Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Gunduz Aktan: Problem-solving

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Gunduz Aktan: Problem-solving

    Gunduz Aktan: Problem-solving

    TDN
    Thursday, May 5, 2005

    OPINIONS

    There are those who point out that we have not managed to solve the
    Armenian issue and portray this as a failure in our foreign policy.
    The same argument has also been made regarding Cyprus. In fact, some
    other issues, too, can be cited in this context: our Iraq policy,
    our relations with the United States, the EU membership process and
    the Aegean problems.

    Gunduz AKTAN - There are those who point out that we have not
    managed to solve the Armenian issue and portray this as a failure in
    our foreign policy. The same argument has also been made regarding
    Cyprus. In fact, some other issues, too, can be cited in this context:
    our Iraq policy, our relations with the United States, the European
    Union membership process and the Aegean problems.

    It is true that our foreign policy's problem-solving capacity is
    not high. However, it must not be forgotten that Turkey, in general,
    has not been successful when it comes to problem solving. Have we
    not been one of the last countries to lower the inflation rate? Don't
    problems continue to exist in such areas as land development, traffic
    and taxation?

    Obviously the fact that we switched to a democratic system at a
    relatively early date has played a certain role in the way these
    issues have turned into problems and remained unsolved. Political
    parties have preferred not to tackle the kind of problems that cannot
    be solved without upsetting the masses, which are already faced
    with great difficulties. They have been afraid they would lose the
    elections to their rivals. In the end, almost all segments of society
    have embraced, more or less, a certain unlawfulness as a way of life.
    Problems have become chronic.

    A succession of governments that have had no problem-solving
    experience in the realm of domestic politics have behaved, when faced
    with problems in the foreign relations area, as if they expected
    these problems to disappear automatically in time. Furthermore,
    foreign policy is an area where, inherently, there are some extra
    difficulties. Since each foreign-relations problem is a conflict that
    involves a minimum of two parties, their resolution does not depend on
    us alone. Our rivals struggle to death to ensure that these conflicts
    will not be resolved in our favor. They do not accept a compromise
    until they use up their strength and, as a result, conflicts last
    longer than a person's lifespan.

    Political conflicts are "zero result" games. In other
    words, one's gain is another's loss. "Win-win" solutions are hardly
    possible. Look, for example, at the crisis that recently broke out
    between China and its biggest trade partner and foreign investor
    Japan. When the Japanese textbooks failed to reflect Japanese abuse
    of the Chinese during the war, that triggered an unprecedented tension
    in bilateral relations.

    The Taiwan case is another example. The Taiwanese too have made
    large-scale investments in mainland China. However, Beijing considers
    Taiwan part of China and openly says that it would attack Taiwan if the
    latter opted for independence -- at the risk of confrontation with the
    United States, who is China's second-biggest economic partner. In other
    words, economic interests cannot prevent political conflicts. This
    may be distressing, but it is a fact that in the realm of foreign
    policy politics supersedes economic considerations.

    It is all the more difficult for a country that has multiple
    problems to protect its interests when it has a conflict with
    a country that has a single problem. While Turkey grapples with
    many strategic problems, the Greek Cypriots' sole goal seems to be
    swallowing up the northern part of the island and the Armenians are
    making a single-minded effort to make us "admit the genocide."

    Undeniably, our biggest weakness in the realm of foreign policy
    stems from our own behavior. Not counting the 1974 intervention in
    Cyprus and the 1998 crisis with Syria, Turkish foreign policy has
    mainly been defensive over the past 50 years. Turkey has underestimated
    its own strength while blowing out of proportion the might of those
    confronting it. It has failed to see that nothing can be done in the
    realm of foreign policy without taking risks. It has considered it
    disgraceful to try to explain itself to the world. It has found it
    hard to ask for help from others.

    Meanwhile, there are two other major obstacles as well on the
    path of Turkish foreign policy. These two factors are interlinked. In
    the wake of World War II, Turkey took its place in the Western
    world, but the Western countries, finding it hard to overcome their
    prejudices rooted in history, still do not consider Turkey to be
    "one of them." This has become clearer in the post-Cold War era,
    especially during Turkey's EU membership process. Would the Armenian
    issue have reached today's proportions if the West had acted fairly?

    Meanwhile, many "liberal intellectuals" who have
    newspaper columns in Turkey (though, in some other countries they
    would be deemed marginal) argue that in order to be "Western"
    Turkey should meet each and every demand of the West. Westerners
    exploit these intellectuals' "lack of identity" in the realm of foreign
    policy. Therefore, obviously we will not be able to conduct "volume"
    or "public opinion" diplomacy on the Armenian issue just as we could
    not do that on the Cyprus issue.

    For too long Turkey has had too few academics interested in
    foreign policy problems. We still do not have a sufficient number
    of jurists and historians specializing in genocide, terrorism and
    the law of war. Our legal experts and historians prefer to build a
    career in more positive aspects of life.

    Also, as a nation we want prompt resolution of conflicts. We
    cannot harbor hostile feelings towards anybody for long. We support
    those that favor a quick solution. We forget that compared to foreign
    policy, even a marathon is a "speed race." And the only way to resolve
    conflicts "quickly" is to make too many concessions.

    --Boundary_(ID_QxnCzvQrUBLiNjt1NVf9xg)--
Working...
X