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Turkey's Soft Power Successes2010-02-11

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  • Turkey's Soft Power Successes2010-02-11

    Turkey's Soft Power Successes

    Wendy Kristianasen is editorial director of Le Monde diplomatique's
    English edition.
    © 2010 Le Monde diplomatique - distributed by Agence Global


    Turkey wants to expand its influence throughout its surrounding
    region, creating a peaceful, stable environment in which its economy
    can prosper. And as the country struggles internally to demilitarize
    and democratize, there is broad support for the AKP government's bold
    aims abroad, says Wendy Kristianasen.

    Ahmet Davutoglu's vision is wide. He wants peace and security for the
    wider region around Turkey and believes Ankara is well-placed as a
    member of the G20 and NATO to make it happen. He is the architect of
    Turkey's new policy, which relies on zero problems with neighboors,
    and soft power. He was chief foreign policy adviser to the prime
    minister from the start of the Justice and Development (AK) Party
    government, which came to power in a landslide general election on 3
    November 2002. In May 2009 he became foreign minister.

    He says Turkey is well-poised to play a mediating role in various
    conflicts, with strong ties with different religious and ethnic groups
    where there are Turkish speakers. That means the Balkans, the
    Caucasus, Russia, Cyprus, the Middle East. His vision of security for
    all and peace means more than mediation; it means `high-level
    political dialogue, economic interdependency and a multicultural
    character.'

    Davutoglu is not a politician, but an academic, and not even a member
    of parliament, so free of ties to constituents. And he has not just
    thought out an innovative foreign policy, he has implemented it. His
    achievements: `Sixty one agreements signed with Syria; 48 with Iraq;
    visa requirements lifted with eight neighbors; resolution of Lebanon's
    problem with Syria [over presidential succession]; two protocols
    signed with Armenia.' He has also attempted mediation between Israel
    and the Palestinians. He conducted the talks between Syria and Israel
    in 2007-8: `We came close, not to peace, but to agreement; but then
    Israel's attack on Gaza [in December 2008] put an end to all that
    work. Gaza wasn't an issue in our negotiations but it was a negative
    context... When Israel has a vision of peace we will be ready to
    listen: this is an issue of principle.'

    This new foreign policy has won widespread popular support among a
    population divided internally by unresolved questions of identity:
    Secular Turks worry about Islamization and resent AKP patronage that
    excludes them (especially in the state sector).

    At the same time, this is a crucial moment as Turkey sends its
    military back to the barracks and exposes the dark secrets of its
    `deep state' -- in particular shadowy elements within the military
    (which toppled four governments between 1960 and 1998) that are
    accused, inter alia, of coup attempts against the AKP
    government. These include a plot to assassinate the deputy prime
    minister, Bulent Arinc, on 19 December 2009. The findings promise for
    the first time to `touch the untouchables' within the army. This has
    been happening within the framework of the ongoing Ergenekon trial. In
    January a flood of media revelations provided yet greater details of
    coup attempts (including a document exposing the so-called Balyoz or
    Sledgehammer operation).

    There's a new dynamic

    As the shades are lifted from Turkey's recent history, and the country
    demilitarizes, the way is now open to real democratization. Much needs
    to be done, including constitutional and other reform (not least to
    allow the military to be prosecuted in civilian courts). But the pace
    of change is undeniable; new elites are emerging, with a growing,
    vibrant middle class (even if disparity in income levels has
    widened). The energy is echoed abroad. Rising above a core divide over
    identity and internal direction, Turks can agree on a foreign policy
    that is coherent and promises economic gain and security, and
    expresses a clear sense of how Turkey sees itself in the world.

    As Ihsan Bal, professor at the Police Academy, pointed out: `There's a
    new dynamic, and it's driven by the people. The West is missing that
    point.' It started in 2003, when the United States had wanted to use
    Turkey as a front for its invasion of Iraq. `And it was the people --
    the MPs and their constituents -- who said no.'

