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New Victory And Idea Of Neo-Ottomanism: Turkish PM Erdogan's Party S

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  • New Victory And Idea Of Neo-Ottomanism: Turkish PM Erdogan's Party S

    NEW VICTORY AND IDEA OF NEO-OTTOMANISM: TURKISH PM ERDOGAN'S PARTY STRENGTHENING POSITIONS IN ISLAMIC WORLD
    By Aris Ghazinyan

    ArmeniaNow
    15.06.11 | 10:17

    Photo: www.wikipedia.org

    Grand National Assembly of Turkey

    Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) won a predictable
    victory in the country's parliamentary elections last weekend,
    receiving 49.9 percent of the vote. The Republican People's Party
    that was founded by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk (the father of all Turks)
    gained 25.9 percent of the vote.

    Enlarge Photo Recep Tayyip Erdogan

    Thus, for the third consecutive time a force espousing "neo-Ottomanism"
    as a state ideology has registered a landslide victory in Turkish
    parliamentary elections.

    AKP's first success came in June 2002 when in parliamentary elections
    it managed to win 363 seats in the 550-member Grand National Assembly
    of Turkey. The party was founded in August 2001 by former members of
    the moderate conservative wing of the banned Turkish Islamic Virtue
    Party. Its leaders are current Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    and President Abdullah Gul.

    For the next eight years the new Turkish authorities would make
    strenuous efforts to strengthen the country's positions not only in
    the Turkic, but also the broader Muslim community. In recent years,
    Ankara has unambiguously positioned itself as the main advocate of
    the interests of the Muslim world, with some observers acknowledging
    it has left Tehran far behind in this endeavor.

    In what form is the "Turkish interest" demonstrated?

    There is the following well-known statement by Turkish Foreign Minister
    Ahmet Davutoglu: "There is a legacy of the Ottoman Empire. We are
    called 'neo-Ottomans'. Yes, we are 'new Ottomans' and have to deal
    with neighboring countries. And we are going to Africa. Great powers
    are watching it in confusion. First of all, France is trying to
    figure out why we are working in Africa. I have already given out an
    instruction: to whatever African country [French President Nicolas]
    Sarkozy goes, it is necessary that every time he raises his eyes he
    sees the building of the Turkish embassy and our flag. I have ordered
    renting buildings for embassies in the best places."

    In February 2010, Prime Minister Erdogan announced his intention to
    revise the basic provisions of the National Security Strategy - a
    document which is called the "Red Book" in Turkey. In October, Erdogan
    made public the "first changes" in the Red Book, outlining a new range
    of foreign policy priorities (in particular, for the first in more than
    half a century Israel was included in the blacklist of the Red Book).

    Based on new trends, opinions are being put forward today about the
    Turkish political leadership's gradual departure from the Pan-Turkic
    ideology towards the pan-Islamic or 'Neo-Ottoman' ideology.

    Turkey's desire to strengthen its positions within the boundaries
    of the former Ottoman Empire (which, according to Turkish analysts,
    amounts to 70 modern states) cannot but "attract attention".

    In September 2010, in Istanbul, Turkey and its ethnic cousin in the
    South Caucasus, Azerbaijan, signed an agreement on the establishment of
    a Council of Strategic Cooperation. At the signing ceremony, Erdogan
    stated: "We are getting to the desired goal or even to the top of
    Turkish-Azerbaijani cooperation, which the late Azerbaijani President
    Heydar Aliyev defined as 'One Nation, Two States', and Ataturk would
    stress - 'the joy of Azerbaijan is our joy, its sorrow is our sorrow.'"

    At present, Erdogan is focused on having a new Constitution adopted in
    Turkey and in this view he feels the need of his political opponents'
    votes. That is why in his victory speech, the Turkish prime minister
    declared: "In reality it is the whole of Turkey, entire Europe,
    justice, democracy and the whole Turkish world that have won at
    these elections."


    From: Baghdasarian
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