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ANKARA: Reset Of Turkish Foreign Policy Or Reset Of Region?

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  • ANKARA: Reset Of Turkish Foreign Policy Or Reset Of Region?

    RESET OF TURKISH FOREIGN POLICY OR RESET OF REGION?

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    Dec 3 2013

    VERDA OZER

    "Turkey has reset its foreign policy." That's the most popular thing
    to say these days. The following has happened only in the last 3
    weeks: Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu first visited Shiite leaders
    during his visit to Iraq and then Tehran, Ankara engaged in a renewed
    dialogue with Baghdad, Prime Minister Erdogan and Russian President
    Putin gave mutual warm messages during Erdogan's visit to Moscow and
    Davutoglu emphasized commonality of Turkish-US interests during his
    visit to Washington.

    In addition, Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki will probably visit Ankara
    in early January and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Prime
    Minister Erdogan will pay reciprocal visits very soon. Turkey has
    also taken concrete action, backing up its denial of supporting
    al-Qaeda affiliates in Syria. Ankara expressed its support for
    the Geneva II Conference to be held on Jan. 22, which Turkey had
    previously signaled deep skepticism about. These all attest to the
    argument that Turkey is shifting away from a foreign policy of the
    last 2 years, which has given it a sectarian-based image. Moreover,
    Erdogan said last week that he trusts Israel will fulfill Turkey's
    preconditions to normalize relations soon and, according to recent
    reports, Ankara has also prepared a road map to normalize relations
    with Armenia. All of these developments are interpreted as signs of
    Turkey shifting back to its "zero-problem policy".

    Yet, this shift only reflects a major systemic change, a broader trend
    in the region. There is a new Middle East underway. The agreement
    between Iran and P5+1 last week is only one foot of this trend and
    signals a gradual end to all of the proxy wars in Syria, most notably
    the U.S.-Russian one. Maliki's upcoming visit to Tehran, following his
    visit to Washington and coinciding with the Iran agreement and the
    ongoing rapprochement between Iraqi Kurdistan and Baghdad, point at
    a broader cooperation. On the other hand, Egypt, a trusted American
    ally for over three decades, is warming up to Russia while U.S. and
    Iran are making peace at the expense of the U.S.' two major regional
    allies, Israel and Saudi Arabia. In other words, the regional balance
    of power and alliances are in tectonic shift.

    This all shows that governments have caved in to the facts on the
    ground. The Syrian war proved once again that it is impossible
    to end a conflict in this region without reconciling the regional
    powers and superpowers that support different sides of the conflict,
    pursuing a proxy war. This is the reason why the US has foundered
    in Iraq and Afghanistan and why the Syrian conflict gets more and
    more complicated every day. Radical Islamist groups, which the Syrian
    crisis has attracted to the country, have now become the common enemy,
    not just for the US and Russia, but also for regional powers.

    Furthermore, the Arab uprisings, the Syrian war in particular, have
    intensified sectarian tensions in the region. Coupled with the U.S.

    withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan, the new configuration demands
    the cooperation of regional powers as well as the superpowers that
    are in one way or another part of any regional problem. It is about
    time to make them part of the solution instead.

    In short, Turkey plays the new game by its own rules.

    December/03/2013



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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