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In Turkey, Gaza Flotilla Crisis Has Strong Domestic Component

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  • In Turkey, Gaza Flotilla Crisis Has Strong Domestic Component

    IN TURKEY, GAZA FLOTILLA CRISIS HAS STRONG DOMESTIC COMPONENT

    World Politics Review
    http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/5719/in-turkey-gaza-flotilla-crisis-has-strong-domestic-component
    June 7 2010

    World Politics Review

    One week later, the repercussions of the tragically botched Israeli
    commando raid on the Gaza aid flotilla spearheaded by a Turkish NGO
    continue to reverberate worldwide.

    Much of the raid's fallout has played out in the realm of foreign
    affairs, particularly regarding its impact on the already sorry
    state of Turkish-Israeli relations, as well as on Washington's
    plans in the Middle East. But the flotilla incident and Ankara's
    response to it also has a very strong domestic component. The domestic
    political context relates to the Justice and Development Party (AKP)
    government's desire to fend off political attacks from both Islamist
    and secularist opposition parties over the red-hot Israel/Palestine
    issue, as well as to use the event to further consolidate its gains
    over the secularist-controlled military, which was historically the
    motor behind the strategic partnership that Turkey and Israel enjoyed
    until only recently.

    In that sense, the current crisis -- while helping shape and define
    what may turn out to be a new regional role for Ankara -- could also
    serve to further expose and sharpen domestic political divisions within
    Turkey, some of which the AKP may find spinning out of its control.

    A clash over Gaza between Turkey and Israel was, in many ways, an event
    foretold. Since the Gaza war in early 2009, Turkey has clearly pegged
    its relationship with Israel to the Palestinian issue -- or, to be
    more specific, to the situation in Gaza and the status of Hamas, as
    the West Bank and its Fatah leadership are rarely mentioned by Ankara.

    The Turkish formula has been simple: An improvement in the situation
    in Gaza will lead to an improvement in ties with Israel. Likewise,
    any deterioration in the Gazans' circumstances will lead to a further
    scaling-down of relations with Israel.

    Although technically not a bilateral issue between the two countries,
    the situation in Gaza has in many ways become the defining issue
    in their relations. In that sense, although the Gaza aid flotilla
    was organized by a Turkish NGO -- the Islamist IHH -- and was not
    sponsored by the Turkish government, it was acting as a proxy for
    Turkish policy. Also, because the Turkish government had elevated
    the Gazans' cause to a level of such political importance, there was
    little room for it to work out a diplomatic solution to the impending
    crisis, lest it be accused by its opposition -- particularly on the
    Islamist right -- of abandoning the Gazans.

    With a general election coming up in about a year's time, the
    AKP now faces a resurgent Islamist right that has gained renewed
    political clout because of the flotilla incident. Meanwhile,
    a reformed secularist opposition with new leadership is promising
    to go after the government where it is most vulnerable: over issues
    such as unemployment and corruption. As a result, the AKP could find
    it expedient to continue turning the heat up on the Israel front,
    taking an increasingly more populist line on the issue.

    "This is now going to be part and parcel in the internal tug of
    war between the AKP and the other political parties in Turkey," says
    Gencer Ozcan, a professor of international relations at Istanbul Bilgi
    University. "In this case, [Prime Minister Recep Tayyip] Erdogan is
    not going to defuse the tension."

    Speaking on Sunday, Erdogan already went after Kemal Kilicdaroglu,
    the new leader of the Republican People's Party, the main secularist
    opposition party, for his approach to the flotilla incident. "Some
    people speak in the name of Tel Aviv, advocate for Tel Aviv," Erdogan
    said. "They question our way of diplomacy."

    But beyond electioneering, increased tension with Israel could also
    help the AKP make further gains in its ongoing effort to reduce the
    Turkish military's control over the state. As Israeli researcher and
    Turkey expert Anat Lapidot-Firilla recently put it, such an approach
    would emphasize "the support of the defense establishment and the
    Kemalist bureaucracy to immoral Israel and the lack of interest in
    the fate of their Muslim brethren in Palestine."

    Nevertheless, using the flotilla incident as a domestic political issue
    could prove problematic for the AKP government. An increasingly pointed
    stance could ultimately allow the AKP to own the issue domestically
    and regionally, but at the cost of putting it at odds with Washington
    and other traditional allies, who would like to quickly repair the
    damage caused by the event.

    In a sign that moderate Turkish Islamic circles might themselves be
    concerned about a rightward shift in Ankara's policy, Fethullah Gulen,
    a U.S.-based Turkish imam with a strong following in Turkey, criticized
    the organizers of the Gaza flotilla in an interview published in
    last Friday's Wall Street Journal. The organizers' failure to reach
    an agreement with Israel "is a sign of defying authority, and will
    not lead to fruitful matters," said Gulen, whose movement in Turkey
    controls several media outlets and business groups, and wields a high
    level of political influence.

    At a time when Turks are being told to that their country has
    "zero problems with neighbors" and that it is now time to reconcile
    with Kurds, Armenians, Cypriots, Greeks, Arabs and all their other
    historical enemies, Israel seems to be emerging as the "replacement
    rival" for a country long used to having foes. This, combined with
    the long odds on any significant short-term progress on the Gaza
    front, will likely make the current tension with Israel a potent --
    and volatile -- tool in Turkey's domestic political arena for quite
    some time.

    Yigal Schleifer is a freelance journalist based in Istanbul, Turkey,
    where he works as a correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor
    and the Eurasianet Web site, covering Turkey and the surrounding
    region. His work has appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post,
    Haaretz, the Jerusalem Report, the Times of London, the Walrus and
    other publications. He blogs on Turkish politics at Istanbul Calling.




    From: A. Papazian
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