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Explaining Turkey's high-risk activism

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  • Explaining Turkey's high-risk activism

    GlobalPost
    December 7, 2009 Monday 11:17 AM EST


    Opinion: Explaining Turkeys high-risk activism

    BYLINE: Ronald H. Linden


    Dec. 7, 2009 (GlobalPost delivered by Newstex) --

    WASHINGTON ' On Monday, Prime Minister Recip Erdogan of Turkey arrived
    in Washingtontrailing a list of actions designed to achieve Å`zero
    problems with his countrys neighbors. Considering how many immediate
    neighbors there are (seven) and who they are (e.g. Iran, Iraq, Syria,
    Armenia) this is a tall order. Ankaras activism has raised the stakes
    in its own neighborhood and eyebrows in the United States.


    Turkey has long been a valuable member of NATO and supporter of U.S.
    initiatives, e.g. the first Gulf War, Afghanistan. Its application to
    join the EU has been in Brussels mailbox for more than 20 years. Now,
    several developments in the region ' an erosion of U.S. interest and
    power, the rise of an assertive Russia and Iran, a nonexistent Å`peace
    process in the Middle East and the emergence of the Black Sea as a
    central energy corridor ' have spurred Turkey to carve out its own
    distinctive role.

    Turkey is poor in energy resources but rich in strategic location.
    Russia is now its largest trading partner and energy supplier. Ankara
    has agreed to let the Russians build the Å`South Stream pipeline across
    Turkish territorial waters. Last year Turkish reaction to Russian
    dismemberment of Georgia ' with whom Turkey had extensive ties ' was
    muted and U.S. attempts to put more naval forces in the Black Sea at
    the time were rebuffed. When the foreign minister visited Georgia, a
    deputy undersecretary simultaneously visited the breakaway Abkhazia
    region.

    But it would be misleading to see this as an East-West choice. Turkey
    has not retreated from involvement in European energy plans and signed
    the long-delayed agreement on the Nabucco Pipeline the same month as
    that on South Stream. It rapidly recognized the new state of Kosovo,
    which the EU and U.S. wanted and Russia did not. President Obamas
    visit in April, 2009 produced a jump in favorable views of the U.S.
    but suspicions linger from years of being other countries instrument.

    What we are seeing is a Turkish foreign policy that is viewing its
    neighborhood through Turkish lenses unrestrained by allies views or
    old paradigms. As such, Turkeys search for its own path is accompanied
    by significant risks. In October the government signed protocols with
    Armenia pledging to open a border that has been closed for more than
    15 years in support of Azerbaijans position in Nagorno-Karabakh. This
    has infuriated the Azerbaijani public and government, which has
    threatened Turkeys privileged access to Azeri energy supplies. If
    Turkish-Armenian normalization goes ahead without progress on
    Nagorno-Karabakh, Turkey will have traded longstanding and much needed
    ties with resource-rich Azerbaijan for a new uncertain level of
    involvement with landlocked, Russian-dominated and quite poor Armenia.

    This risk is minor compared to those in the Middle East. American
    desires to isolate and pressure Iran run directly counter Turkeys $10
    billion annual trade with the Islamic Republic. The same prime
    minister who is coming to Washington has sharply criticized talk of
    sanctions and proclaimed Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to be
    Å`our friend. A friend he may be, but if he persists with uranium
    enrichment and threatens others in the region, Turkey will seem an
    enabler.

    Probably no change of direction has been as dramatic as Turkeys
    courting of good relations with its Arab neighbors, Iraq and Syria,
    combined with its simultaneous slaps at Israel, a long time ally. An
    emotional outburst by Prime Minister Erdogan at Davos in January was
    followed by visceral criticism of Israeli action in Gaza and, most
    recently, cancelling of Israeli participation in the Å`Anatolian Eagle
    military exercises. The gains are substantial for Turkeys image among
    Arab states and with Iran.

    But the risks are great. Ankara risks losing the valuable military and
    technological cooperation it had enjoyed with Israel, not to mention
    the $300 million annually derived from Israeli visitors ' some 500,000
    last year. It has raised great suspicions among Americans concerned
    about the fate of Israel and forfeited its role as an Å`honest broker
    in the Middle East ' a role that almost succeeded in creating direct
    Israeli-Syrian talks. Instead, Turkey now has a Å`strategic partnership
    with Syria, another Å`trade that may bring it closer to a much poorer,
    weaker and more isolated country.

    More broadly, virtually all of the Turkish moves strengthen the hand
    of Russia in the region, already boosted by its actions in Georgia.
    Turkish-Azeri tension over the Armenian overture, for example, rebound
    to Russias advantage, as the major gas supplier to Turkey and
    alternative market for Azerbaijan.

    Why would Turkey pursue such policies, especially given recent failed
    gambles? In 2004 it reversed decades-long policy to back an
    EU-brokered settlement in Cyprus. The result? Greek-Cypriots rejected
    the plan, northern Cyprus is still isolated and Cyprus has been
    admitted to the EU while its own prospects languish.

    Domestically, Turkish policies resonate positively with an important
    part of the public. Changes in Turkey in the last decade have brought
    to influence more conservative and more Islamic actors from Anatolia
    and eastern Turkey, a newly empowered elite no longer as interested in
    getting the Wests approval. Ironically, the very democratization that
    the West has pushed has given this group more influence over foreign
    policy.

    Internationally, Turkey is asserting ' or reasserting ' itself in a
    region that was once under its sway. This is not a revival of the
    Ottoman Empire, but a move to fill the vacuum created by missing U.S.
    influence in the Middle East and a weak, uncoordinated European
    response to Russia in the Black Sea. Given history and the countrys
    geostrategic position, it seems to the Erdogan government both natural
    and obligatory to fill this vacuum. The aim is to create a less
    turbulent region and a more secure energy supply while satisfying an
    important domestic constituency. But internationally there is another
    constituency, here in Washington, that needs some reassuring.

    Ronald H. Linden is a Senior Fellow of the Transatlantic Academy based
    at the German Marshall Fund in Washington D.C.
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