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  • The Rise And Rise Of Turkey

    THE RISE AND RISE OF TURKEY

    Middle East Online
    http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/opinion /?id=35441
    Nov 2 2009
    Egypt

    One way and another, a resurgent Turkey is rewriting the rules of the
    power game in the Middle East, in a positive and non-confrontational
    manner. This is one of the few bright spots in a turbulent and
    highly-inflammable Middle East, says Patrick Seale.

    It is generally accepted that America's destruction of Iraq overturned
    the balance of power in the Gulf, opening the way for the Islamic
    Republic of Iran to emerge as a major regional power, able to challenge
    the dominance of Sunni Arab states and pose as a rival to both Israel
    and the United States.

    Its influence has spread to Iraq itself -- now under Shi 'a leadership
    -- and beyond to Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, and even perhaps to Zaidi
    rebels in northern Yemen fighting the central government in Sana'a,
    a development which has aroused understandable anxiety in Saudi Arabia.

    However, the Iraq War has had another important consequence which is
    also attracting serious notice. America's failure in Iraq -- and its
    equal failure to tame Israel's excesses -- has encouraged Turkey to
    emerge from its pro-American strait-jacket, and assert itself as a
    powerful independent actor at the heart of a vast region which extends
    from the Middle East to the Balkans, the Caucasus and Central Asia.

    The Turks like to say that whereas Iran and Israel are revisionist
    powers, arousing anxiety and even fear by their expansionism and their
    challenge to existing power structures, Turkey is a stabilizing power,
    intent on spreading peace and security far and wide.

    Turkey is extending its influence by peaceful diplomacy rather than by
    military force. It is also forging economic ties with its neighbours,
    and has offered to mediate in several persistent regional conflicts.

    It has, however, not hesitated to use force to quell the guerrilla
    fighters of the PKK, a radical movement fighting for Kurdish
    independence.

    But even here, Turkey is now using a softer approach. PKK rebels have
    been offered an amnesty and Turkey's influential Foreign Minister
    Ahmet Davutoglu has this past week paid a historic visit -- the first
    of its kind -- to the Kurdish Regional Government in northern Iraq.

    There is even talk of Turkey opening a consulate in Erbil.

    In recent years, Turkey's diplomacy has scored many successes, winning
    great popularity in the Arab world and strengthening Turkey's hand
    in its bid to join the European Union. Some people would go so far
    as to argue that there is no future for Turkey without the EU, and
    no future for the EU without Turkey.

    Turkey's dynamic multi-directional foreign policy started to take
    shape when the AKP came to power in 2002, under its leaders Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and Abdullah Gul, now President of the
    Turkish Republic. These men are rightly considered to be conservative
    and moderately Islamic -- their wives wear headscarves -- but they
    are careful to stress that they have no ambition to create an Islamic
    state. Turkey's population may be largely Muslim, but the state itself
    is secular, democratic, capitalist and close to both the West and
    the Arab and Muslim world. Indeed, Turkey sees itself as a bridge
    between them, vital to both.

    Ahmet Davutoglu is the man credited with providing the theoretical
    framework for Turkey's new foreign policy. He was Erdogan's principal
    adviser before being promoted Foreign Minister.

    Two visits this past October may serve to illustrate Turkey's activist
    foreign policy. Prime Minister Erdogan, accompanied by nine ministers
    and an Airbus full of businessmen, visited Baghdad, where he held
    a joint session with the Iraq government and signed no fewer than
    48 memoranda in the fields of commerce, energy, water, security,
    forestry, the environment and so forth.

    At much the same time, Foreign Minister Davutoglu was in Aleppo where
    he signed another 40 agreements with Syria's Foreign Minister Walid
    al-Muallim, of which perhaps the most important was the removal of
    visas, allowing for a free flow of people across their common border.

    Turkey also broke new ground in October by signing two protocols with
    Armenia, providing for the restoration of diplomatic relations and
    the opening of the long-closed border between them. Not surprisingly,
    Turkey's ally Azerbaijan has strongly objected to this development,
    since it is locked in conflict with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh,
    an Armenian-populated pocket of Azerbaijan occupied by Armenian forces.

    Indeed, Turkey's protocols with Armenia are unlikely to be fully
    implemented until Armenia withdraws from at least some of the districts
    surrounding Karabakh - but, at the very least, a historic start has
    been made towards Turkish-Armenian reconciliation.

    >From the Arab point of view, the most dramatic development has
    undoubtedly been the cooling of Turkey's relations with Israel, which
    had been very close since 1996, especially in the field of defence
    industries and high-tech weapons. The relationship has been damaged
    by the outrage felt by many Turks at Israel's cruel oppression of
    the Palestinians, which reached its peak with the Gaza War.

    Even before the assault on Gaza, Prime Minister Erdogan -- a strong
    supporter of the Palestine cause -- did not hesitate to describe
    some of Israel's brutal actions as "state terrorism." A total breach
    between the two countries is unlikely, but relations are unlikely
    to recover their earlier warmth so long as Israel's hard-line Prime
    Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and his racist Foreign Minister Avigdor
    Lieberman remain in power.

    Underpinning Turkey's diplomacy is its central role as a unique
    energy hub linking oil and gas producers in Russia and Central Asia
    with energy-hungry markets in Europe.

    One way and another, a resurgent Turkey is rewriting the rules of the
    power game in the Middle East, in a positive and non-confrontational
    manner. This is one of the few bright spots in a turbulent and
    highly-inflammable Middle East.

    Patrick Seale is a leading British writer on the Middle East, and the
    author of The Struggle for Syria; also, Asad of Syria: The Struggle
    for the Middle East; and Abu Nidal: A Gun for Hire.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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