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No, Turkey has no Ottoman nostalgia

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  • No, Turkey has no Ottoman nostalgia

    No, Turkey has no Ottoman nostalgia
    By Suat Kiniklioglu
    Commentary by

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?editio n_id=1&categ_id=5&article_id=109719
    Monday , December 14, 2009


    Nowadays, the international media are obsessed with the question of
    who `lost' Turkey and what that supposed loss means for Europe and the
    West. More alarmingly, some commentators have likened Turkey's
    neighborhood policy as a revival of Ottoman imperialism. Recently, a
    senior Turkish columnist went so far as to quote the country's foreign
    minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, as saying that `we are indeed neo-Ottoman.'

    As someone who was present when Davutoglu made his presentation to the
    parliamentary faction of Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party
    (AKP), I can attest to the fact that he did not use such terminology.
    In fact, Davutoglu and all of us in the AKP foreign-policy community
    never use this term as it is simply a misrepresentation of our
    position.

    Turkey's neighborhood policy is devised to reintegrate the country
    into its immediate neighborhoods, which includes the Balkans, the
    Black Sea area, the Caucasus, the Middle East, and the Eastern
    Mediterranean. We in Turkey aim to deepen our political dialogue,
    increase our trade relations, and multiply our people-to-people
    contacts with our neighbors in the form of sports, tourism, and
    cultural activities. When the German Social Democratic politician Egon
    Bahr formulated his Ostpolitik in the 1960s, no one asked the
    chancellor, Willy Brandt, whether Germany was lost.

    God bestowed upon Turkey a geographical position that fundamentally
    requires us to engage with East and West as well as North and South.
    This is neither a choice Turkey has made nor a luxury - it is a
    necessity.

    The symbol of the Byzantine and then the Seljuk Empires, which
    occupied roughly the same geographical area as Turkey does today, was
    a double-headed eagle looking in the directions of both east and west.
    It should be no wonder that Turkey is also seeking to engage both ends
    of its geographical extensions, and feels that its security is best
    consolidated by minimizing ambient risks together with its neighbors.

    So, we find that the current debate on Turkey's orientation is rather
    superfluous, and in some cases ill-intentioned. Our neighborhood
    policy needs support, not criticism. Turkey has become an invaluable
    asset in the make-up of our surrounding regions, and it is already
    changing the status quo in favor of more stability and predictability.
    Turkish efforts at normalization with Armenia, for example, are
    destined to bring about change in the entire South Caucasus. We are
    doing our part in terms of burden-sharing. Sensible Europeans can
    understand that.



    To be sure, some of our neighbors are more difficult than others. But
    no country has the luxury of choosing its neighbors. Turkey's
    neighborhood policy is a very realistic one, based on a genuine
    interests; it does not represent some form of romantic neo-Ottoman
    nostalgia, as more than a few international commentators have
    mistakenly suggested.

    True, there is a neo-Ottoman revival in the cultural field, and our
    citizens are eager to rediscover Ottoman life, culture, and practices.
    As Turkey is normalizing domestically, it is also reinterpreting its
    national historical narrative. This is a natural byproduct of our
    efforts to consolidate our democracy. However, trying to paint our
    carefully constructed foreign-policy initiatives with overtones of an
    imperialism past is not only a stark misrepresentation of reality; it
    also does gross injustice to our well-intentioned efforts to stabilize
    our surrounding region.

    In Roman mythology, Janus was the god of gates, doorways, beginnings,
    and endings. Turkey today has a Janus-like geography that offers gates
    and doorways to the East and to the West. It offers beginnings and it
    offers endings to the Caucasus, the Black Sea, the Balkans, and the
    Mediterranean.

    In this capacity, Turkey compliments and contributes to creating a
    unique transitional passage between otherwise difficult regions, for
    it embodies and signifies centuries-old co-existence and adjustment.
    Turkish foreign policy contributes to that coming together as well as
    helping its immediate neighborhoods to connect with one another.

    Contrary to the recent charges, Turkey's foreign policymakers are not
    seeking to revive the Ottoman Empire. Instead, we seek Turkey's
    historical reintegration into its immediate surroundings, thereby
    correcting an anomaly created during the Cold War years. Such
    re-integration could only benefit the European Union and our other
    Western and NATO allies. None of them, therefore, has any reason to
    express discomfort with Turkey's approach.



    Suat Kiniklioglu is the Justice and Development Party's deputy
    chairman for external affairs, a member of the party's Central
    Executive Committee, and member of the Foreign Affairs Committee in
    the Turkish Parliament. THE DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in
    collaboration with Project Syndicate © (www.project-syndicate.org).
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