    You would expect Turks to worry about the effects of the global
    financial crisis, and unemployment (near to 15%; probably 30% among
    the young) but they discuss Gaza instead. A year ago 5,000 waved flags
    to greet their prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, on his return
    from the World Economic Forum in Davos. He had just stormed out of a
    televised debate, on 29 January 2009, with Shimon Peres, the Israeli
    president. Erdogan told Peres: `You are killing people,' and the
    moderator refused to allow him to rebut Peres' justification of the
    war on Gaza. Turks care about Palestine. They appreciate that
    Erdogan's feelings are genuine and respond to his charisma, ordinary
    origins, and the always present family of this populist prime
    minister.

    The Davos incident made Erdogan an instant hero among Arabs and
    Muslims. The United States seemed not too unhappy about the outburst,
    although it wishes that Turkey would show sympathy for Fatah, and not
    just Hamas, to help unblock the frozen peace process. A number of
    Turks feel that government support of Hamas (including inviting its
    leader Khalid Mesha'al to Ankara) should have paid a dividend -- say
    the release of the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, captured on 25 June
    2006 and held under Hamas authority in the Gaza Strip. Davutoglu's
    people reply that this misses the point.

    Yet when the AKP came to power in 2002, it continued Turkey's previous
    close relations with Israel, as the mediating effort with Syria
    showed. The context changed with the invasion of Gaza. Later the next
    year, in October 2009, Turkey excluded Israel from scheduled military
    exercises and postponed them indefinitely. This January, Israel was
    forced to apologize for its deputy foreign minister Danny Ayalon's
    treatment of the Turkish ambassador to Tel Aviv. Ahmet Oguz Celikkol,
    summoned to hear complaints about a Turkish TV drama seen as
    anti-semitic, was forced to sit on a low sofa without a handshake or
    the ritual Turkish flag while Ayalon explained to local TV stations
    that the humiliation was intentional.

    What does this mean for future relations between the two countries?
    Meliha Altunisik, professor at Ankara's Middle East Technical
    University, said that after the Gaza war `any government would have
    had to moderate its policy. Plus, Israel is growing more isolated
    under its present government and with Obama in power: its strategic
    position is declining.' Many Turks point out that Turkey is now more
    important to Israel than vice versa, even economically. However, they
    do not foresee more than a downscaling of relations: Neither Turks nor
    Arabs want Turkey to burn its bridges.

    `One of us has made it'

    Altunisik said of the Arab world: `People in the region look to Turkey
    to play a constructive role. The economy is key. But Erdogan is
    personally popular: I even found women in Damascus who are learning
    Turkish on his account.' It started in 2003 when Turkey stood up to
    the US and refused to allow the country to be used as a launchpad for
    the Iraq war. `There was the feeling that one of us has made it.' She
    says that with Iran there is still competition. `Turkey has been
    trying to steal its thunder by its open support of Gaza, engagement of
    Syria with Israel, and resolving Lebanon's presidential crisis.' With
    the new aim of solving problems through cooperation, the benefits are
    multiple. `Just in the Middle East, there is the straight benefit of
    developing relations with the Arabs; plus the extra benefit that
    brings over Iran; plus the economic benefit; plus stability. This
    provides a win-win possibility. It's a new language. And it's
    important.'

    Iran is one of the few foreign-policy topics on which Turks
    disagree. Yavuz Baydar, political correspondent at the pro-government
    English language daily Today's Zaman, said: `No cause for concern;
    what goes on between Erdogan and Ahmadinejad is just two men of the
    street with the same body language. They are cautious of each other.'
    But many feel attempts to mediate on Iran's nuclear capability are
    dangerous, pointless, or naïve. The disagreement reflects the
    difficulty of deciphering Iranian ambitions. There is also the fear of
    an explosive situation on the doorstep.

