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Can Turkey Help Bridge East And West?

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  • Can Turkey Help Bridge East And West?

    CAN TURKEY HELP BRIDGE EAST AND WEST?

    Middle East Online
    March 19 2009

    Turkey's proximity to Europe in the West and Russia, Iran, Iraq,
    and Syria in the East, makes it an important bridge for peace and
    understanding, notes Dallas Darling.

    In the early 20th Century when Mustafa Kemal-who was given the grand
    title Ghazi or Fighter of the Islamic Faith, led an uprising and
    Turkish national army against the Western Powers and Russia's attempt
    to dismember the Anatolia Peninsula, he probably never envisioned that
    someday Turkey would help bridge East and West. Nor did he realize
    that in creating the nation of Turkey, he was subverting an empire. (1)

    Therefore, it was no surprise when Turkey's Prime Minister (PM)
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the Islamist Justice and Development Party
    played a pivotal role with negotiations between Israel and Syria over
    Israel's occupation of the Golan Heights. Neither was the disclosure
    of Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan's statement that Turkey would
    like to bridge the differences between the United States and Iran
    a major revelation. (Note: Syrian's president just announced that
    Israel will return the Golan Heights.)

    When Turkey's PM Erdogan recently walked off the stage at the World
    Economic Forum in Switzerland, he did so to protest and admonish those
    who applauded Israel's justification of its invasion of Gaza which
    killed 1,300 civilians. He said he was very saddened so many people had
    been killed and thought it was wrong and "not very humanitarian." In a
    follow-up interview, PM Erdogan condemned the brutal Israeli invasion
    and Israel's punitive economic blockade against Gaza.

    While challenging Israel to listen more intently to surrounding
    Arab nations, he is also working to bring Palestinian's Hamas'
    conditions for a permanent ceasefire to the United Nations. Can Turkey
    intervene and help free Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit and hundreds of
    Palestinians wrongly imprisoned-who have no name? A plan for Turkish
    peace keeping forces in and along Gaza and the Israeli border is
    also being considered. Mr. Erdogan too has called on the US and the
    world to initiate a new round of Middle East peace talks on behalf
    of Palestinian Statehood.

    When President Barack Obama telephoned Turkish President Abdullah Gul
    and PM Erdogan, both agreed to strengthen US support for Turkish-Iraqi
    relations and address the Kurdish Question. At the same time, they
    encouraged the newly elected president to review America's military
    policies in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Western Powers, especially
    the US, can learn from the Turkish-Ottoman Empire and how armies
    and massive rearmament programs unfortunately create empires by
    subverting nations.

    While visiting the US, Turkish PM Erdogan cautioned that "All
    countries are passengers on the same ship" and "if we sink, we will
    all go down together." PM Erdogan then challenged US and European
    leaders to turn their attentions to other "ticking time bombs" like
    the unsettled border disputes between Turkey's neighbors Russia and
    Georgia and Armenia and Azerbaijan, and the hypocrisy of America's
    nuclear policies in relation to Iran's nuclear enrichment program.

    Turkey's PM Erdogan warned that "Nuclear weapons are being harbored
    in many countries" and "Taking a stand against one country and
    forcing them to disarm is not an honest approach." He challenged
    all nations, including the US, to eradicate nuclear weapons once
    and for all. Back at home, PM Erdogan has called for lifting a ban
    on Muslim women wearing head scarves in universities. He also plans
    a future meeting with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan to discuss
    the Armenian Diaspora.

    It appears the "sick man of Europe" (as Britain and Czar Nicholaus
    I referred to the declining Turkish-Ottoman Empire) is today the
    "strong man of Eurasia" and is becoming a vital bridge between East
    and West. Due to disastrous wars in the Middle East and a tarnished
    human rights record, the US has currently forfeited its bridge in
    the 21st Century. Russia, Turkey's powerful neighbor to the north,
    also too experienced trouble.

    This power vacuum has left Turkey as being a vital link between East
    and West. NATO's predominantly secularist and Christian forces could
    improve its peace keeping operations by using more Turkish Muslim
    soldiers. Since the European Union (EU) has accepted Turkey as a
    potential candidate and if admitted, Islamic economic values could
    help improve wasteful and fledgling Western capitalist societies.

    Turkey's proximity to Europe in the West and Russia, Iran, Iraq,
    and Syria in the East, makes it an important bridge for peace and
    understanding. As Turkey revaluates the impact of secular institutions
    on religion, extreme individualism on the ummah, globalization on
    economic stability, and modernization on Islam, it would be well to
    remember the words of Ataturk Mustafa Kemal: "Surviving in the world
    of modern civilization depends upon changing ourselves." (2)

    This also goes for citizens in other countries around the world
    and what type of bridges they are encouraging their governments and
    leaders to build.

    Dallas Darling is the author of The Other Side Of Christianity:
    Reflections on Faith, Politics, Spirituality, History, and Peace, and
    is a writer for www.worldnews.com. You can read more of his articles
    at www.beverlydarling.com.

    Notes:

    (1) Archer, Christon I., John R. Feris, Holger H. Herwig, and Timothy
    H.E. Travers. World History Of Warfare. Lincoln, Nebraska: University
    of Nebraska Press, 2002. p. 475.

    (2) Ellis, Elisabeth Gaynor and Anthony Esler. World History
    Connections To Today. Needham, Massachusetts: Prentice Hall,
    1999. p. 745.

    http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?i d=31051

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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