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  • ISTANBUL: Obama's ideal partner: Turkey

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 6 2009

    Obama's ideal partner: Turkey

    by JOSHUA W. WALKER*


    US President Barack Obama laid out his new Afghanistan strategy on
    Tuesday night by ordering an additional 30,000 US forces to the
    country.


    While the majority of the analysis and discussion in Washington has
    centered on the levels of US forces or the president's reasoning for
    it, the president emphasized that the `burden [in Afghanistan] is not
    ours alone to bear.' Declaring that not only is NATO's credibility on
    the line, but that the security of the US and all of its allies are at
    stake, the president invoked the international consensus on
    Afghanistan that led to a 43-nation coalition that has operated in the
    country since the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, to sell his new strategy.
    Yet the reality is that this international coalition is waning, not
    surging, and is in desperate need of a regional champion that can
    serve as a model partner for the US in Afghanistan. Obama's ideal
    partner is Turkey.

    Consider the facts: Turkey boasts the second largest military in NATO
    after only the US and the largest in Europe. Turkey has been a close
    American bilateral and NATO ally for more than 60 years. In addition
    to being a member of almost every European organization, Turkey is a
    UN Security Council member, a member of the G-20, has successfully
    pushed Ekmeleddin Ä°hsanoÄ?lu as the secretary-general of the
    Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) and is one of the few
    examples of a fully functioning Muslim-majority democracy in the
    Middle East. On top of all of this, Ankara has close historic ties
    with Afghanistan that date back to the 1920s when the founder of the
    modern republic, Atatürk, served as a model for modernization that
    collapsed only after great power interference in Kabul carved up the
    country. Often referred to as Afghanistan's `closest neighbor without
    borders,' Turkey also shares considerable cultural, ethnic and
    linguistic links that make it an ideal partner for the US to work
    with.

    The Turks have taken command of the International Security Assistance
    Force (ISAF) in Kabul for the second time and have doubled their troop
    levels to 1,600 troops in the last few months alone. Every place the
    Turks, both civilian and military alike, have controlled has benefited
    from considerable and consistent improvements in ways that few other
    Western allies can claim. Having once contributed the third highest
    number of troops in Afghanistan after only the US and Britain, the
    Turks today with their 2.5 million soldiers are an under-utilized and
    under-appreciated ally that Washington would be wise to actively court
    and engage.

    Turkey is eager to prove its importance as a rising regional power. As
    demonstrated in recent months by Ankara's moves in Armenia, Syria and
    Iraq, Turkey has transformed itself from a static Cold-War bulwark
    into a potential catalyst for regional stability. At the same time
    Ankara's rhetoric and moves towards Iran, Israel and Sudan have
    confused many in Washington. As a result, Turkey's new self-confidence
    and regional prominence would be best channeled towards Afghanistan,
    which would highlight Turkey's vital transatlantic connection and
    newly emerging leadership role in the Muslim world.

    In this respect Turkey is both internationally and domestically well
    positioned to play a larger role in Afghanistan. There is a broad
    consensus within Ankara that is rarely found between the ruling
    Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the military establishment
    about the responsibility and potential for Turkish influence in
    Afghanistan. The AKP sees Afghanistan as being part of its historic
    region and offering a positive example of the constructive role
    Turkey's newly activist post-Cold War foreign policy can play in
    producing regional stability. On the other side, the Turkish military
    has suffered a series of recent scandals that has tarnished its
    reputation at home that would be enhanced by a successful peacekeeping
    deployment that re-enforced the importance of Turkey's military, not
    only domestically, but internationally as well. Given the rarity of
    such a consensus between the AKP and the Turkish military, there has
    never been a better time for the US to look to Turkey for help in
    Afghanistan.

    If the president wants to succeed in Afghanistan and actively engage
    America's allies, he should begin with a personalized request to
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an when he visits the White
    House on Monday, Dec. 7. Highlighting the Turks' considerable
    accomplishments in construction, education and hospital support
    throughout central Afghanistan would encourage Turkey to take a more
    active leadership role in the region. Asking for more civilian and
    military help in Afghanistan given the fact that Turkish diplomats,
    politicians, workers and even military personally can travel with a
    light footprint without facing many of the security problems that
    Western counterparts encounter makes pragmatic and strategic sense. By
    playing to the Turks' newly discovered self-confidence in Afghanistan,
    the president can transfer critical responsibility to an ideal partner
    that is poised to play an increasingly important regional role for
    many years to come. Not only will enhanced US-Turkish cooperation
    serve the interests of Afghanistan but it is also a win-win for
    America and Turkey.


    *Joshua W. Walker is a postdoctoral fellow at the Transatlantic
    Academy of the German Marshall Fund and a Truman national security
    fellow.


    06 December 2009, Sunday
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