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The Failure Of The Neo-Ottoman Project

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  • The Failure Of The Neo-Ottoman Project

    THE FAILURE OF THE NEO-OTTOMAN PROJECT

    Mideast Mirror
    February 7, 2014 Friday

    Despite hopes to the contrary, Turkish PM Erdogan and his government
    cannot change course and are doomed to fail, says Mohammad Noureddin
    in today's Emirates' al-Khaleej

    Hopes that Turkish PM Erdogan's visit to Tehran's last week may
    indicate a change of course for Turkish policy towards Syria and Iraq
    are misplaced, suggests a Lebanese commentator in a Gulf daily.

    GREAT INTEREST: "Observers have shown great interest in Turkish PM's
    visit to Tehran [this week]," writes Lebanese Turkish affairs analyst
    Mohammad Noureddin in Friday's UAE daily al-Khaleej.

    It was the first such visit in two years. Relations between the
    two countries had become troubled due to the situation in Syria and
    Turkey's attempts to topple the Syrian regime, Iran's ally. Tensions
    subsequently grew after Turkey agreed to deploy NATO's Missile Defense
    Shield that targets Iranian and Russian missiles in Malatya [Turkey].

    We should first note that relations between Turkey and Iran had been
    stable for the last 300 years, with no wars between the two despite
    their historical and confessional differences, and the competition
    between them. In fact, mutual economic interests took precedence
    over other aspects of their relationship. Their current ambition to
    increase the level of annual commercial relations between them to 30
    billion dollars is therefore not that difficult to realize.

    However, setting aside their direct bilateral relations, the two
    countries have often been in (sometimes intense) competition with
    each other, as is the case now over Syria, Iraq, and the Southern
    Caucasus - that is, the Azeri/Armenian conflict, with Iran siding
    with the Armenians against the Azeris who have been coordinating with
    Israel and Turkey.

    But one major issue dominated Erdogan's latest visit that some have
    been wagering on - namely, that Turkey may be ready to change course
    on Syria. However, in order to examine this matter further we need
    to go beyond Erdogan's visit to Tehran and consider a number of signs
    that should answer the most important questions concerning this issue.

    Over the course of the last year - 2013 - Turkey faced some of
    its worst foreign policy setbacks and defeats. On the one hand,
    its wager on toppling the Syrian regime did not succeed. Instead,
    it had negative repercussions for its borders and its relations
    with some of the armed groups in Syria. Turkey also lost the backing
    of a number of states thanks to its attitude towards the June 30th
    [anti-Mursi] Revolution in Egypt. It lost one of the main pillars
    of its Middle East project, namely the Muslim Brotherhood regime in
    Egypt. In fact, as far as Erdogan and his team - including President
    Abdullah Gul whom some people count as a 'moderate'- are concerned,
    Egypt had turned into what resembles a domestic Turkish province,
    with no attention paid to the most basic principle of not intervening
    in other countries' affairs.

    Turkey's loss of Egypt and the harm done to its relations with most
    of the Arab Gulf states further shook up the 'neo-Ottoman' project
    whose bases were developed by Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu,
    and which was adopted by Erdogan with the support of the rest of the
    ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

    Moreover, Turkey now finds itself totally isolated in light of the
    lack of progress in relations with Israel for domestic Turkish reasons,
    and not because Erdogan is opposed to these relations. To this should
    be added the domestic pressures that Erdogan has been facing, such as
    the [summer 2013] Gezi Park protests, and most recently the corruption
    scandal in which a number of AKP ministers and leaders were involved -
    including Erdogan's son, Bilal.

    Given all the above, Erdogan has been trying to create a breach in the
    wall besieging him. He has found that relations with Iran may benefit
    him, at least in preventing the collapse of one of the dams that
    protect him in power, namely the economic dimension. This explains
    his visit to Iran, which coincided with a partial lifting of the
    sanctions imposed on Tehran - an injection that may help him survive.

    This is the limit of Turkey's change of course which goes no further,
    whether regarding Syria or Iraq. This is because a project as vast and
    profound as that of dominating the entire region via Muslim Brotherhood
    groups and a strong economy, and the policy of breaking up then burning
    all boats by employing unwarranted sharp slogans, means that this
    project will not and cannot accept any change. This Turkish project
    has placed itself before a single equation: It either wins or loses.

    But it has already lost--in political terms at least. No new change
    will be of any use not even at the merely formal or verbal level. Any
    such change will face enormous scepticism after the collapse of the
    wall of trust that had been built between Turkey and the Arab states
    in recent years, after decades of tensions and sensitivities.

    Moreover, it is impossible for this project to collapse without those
    behind it collapsing as well. It is impossible for them to remain in
    power. Erdogan and his team may be able to hang on to office for a
    few additional years for domestic ideological reasons; but this will
    merely be a countdown of days or years for a project that has lost its
    moral compass - thanks to its corruption, repression, and tyranny -
    and its foreign credibility - thanks to its attempt at domination
    and unilateral hegemony. It has come to an end.

    "The logic of history implies that it is illogical and impossible for
    such a project to collapse without its creators and sponsors losing
    power as well," concludes Noureddin.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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