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ANKARA: Turkey's Transformers (II): Ankara's Ambitions

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  • ANKARA: Turkey's Transformers (II): Ankara's Ambitions

    TURKEY'S TRANSFORMERS (II): ANKARA'S AMBITIONS
    Morton Abramowitz/Henri J. Barkey

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Nov 10 2009
    Turkey

    Turkey has never before had a foreign minister with the drive, vigor
    and vision of Ahmet Davutoglu. Even before he took the post last May,
    Davutoglu had been promoting a forceful vision of Turkey's role in
    the world.

    He has gathered an A-list of senior officials at the Ministry of
    Foreign Affairs and set forth an ambitious policy advocating "zero
    problems with neighbors," with the hope of settling long-standing
    differences through a high degree of engagement with the leaders and
    the people of Turkey's neighboring countries.

    The aim is to turn Turkey from a "central," or regional, power into
    a global one in the new international order. Implicitly, this is also
    a project to demonstrate to the world that a Muslim country can be a
    constructive democratic member of the international community. More
    explicit is Turkey's ambition to better deal with the Muslim nations
    of the Middle East and beyond, whether friends or foes of the West.

    The Justice and Development Party, or AKP, government has been
    enormously active, though with mixed results, despite the acclaim
    it showers on itself. Most successful in expanding its trade and
    investment abroad, it has been far less so in making progress toward
    satisfying the European Union's accession requirements. It has also
    failed to come to grips with the question of whether the Ottomans'
    treatment of the Armenians a century ago constituted genocide.

    It is still unclear whether the AKP has the will to break much domestic
    crockery on matters of foreign policy. Its major breakthrough so far
    has been to end Turkey's political isolation of Iraqi Kurdistan. Ankara
    no longer pretends the region does not exist and that it need only
    deal with Baghdad. This 180-degree turn was in part prompted by the
    recent U.S. decision to begin withdrawing its troops from Iraq.

    Turkey is trying to anticipate the evolution of Iraqi politics in the
    absence of U.S. combat units in the country. The AKP government wants
    Iraq to remain whole, but realizes that if tensions in Iraq devolve
    into all-out violence and the country breaks apart, Turkey would be
    better off with a friendly partner in Iraq's energy-rich north.

    The AKP government managed to convince the Turkish military that an
    opening to the Iraqi Kurds would not exacerbate existing difficulties
    with the Turkish Kurds and would increase Turkey's influence in Iraq.

    The Turks have come to understand that for the Iraqi Kurds, having
    better relations with Ankara is a strategic choice: Turkey is their
    door to the West. Yet the Turkish authorities and their Kurdish
    counterparts in Iraq still have to sort out some explosive issues,
    such as the contested status of the oil-rich area of Kirkuk. The Turks
    believe that it is essential to keep control of the city out of the
    hands of the Regional Kurdish Administration, both to help prevent
    the breakup of Iraq and to limit the aspirations of the Iraqi Kurds.

    The Turkish government also made an impressive move earlier this year
    when it reversed its long-standing policy of isolating Armenia. In
    April, despite an apparent promise to U.S. President Barack Obama,
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan delayed opening Turkey's
    border with Armenia after nationalists in Turkey and Azerbaijan
    protested. But in another surprising about-face, Turkey approved in
    August the text of two protocols establishing diplomatic and economic
    relations between the two countries and an agreement on opening the
    Turkish-Armenian border.

    This is a major step forward for diplomacy in the Caucasus. Turkey
    also hopes that the initiative will help its case with the EU and
    reduce the pressure on the U.S. Congress to pass a resolution on the
    Armenian genocide next year.

    It remains to be seen whether the AKP will stand up to opposition.

    Erdogan has promised the government of Azerbaijan that Turkey will
    not open its border with Armenia until Armenia relinquishes control
    over the regions it holds surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, a landlocked
    province in Azerbaijan. Erdogan seems to be betting that a diplomatic
    solution to this issue will somehow be found this fall. But it is
    quite possible that Erdogan's deals with Armenia will fail to pass in
    the Turkish Parliament because of Azerbaijani and Turkish nationalist
    pressures.

