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  • Murky Seas

    Transitions on Line, Czech Rep.
    Aug 23 2005

    Murky Seas


    by TOL
    22 August 2005

    Could a new vision for the Black Sea area yield new ideas about how
    to promote democracy on Russia's fringes?

    So it seems that Europe may soon have a new organization to become
    used to, an alliance of democracies stretching from the Baltic to the
    Black and the Caspian seas intent on acting as `a strong tool to free
    our region from all remaining dividing lines, from violations of
    human rights, from any spirit of confrontation, from frozen
    conflicts.' That, at least, is the vision for a "Community for
    Democratic Choice" put forward by Ukraine's President Viktor
    Yushchenko and Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili on 12 August.

    That is of course an appealing vision, but it will be competing with
    others, particularly in the Black Sea region. Since 1992, Turkey -
    historically the greatest power in the Black Sea, arguably the
    region's greatest power at present, and now also a pipeline hub - has
    promoted its own notion of a peaceful and prosperous Black Sea
    through the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) group, an
    association of Black Sea countries and their immediate neighbors.

    Since the end of the Cold War, others in the West have formed their
    own vision of a secure Black Sea, with Turkey as a cornerstone. From
    an outpost of NATO, Turkey has come to be seen as a key to the
    security of the Black Sea and a stabilizing force in the Middle East.
    That is a concept that underpins the United States' - and others' -
    support for Turkey's membership of the European Union. In the grander
    variant of the current U.S. administration, Turkey could even become
    part of an arc of democratic Muslim states stretching from Iraq's
    Gulf shores to the Bosphorus.

    TURKEY'S SWING TOWARDS RUSSIA

    George Bush's grand vision is currently being mauled by the
    instability in Iraq. It may also be being undermined by Turkey itself
    because, judged by recent developments, Turkey may have a different
    idea of who its key partners are in the Black Sea - and what changes
    are desirable.

    First, in May in a development noted perhaps only by The Economist,
    the United States was refused observer status by the BSEC. The
    decision relegated the United States below such Black Sea
    heavyweights as Slovakia, a country that enjoys observer status.
    Russia is thought to have blocked its application, a veto that
    angered eight post-communist Black Sea states who publicly said the
    United States should be allowed to attend their meetings. Turkey
    remained silent - not perhaps the type of support that Ankara might
    have been expected to give to a country that has been a great
    agitator for its admission to the EU. Given that the BSEC was its
    brainchild, surely Turkey could have insisted on opening the doors to
    the United States.

    Turkey's silence gains in significance when seen against the backdrop
    of Turkey's rapid and dramatic upswing in relations with Russia. The
    signs include the first visit to Ankara by a Russian head of state
    (in December 2004), four meetings between Russia's President Vladimir
    Putin and Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in seven
    months, a huge rise in trade, a hefty increase in the flow of gas
    through a pipeline leading from Russia to Turkey through the Black
    Sea, and talk of more pipelines as well as supplies of electricity
    from Russia.

    The second development is the evidence that Russia and Turkey are not
    simply improving their relationship; they seem to have found a new
    and surprising congruence of interests. At a meeting with Putin in
    July, Erdogan told the world that `our views totally coincide with
    regard to the situation in the region as well as to the issues
    concerning the preservation of stability in the world.' If he meant
    it, Erdogan was saying something disturbing, because Russia's idea of
    stability is deeply antithetical towards the West and had no qualms
    about the Uzbek government's killing of hundreds (possibly a
    thousand) protestors in Andijan this May. Indeed, Erdogan's phrase
    could have been taken straight from meetings between Putin and the
    presidents of Central Asia. Could that be possible? Turkish analysts
    believe it is and their answer seems plausible: apart from asking
    Uzbekistan to remove Turkish flags from jeeps used by Uzbek forces,
    Ankara has been very reticent in making any criticism of Uzbekistan's
    President Islam Karimov.

    All of this suggests a major shift in the position of two regional
    powers who have usually competed rather than coincided in their
    interests. Both seem keen to work more closely still. In January,
    Turkey expressed an interest (`unexpectedly,' said Putin) in joining
    the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a Central Asian grouping
    comprising Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and
    Uzbekistan. Though a competitor with Russia for influence in Georgia,
    Turkey is now apparently angling for a role as a mediator in the
    dispute over Abkhazia. Erdogan and Putin have, it seems, decided that
    their countries are not playing a zero-sum game either in the Black
    Sea or in Central Asia.

    So, what should be made of Ankara's new friendship with Moscow? Not
    too much is one answer.