    Among Arab countries, Syria has captured the Turkish imagination: In
    university foreign affairs departments the staff talk of their latest
    trips to Damascus. Considering the old, bad relations -- Syrian
    support for the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK), its claim to Hatay
    (Alexandretta) cross-water problems -- today's social and economic
    relations seem miraculous. In Iraq, economic and social relations, and
    Turkish help in bringing Sunni groups to the negotiating table, have
    created a stable environment that contrasts with the instability of
    recent years in the Kurdish north, marked by PKK separatist activity
    and Turkish incursions. Business is booming in Africa, especially
    Libya and Sudan (scene of another prime ministerial gaffe); Turkey's
    non-combatant role in Afghanistan (with 1,750 troops) is approved of.

    It is not just the Muslim world: there's Russia, Serbia, Georgia,
    Greece, Cyprus, Armenia, with two protocols signed on 10 October 2009
    calling for diplomatic ties and the opening of borders.

    What about the suggestion in the western press that Turkey's turn to
    the east and south is a symptom of renewed Ottoman longings? The idea
    doesn't register among Turks today. Temel Iskit, a former diplomat and
    Turkey's first director general for EU affairs in the 1980s, says that
    the idea is a `way of saying Turkey has lost interest in joining
    Europe and is going Islamic. These criticisms come from countries that
    don't want Turkey inside the EU and the pro-Israel US press. I think
    they are neither true nor sincere.' Iskit is one of the many
    disaffected who supported the CHP (Republican People's Party, the
    secular center-left party that goes back to Ataturk's single party
    state) but have lost confidence in the party under its current leader,
    Deniz Baykal. `After a lifetime of having publicly to defend all the
    old taboos on Armenia, Cyprus, the Kurds, I revised my opinions, and
    decided to speak out.'

    Turkey has always had a central geopolitical place, explained
    Iskit. But because of its youth and struggle for independence, and
    then the cold war, it was always on the defensive. `What has changed
    is that Turkey has begun to democratize. That happened with agreement
    to fulfill the Copenhagen criteria, engaged before the AKP came to
    power, and the army's agreement to stop meddling in politics. This
    democratization has led to a new spirit of co-operation and
    compromise.'

    Kadri Gursel, a columnist on the secularist daily Milliyet, thinks
    that Turkey's present foreign policy stance would have come about
    under any government. `Our foreign policy assets multiplied with the
    economic boom in 2002-3, the process of EU accession, and the end of a
    major security concern with the capture of [the PKK leader Abdullah]
    Ocalan.'
    Turkey is seeing a natural adjustment to new realities of the
    post-cold war and globalization, which have created a new
    dynamic. `But a secular party could not have profited so well: The AKP
    feels at home in the Middle East, especially with the Sunnis.' Many in
    and around the government speak Arabic. But that does not mean an
    `eastern axis.'

    Insurance policy

    Gursel thinks it's about the economy. `Turkey is condemned to economic
    growth based on export because there's no domestic saving structure.'
    So it has to find new markets, and that means the Middle
    East. `Overall, this has worked,' he says. `The government has run the
    economy properly and they're business minded, even if they behave in a
    rather tribal way and keep the benefits for themselves. Indirectly it
    helps their Anatolian base to form a new middle class and this is an
    insurance policy towards a stable democracy.'

    Soli Ozel, professor of international relations at Istanbul's Bilgi
    University, said: `The eastern axis fuss is about the West's inability
    to digest a Turkey that is calling its own shots.' He pointed out that
    the AKP has very good relations with the United States. `Turkey wants
    stability, a zone of prosperity, security aimed at peace. In contrast
    to Israel and Iran.' He, too, talked of the continuity in foreign
    policy: `The AKP have conceptualized this better than others.' He
    thinks the question of Turkey's `Westness' is less about its strategic
    orientation than about whether it will become a real western
    country. `If the EU takes itself out of the equation through its
    inadequate understanding of what Turkey does, even though this is in
    the West's interest, then most of our foreign relations will be
    conducted through the US.' In that case, Ozel wonders, will Washington
    push the EU harder to move ahead on Turkey's membership? `That would
    mean that it rightly sees Turkey as a member of the western alliance
    with particular strengths in the Middle East, rather than a Middle
    East country allied to the West.'

