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Ankara: The Good, The Bad And The Shrewd

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  • Ankara: The Good, The Bad And The Shrewd

    The Good, The Bad And The Shrewd

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    Dec 7 2012

    Send to friend Â" Share on linkedinEleftherios Venizelos, the
    illustrious statesman and former prime minister of Greece, once noted
    that the well-being of small nations is guaranteed by, 1) Realism;
    2) Avoidance of illusions of grandeur; and 3) Being consistent in
    their alliances with powerful, even if selfish, allies.

    Apparently, Venizelos' homeland wellness prescription is the
    antithesis of neo-Ottoman Turkey a century later. And no doubt,
    Turks love that antithesis. Betting and other means of gambling are a
    Turkish pastime. I no longer hope to see crumbs of realism in Turkey's
    foreign policy calculations, but I am still wondering whether crumbs
    of consistency will remain the rare commodity forever.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his foreign policy czar,
    Ahmet Davutoglu, should decide, for the sake of an elementary level
    of consistency, whether the "world order" they praise and condemn at
    the same time is good or bad.

    For instance, the United Nations is good when its General Assembly
    upgrades Palestine to non-member state status. But the U.N. Security
    Council is bad when it does not do as Mr. Erdogan thinks it should
    do about Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. The U.N. is also bad when
    it does not grant Palestine full member state status.

    The old League of Nations was bad when it passed resolution after
    resolution to condemn the Turkish occupation of Cyprus. It was so very
    awful when it treats Hamas as a terrorist entity. But it was good when
    its secretary-general did not even bother to reply to any of the 20
    or so Israeli appeals this year to stop attacks on its citizens. It
    was good when it deplored, condemned or strongly deplored Israel;
    called on Israel to do this, took note of previous calls on Israel
    or deeply regretted that Israel had done this or that.

    The United States is good when it treats the Kurdistan Workers'
    Party (PKK) as a terrorist entity. The U.S. is good when it allows
    the Islamic headscarf on its campuses, or when Congress blocks a bill
    recognizing the Armenian genocide. It is also good when it supports
    a concerted move to topple Mr. al-Assad.

    But it is bad when its president does not ban a video that insults
    Islam, or because its president in fact believes what the Turks did to
    the Armenians was genocide. The U.S. is also bad because it refuses to
    bomb Damascus and treats Hamas like it treats the PKK. It is so very
    bad when some American states allow gay marriages or when Washington
    declares that Israel has a right to self-defense.

    Just like Russia, which is good when tens of billions of dollars in
    trade flow over the border with Turkey, but bad when it holds the
    key to topple Mr. al-Assad and remains an ally with him.

    Or like France, which is bad when its Parliament makes it illegal to
    deny the Armenian genocide and is suddenly good when its Constitutional
    Council scraps that bill. France is bad if run by Nicolas Sarkozy
    and good if run by Francois Hollande. But France is good because
    it has recognized the Syrian Opposition V.2 as the sole legitimate
    representative of the Syrian people.

    And NATO was good when it bombed Moammar Gadhafi's Libya. But it is
    bad because it does not bomb al-Assad's Syria. It was bad because
    it forced us to deploy a radar system on our soil to intercept
    potential missiles from Iran. We agreed, but we will be angry if any
    ally attempted to share any information collected by that radar with
    Israel. All the same, NATO is so very good as it has agreed to deploy
    the Patriot air defense system on our soil.

    The West, in general, is bad because it allowed Israel to have its
    nuclear weapons. It is also bad because it does not allow Muslim
    Iran to have its own nuclear arsenal. It is especially bad because
    thousands of Syrians are dying in a civil war. But it was not so bad
    when hundreds of thousands of Iraqis were killed or forced to flee
    their homeland under bombs and bullets.

    You may not believe it, but all that is not the foreign policy doctrine
    at the kindergarten in your neighborhood.

    December/07/2012


    From: Baghdasarian
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