    Cyprus and Nabucco

    The issue of Cyprus continues to be the main hurdle to Turkey's
    accession to the EU. Despite Turkey's renewing negotiations with the
    two Cypriot parties for the umpteenth time, there is no great hope for
    settling the island's contested status. The Turkish government will
    also have to decide soon whether it will open its ports to shipping
    from the Greek part of Cyprus, as it has pledged it will do to under
    its agreement with the EU.

    The European Commission is expected to release a report on Turkey's
    progress in November, and that could set the stage for recriminations.

    The fact that in 2003, the Turkish government displayed the courage,
    at least in domestic political terms, to drop its traditional
    obstructionist stance in favor of a pro-European one seems to hold
    little water today. The EU failed to reward the Turkish Cypriots
    for the dramatic change in their patron's policy by providing them
    with trade opportunities, thereby undermining the AKP government's
    diplomacy and its credibility on this issue at home.

    Until its recent Armenian initiative, the Turkish government seemed
    to have grown mostly inert when it came to enhancing its standing
    with the EU.

    Turkey did score a big win last July by signing an agreement with
    six other countries to build a pipeline that would bring natural gas
    from the Caucasus and Central Asia through Turkey to Europe. Whether
    the Nabucco pipeline will ever be built is uncertain: The costs
    of construction and whether enough gas will be available to fill
    the pipeline are issues that still need to be worked out, and the
    Turkish government will have to maneuver delicately with both the
    West and Russia.

    But the pipeline project has already raised Turkey's importance in
    the eyes of the EU's energy-hungry countries, though several Turkish
    foreign-policy initiatives have given Western governments pause. One
    is Turkey's closer relationship with Russia, a rapprochement driven by
    a vast expansion in Turkish-Russian trade. During a highly publicized
    visit to Ankara by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin soon after
    the Nabucco pipeline deal was signed this summer, the Turkish and
    Russian governments struck a potentially conflicting agreement to
    develop the South Stream pipeline to bring Russian gas to Europe
    through Turkish territory.

    As soon as the Georgian crisis hit in August 2008, Erdogan jumped on a
    plane and tried to broker negotiations between Moscow and Tbilisi. His
    intervention, which was notably uncoordinated with Turkey's allies in
    NATO and the EU, yielded little more than Turkey's call for a Caucasus
    Stability and Cooperation Pact - an idea that pleased the Russians but
    appeared to vex Western governments. Whatever suspicions Turkey may
    continue to harbor about Russia, Erdogan has significantly improved
    the tenor of the two states' relations. He is also in no hurry to
    see Georgia's NATO aspirations fulfilled.

    But perhaps the AKP government's most ballyhooed effort has been its
    diplomatic activism in the Middle East. The Turkish government took
    advantage of the vacuum created by U.S. President George W. Bush's
    unpopular policies in the region to participate in indirect talks
    between Israel and Syria. It injected itself into the negotiations
    following the crises in Lebanon in 2006 and Gaza in late 2008 and
    early 2009. French President Nicolas Sarkozy invited Davutoglu, then
    a foreign-policy adviser, to join the French delegation that traveled
    to Damascus to discuss the Gaza crisis.

    Ankara has taken partial credit for the agreement governing the
    withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq; it reportedly deserves some for
    hosting talks between U.S. representatives and Iraqi insurgents earlier
    this year. And Foreign Minister Davutoglu jumped at the opportunity
    to mediate Iraq and Syria's recent dispute, in which Iraq claimed
    that bombings in Baghdad's Green Zone in August were carried out by
    insurgents from Syria.

    * Morton Abramovitz, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation,
    was U.S. ambassador to Turkey from 1989 to 1991. Henri J. Barkey
    is a nonresident senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for
    International Peace and a professor of international relations at
    Lehigh University. This piece was published in the November/December
    2009 edition of Foreign Affairs.
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