    Turks hope that Barack Obama will be better able to do this than
    George W. Bush. On Obama himself, Yasemin Congar, managing editor of
    the Istanbul daily Taraf says: `There is a lot to be said for his
    bi-racial, multi-cultural background and knowledge of the Muslim
    world. His middle name is Hussein and Turks keep that in mind.' The
    Obama message of a new dialogue with the Muslim world and respect for
    human rights is in tune with Turkey's efforts to democratize and to
    find an equitable solution to its Kurdish problem. But his failure to
    pressure Israel over the Palestinians, and particularly settlement
    activity, and his decision to send more troops to Afghanistan, have
    disappointed people. At the same time, they note that Turkey's own
    outspoken stance on Israel has gone without criticism, and may not be
    unwelcome given Obama's poor relations with the current Israeli
    government. However, if Obama is to dispel the anti-Americanism of
    recent years, he will need to secure real progress on the
    Palestinians.

    There is deep bitterness about Europe that underlies all talk on
    foreign policy. And the opposition's complaint that the government has
    failed to pursue EU membership with sufficient enthusiasm has grown
    unconvincing since President Sarkozy's rejection of Turkey. Rather,
    Turks believe that the country's enhanced standing in the region means
    that it will be able to deliver more to the EU party. And if Turkey is
    not invited in? Its role in the world will in any case have been
    boosted.

    Zafar Yavan, secretary-general of Tusiad (Turkish Industrialists' and
    Businessmen's Association), the association for big business,
    traditionally in the hands of the old secular Istanbul families,
    complains that the government has not moved fast enough on the EU,
    especially on public procurement and other economic chapters, creating
    doubts about its enthusiasm. But he admits that maybe the slowing down
    of the pace of convergence is to do with Sarkozy, not Turkey. `The
    direction is right, as long as they stay on track. Turkey will make
    progress with or without this government. But the AKP's democratic
    attempts will remain: it's a one-way process. And the pace of the AKP
    and its perseverance is not to be compared with that of any previous
    government.'

    Ayse Celikel, a former CHP minister of justice, has every reason to
    oppose the government; she heads an association (Cagdas Yasam Dernegi)
    that offers secular education to girls, now under pressure from the
    government, with 14 employees detained without charges being made
    known. She calls herself `a Kemalist, but an open-minded one.' On
    foreign policy she recognizes that, `with EU adhesion on the back
    burner, the government is engaged in a balancing act with openings to
    the east and south. And as long as it doesn't go any further away from
    Europe, or closer to Iran, okay.'

    Armagan Kuloglu, a retired general and adviser at a new Ankara
    think-tank ORSAM (Centre for Middle Eastern Strategic Studies), is a
    self-proclaimed `Ataturkcu' (Ataturk devotee), `though not a Kemalist,
    which means defending the Turkish nation as an ethnic base.' He
    defends the old taboos, and condemns the government initiatives on
    Cyprus, the Kurds and Armenia. Yet he too agrees that there has been
    no change of axis: `The government just wants good relations with
    neighboring countries, and this is the first opportunity for this.'
    (He doesn't criticize the government's EU policy either, since he
    would be happy not to enter.)

    Some Turks worry that the AKP government is juggling too much and may
    drop something. And is it in danger of overstating Turkey's soft power
    potential? Meliha Altunisik says the question is premature and misses
    the point. `How foreign policy is conducted is as important as the end
    results. We used to be peripheral to all our neighbors. Now you can't
    discuss many regions without talking about Turkey.'


    Wendy Kristianasen is editorial director of Le Monde diplomatique's
    English edition.

    © 2010 Le Monde diplomatique - distributed by Agence Global
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