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  • Crisis in Libya and Regional Diplomacy of Turkey

    CRISIS IN LIBYA AND REGIONAL DIPLOMACY OF TURKEY
    http://noravank.am/eng/articles/detail.php?ELEMENT_ID=5738

    28.04.2011
    Artashes Ter-Harutyunyan


    On April 8 the prime-minister of Turkey Recep Tayip Erdogan stated
    that his country is elaborating the programme on cessation of the
    hostilities in Libya which includes armistice, withdrawal of the
    troops loyal to Muammar Kaddafi from some cities, creation of
    humanitarian corridor and immediate initiation of the reforms in
    Libya.

    When on April 3 the Pentagon stated that it ceased the participation
    of the US troops in Libyan campaign after which the troops loyal to
    Kaddafi regained the superiority and advanced to the East, in the
    direction of Bengazi - the center of the rebels, this statement by
    Erdogan may mean that for the international coalition formed against
    Muammar Kaddafi the military solution of the issue seemed to lose its
    topicality.

    In the initial stage of crisis in Libya France stood out with its
    initiatives and it is not a mere chance that the first anti-Kaddafi
    congress took place on March 19 in Paris, to which Turkey was not even
    invited.

    But the aforementioned statement by Erdogan not only means that Ankara
    at least has support of the United States (e.g. to offer armistice to
    Kaddafi on behalf of `international community') but it also
    demonstrates the purpose of the Turkish policy to obtain the role of
    the regulator in the Libyan crisis which has turned into an important
    regional issue.

    And if we consider the issue from the point of view of the territories
    of the former Ottoman Empire, and correspondingly, from the point of
    view of the influence areas, it becomes clear that the Turkish party
    is very interested in the affairs in North Africa and that part of the
    Mediterranean. Of course, this is not a novelty in the Turkish foreign
    policy of the recent years. But the point is whether the US are going
    to support that policy of Turkey only in this part of the
    Mediterranean or in the other territories and areas of influence of
    the former Ottoman Empire (Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Caucasus) either.

    Situational survey
    In the initial stage of the crisis in Libya Turkey was particularly
    against the foreign military interference. On February 28 Erdogan
    stated: `NATO has nothing to do in Libya'.

    This line of Turkey's military and political leadership continued even
    after the well-known decision of the UN Security Council and the March
    19 Conference in Paris, during which international anti-Kaddafi
    coalition which included the US, France, Great Britain, Canada,
    Belgium, Italy, Spain and Denmark was established. On March 20 at the
    session of the NATO council it was Turkey who did not allow the NATO
    to undertake the mission of providing no fly zone over Libya.

    The main reason for such an approach of Ankara was the ignoring of the
    interests of Turkey. As it was mentioned, in the initial stage of the
    anti-Kaddafi coalition formation it was Paris that singled out by its
    diplomatic, informational and military initiatives. The result was
    that for the first time since the 1956 Suez crisis Paris (by the way
    again in cooperation with London1) has initiated a military campaign
    directed to the widening of their authority and, correspondingly, its
    political influence in the Mediterranean which is considered to be
    important in the aspect of French interests. But such an activity of
    Paris has again put forward the French-Turkish contradictions in the
    Mediterranean which has aroused in recent years2. Coming forward with
    such an initiative France at the same time made efforts to minimize
    the involvement of Turkey in this process. It is not a mere chance
    that during the meeting with the Minister of Defence of Macedonia
    Zoran Konyanovski on March 21 in Ankara, the Minister of Defence of
    Turkey Vecdi Gonul stated that it was difficult to understand the
    leading role of France in Libyan campaign.

    The situation, however, changed after the phone conversation of Obama
    and Erdogan on March 21, during which, according to the official
    statement, the crisis in Libya was discussed.

    Two days later, on March 23 Turkish parliament not only approved
    joining of the Turkish navy to the NATO forces in blockading Libya,
    but Ankara also sent the biggest navy forces after the US - four
    frigates, one submarine and one support vessel. On the same day the
    president of Turkey Abdullah Gul made a statement and called Muammar
    Kaddafi to quit.

    It is remarkable that the United States turned for the assistance to
    Turkey and in consequence of the mediation of the later it became
    possible to free four captured correspondents of The New York Times.
    And on March 22 the US State Department officially stated that the
    interests of the United States in Libya will be presented by the
    Turkish embassy.

