvard, he gained a similar world
    outlook as a "WASP" (white, Anglo-Saxon Protestant). Not do only his
    education and training make Obama of the same kind, but he also started
    building his political career at a local level in accordance with the
    "rules of the game." After all, as political scientist Louis Hartz
    argues, Americans seeks the "same estate" and make a choice among
    liberals only.

    Although Obama's background and his early exposure to the rest of
    the world might give him a better understanding of the "other,"
    his first choice for senior staff hints that not much will change
    in the course of US policies. In all fairness to him, though, we
    should note the importance of his promise to close Guantanamo, which
    has been in dire contradiction with the liberal values that America
    claims to celebrate. Presidential history presents examples of the
    impact of personalities on policies, but in such an institutionalized
    country that has stakes throughout the world, there is an unwritten
    limit to the degree of changes you can make, particularly in foreign
    policy. Even in the pre-election declarations on foreign policy,
    for instance, as far as relations with Israel are concerned, Obama
    vowed to prioritize the security of Israel. Yet, he also signaled for
    "more diplomacy" with Iran. Apparently Iran considers Obama less
    of an evil considering the congratulatory message from Tehran. It
    would not be unreasonable to expect the end of unilateralism and
    "pre-emptive strikes" on the part of the US, which is by itself a
    positive development for the rest of the world.

    Although Obama declared the main tenets of his policies prior to
    election -- such as his promise to withdraw troops from Iraq -- we
    are not in a position to make intelligent estimates on the possible
    consequences of such a step and other critical issues.

    As far as Turkish-American relations are concerned, there is no doubt
    that at least a different mood will mark the new era. Notwithstanding
    the constants of American foreign policy, we might expect the new
    administration to be at least more open to dialogue. It is public
    knowledge that mutual mistrust and frustration determined the tone of
    US-Turkish relations in the post-March 1, 2003, era despite periodic
    efforts to mend fences. From the end of the Cold War until that
    date, there was already a need for a redefinition of relations as the
    assumptions of the Cold War era coupled with the complacency that they
    brought about disappeared. The relations were no longer on "automatic
    pilot," but in the lost years of the 1990s, Turkey was overly occupied
    with domestic tensions in the absence of a stable government let alone
    a visionary leader to draw up a new framework for US-Turkish relations.

    With the adoption of a proactive foreign policy in the 2000s, Turkey
    began to seek a leadership role in the region while trying to reduce
    problems with its neighbors. In addition to emphasizing the already
    well-known yet unique features of its identity (being the only secular
    Muslim country in such a strategic and troubled region of the world),
    Turkey wanted to assume the role of an arbiter in the most contentious
    matters in the Middle East. Considering the never-ending domestic
    tensions and the struggle to constitute the primacy of civilian
    politics at home, Turkey might not have had an upper hand. Yet,
    despite its domestic chains, Turkey has not quit its efforts to be a
    more active player in the region. In a way, these efforts paid off
    when Turkey was elected a temporary member to the United Nations
    Security Council.

    It seems that an American administration that would avoid military
    means as much as possible and prefers diplomacy and dialogue over
    pre-emption would be much easier to cooperate with for Turkey. Although
    Turkish society was overly focused on Obama's stance on the Armenian
    question, when looked at a macro level, a proactive Turkey that
    targets zero problems with its neighbors is likely to have a broader
    overlap of interests with the Obama administration than with the
    neocons. Having said that, I do not suggest ignoring the Armenian
    issue. Yet, we have to acknowledge that this issue has almost a
    public relations dimension. Unfortunately, because of decades of
    poor lobbying, we seem to be losing the hearts and minds of the
    international community in that respect. Rather than seeking the
    support of the US president regardless of his convictions, we have
    to have a long-term strategy of changing the public opinion in the
    first place. In such a framework, it is clear that Turkey's move to
    ameliorate the relations with Armenia was a constructive step that
    will give us leverage in such a touchy subject.

    For America, at a time of global economic crisis and among its
    immediate headaches such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran and others,
    relations with Turkey surely will not be a top item in the list
    of Obama administration. Yet, given our direct and/or indirect
    inevitable role in almost every issue in the region, Obama will have
    to learn more about Turkey. The intricacies of Turkish politics will
    probably confuse him at first like any other beginner, but hopefully
    with reasonable and fair advisers, it will not take long for this
    promising administration to realize Turkey's role in the region.

    As Obama said in his campaign, "change we need." Not only in the
    United States, but also in the way they communicate with the rest of
    the world.
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