    Firstly, the relationship between Russia and Turkey may be warming
    up, but there is little doubt that at present its relationship with
    the EU is far more important to Turkey than its ties with Russia.
    Ankara may take a more positive view of Moscow than Brussels does at
    present, but it is always going to follow an independent Russia
    policy. And, in any case, Europe's largest countries - France,
    Germany, and Britain - all have relationships with Russia that are
    also very cozy and differ from the increasingly skeptical position of
    the European Commission. (Where this all leaves Ankara's relationship
    with Washington is another matter, but it is primarily through the EU
    that Turkey can be tied more closely to the West.)

    Secondly, Turkey may be more interested in maintaining stability than
    in promoting democracy in Central Asia but in that respect it is
    behaving like the United States, which responded with woefully weak
    words to the events in Andijan.

    And, in any case, there are reasons to welcome the impact on the
    region of a better relationship between the two countries. A
    rapprochement between the main supporter of Armenia - Russia - and
    the main backer of Azerbaijan - Turkey - could push the issue of
    Nagorno-Karabakh towards a settlement and help push Armenia and
    Turkey towards opening up an economic relationship. An improvement on
    either front would help everyone (as well as promoting Turkey's case
    for EU membership). And if Turkey could deliver a solution to the
    Georgian-Abkhazian conflict, it would (of course) have achieved what
    no one else has proved able to do.

    PROMOTING DEMOCRACY

    Still, the contrast between Turkey's call for stability and
    Yushchenko's and Saakashvili's implicit call for democratic change
    does highlight some of the weaknesses in assuming that Turkey might
    be a force for positive change in the Black Sea and Caspian Sea
    regions.

    For one, the contrast underlines that Turkey has its own,
    long-standing interests in the Caucasus and Central Asia and - as the
    thorny, even neuralgic relationship with Armenia indicates - Turkey
    is perfectly capable of helping to maintain instability and retard
    progress in the Caucasus in defense of those interests. There may
    have some positive recent moves in relations between Turkey and
    Armenia, but the collapse of a joint historical commission and the
    imprisonment in Armenia of a Turkish historian indicate that a
    breakthrough in their relations is still a distant prospect.

    Second, achieving breakthroughs may be beyond Turkey. A summit
    between the Azeri and Armenian presidents on 26 August should again
    demonstrate how hard it will be for anyone to broker a settlement
    over Nagorno-Karabakh. In any case, all countries in the region,
    including Georgia and Azerbaijan, will be wary of the motivations of
    two powerful neighbors suddenly working together.

    And third, whatever the virtues of having a democratic Turkey
    embedded in the EU, Turkey is not yet an active promoter of the
    democratic changes that it itself is now embracing. Indeed, analysts
    believe that Turkey is very wary, for example, about potential
    upheaval after parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan this November.
    If key supporters of Turkey's membership of the EU - Britain and the
    United States - anticipate that Turkey would be active in promoting
    change in the region, they may well be wrong. At least for now, it
    looks likely that Turkey's contribution to political progress in the
    region will be passive, as an example that internal change is
    possible.

    Which brings to the fore the point that Yushchenko and Saakashvili
    implicitly highlighted: that current policies to promote democracy in
    the region are inadequate. Turkey seems interested in the status quo,
    not change. The EU's approach - demonstrated again in the spat
    between Belarus and Poland - is out of touch. With Belarus, its
    policy is based on reciprocity, a "step-by-step" approach under which
    the EU will respond to overtures made by Minsk. That is a passive
    position that relies on the EU's magnetic appeal to its neighbors.
    That may be fine when its neighbors - like countries in the western
    Balkans - are attracted to the EU, but clearly leads merely to
    disengagement with neighbors - like Belarus - who have no interest in
    the EU. If the EU wants to help promote political development in
    Central Asia or in the Caucasus, it needs something better than that
    - and also something better than its muted response to events in
    Andijan.

    The U.S. approach to the promotion of democracy also fails to provide
    a convincing model. In Turkey's neighborhood, it has used three
    approaches. Faced with an election-stealing government in Eduard
    Shevardnadze's Georgia and the "soft authoritarianism" of Ukraine's
    Leonid Kuchma and Kyrgyzstan's Askar Akaev, it deployed soft power,
    mainly by supporting civil society groups. Faced with "hard
    authoritarianism" in Iraq, it opted for violent overthrow, with
    uncertain long-term results. In Uzbekistan, it plumped for a few
    quiet and reluctant words of concern about the Andijan killings, a
    lily-livered policy that did nothing to save its troops from being
    ordered out of the country.

    What practical form the Community for Democratic Choice might take
    remains shadowy (all that is known is that a conference should be
    held in the autumn), but the Yushchenko-Saakashvili initiative -
    backed already by Poland and Lithuania - at least heralds the
    prospect of some new thinking about how to promote democracy. Given
    the inadequacies of the "models" provided by the big powers - the EU,
    Turkey, and the United States - some competition of ideas would be
    welcome.
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