    And finally the most serious evidence of the Turkish involvement in
    Libyan issue was the decision of the North Atlantic Alliance to
    station the NATO control center responsible for the Libyan campaign at
    the military base in Izmir.

    Conclusions
    It is very remarkable that against the background of events in
    Tunisia, Egypt, the ongoing developments in Libya, Yemen, Syria and a
    number of other Arab countries Turkey is the only Muslim country on
    the international diplomatic and informational stage that tends to
    influence the processes. Even Saudi Arabia which is well-known for its
    financial possibilities and behind-the-scenes connections in Arab
    countries cannot position itself in such a way and Saudi approaches
    are often restricted to the measures of official character. As for the
    other Muslim power in the region - Iran, the initiatives has not
    acquired the same form as in case with Turkey. The Iranian authorities
    confined themselves to calling the events in Egypt Islamic revolution
    and exerting some diplomatic and informational pressure on the Sunnite
    authorities of Bahrain.

    On the other hand being involved in the Libyan crisis in this way,
    Ankara, in essence, creates precedent for at least diplomatic and
    informational interferences (if not military ones) in case of the
    similar developments in the Middle East, North Africa, maybe even on
    Balkans and in South Caucasus-Central Asia line.

    E.g. over the recent period anti-governmental disturbances continued
    in Syria and today Turkey is the only country which practically
    interferes into Syrian developments. At the end of March about half a
    dozen phone conversations took place between Turkish prime-minister
    and president of Syria. On March 27 in Damascus Bashar al-Assad
    received the chief of the Turkish intelligence Hakan Fidan and several
    days later the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Turkey Ahmet Davutoglu
    arrived. One of the statements of Erdogan concerning the developments
    in Syria in which he called official Damascus to meet halfway the
    wishes of the Syrian people and to initiate democratic reforms drew
    attention.

    In all the aforementioned the approach of the US should be singled
    out. One can see that Washington initiates some measures to promote
    the regional claims of Ankara and the cooperation between Turkey and
    US which has been revealed in consequence of the crisis in Libya seems
    to be the evidence of that. In this aspect the novelty is that the
    American-Turkish contradictions which could have been observed over
    the last period of Bush's governing can be substituted by a
    partnership which may acquire new meaning, as, e.g. for the US which
    is leaving Iraq it is very important to have such a partner in the
    region. But the point is whether Turkey will be able to undertake that
    mission.

    1On October 29, 1956 Great Britain, in the alliance with France and
    Israel, embarked on a military campaign against Egypt. The aim was to
    restore control over the Suez which had belong to the British and
    French shareholders for almost a century (it was opened in 1869) and
    in June 1956 it was nationalized by the Egyptian president Gamal Abdel
    Naseri. Under the pressure of the Soviet Union Great Britain, France
    and Israel who were not supported by the United States were obliged to
    stop military actions just in several days (November 6, 1956) and in
    1957 they withdrew their troops from the occupied territories of
    Egypt.

    2Those contradictions are mainly based on the initiative of France to
    create the so-called Mediterranean union. From the point of view of
    Turkey this initiative contains two dangerous circumstances. Firstly,
    in this way French try to increase their geopolitical influence in the
    Mediterranean basin; such attempts are also made by Turkey. Secondly,
    Paris tries to close finally the doors of the European Union for
    Turkey, instead offering Turkey to join the Mediterranean format.
    For the first time the idea of the Mediterranean union was put forward
    by N. Sarkozy in May 2007 as a format for cooperation of the European
    Union countries and countries of the region which are not members of
    the EU. The Mediterranean constituent assembly was called in July 2008
    in Paris under the name of `Barcelona Process: for the sake of the
    Mediterranean'. It is remarkable that some observers in Ankara express
    the opinion that the real initiator of such a way of keeping Turkey
    out of the EU is the Pope Benedict XVI.


    Return
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Another materials of author

    -FUTURE OF THE MUSLIM POPULATION ON THE PLANET [24.02.2011]
    -SOUTHERN SUDAN: NEW STATE IN THE WORLD[25.01.2011]
    -ON THE CYBER-SECURITY[17.01.2011]
    -TURKEY-CHINA INTERRELATIONS[29.11.2010]
    -TURKEY AFTER THE CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES[11.11.2010]




    From: A. Papazian
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