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akv
10-27-2009, 13:33
Is Turkey Leaving the West?
An Islamist Foreign Policy Puts Ankara at Odds With Its Former Allies
Soner Cagaptay, FOREIGN AFFAIRS 10/26/09

In early October, Turkey disinvited Israel from Anatolian Eagle, an annual Turkish air force exercise that it had held with Israel, NATO, and the United States since the mid-1990s. It marked the first time Turkey's governing Justice and Development Party (AKP) let its increasingly anti-Western rhetoric spill into its foreign policy strategy, and the move may suggest that Turkey's continued cooperation with the West is far from guaranteed.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's prime minister and the leader of the AKP, justified the decision by calling Israel a "persecutor." But only a day after it dismissed Israel, Turkey invited Syria -- a known abuser of human rights -- to joint military exercises and announced the creation of a Strategic Cooperation Council with the Syrian regime. A mountain is moving in Turkish foreign policy, and the foundation of Turkey's 60-year-old military and political cooperation with the West may be eroding.

Starting in 1946, when Turkey chose to ally itself with the West in the Cold War -- later sending troops to Korea and joining NATO -- successive Turkish governments have pursued close cooperation with the United States and Europe. Turkey viewed the Middle East and global politics through the lens of their own national security interests. This made cooperation possible, even with Israel, a state Turkey viewed as a democratic ally in a volatile region. The two countries shared similar security concerns, such as Syria's support for terror groups abroad -- radical Palestinian organizations in the case of Israel, and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in Turkey. In 1998, when Ankara confronted Damascus over its support for the PKK, Turkish newspapers wrote headlines championing the Turkish-Israeli alliance: "We will say 'shalom' to the Israelis on the Golan Heights," one read.

The AKP, however, viewed Turkey's interests through a different lens -- one colored by a politicized take on religion, namely Islamism. Senior AKP officials called the 2004 U.S. offensive in Fallujah, Iraq, a "genocide," and in February 2009, Erdogan compared Gaza to a "concentration camp."

The foundation of Turkey's 60-year-old military and political cooperation with the West may be eroding. But the AKP's foreign policy has not promoted sympathy toward all Muslim states. Rather, the party has promoted solidarity with Islamist, anti-Western regimes (Qatar and Sudan, for example) while dismissing secular, pro-Western Muslim governments (Egypt, Jordan, and Tunisia). This two-pronged strategy is especially apparent in the Palestinian territories: at the same time that the AKP government has called on Western countries to "recognize Hamas as the legitimate government of the Palestinian people," AKP officials have labeled Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas the "head of an illegitimate government." According to diplomats, Abbas' last visit to Ankara in July 2009 went terribly -- now, these diplomatic sources say, Abbas does not trust the AKP any more than he trusts Hamas.

As the cancelled military exercises with Israel show, the AKP's moralistic foreign policy is not without inherent hypocrisies. An earlier example came last January, when, a day after Erdogan harangued Israeli President Shimon Peres, as well as Jews and Israelis, at the World Economic Forum for knowing "well how to kill people," Turkey hosted the Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Taha in Ankara. This is a dangerous position because it suggests -- especially to the generation coming of age under the AKP -- that Islamist regimes alone have the right to attack their own people or even other states. In September, Erdogan defended Iran's nuclear program, arguing that the problem in the Middle East is Israel's nuclear arsenal.

Some analysts have dismissed such rhetoric as domestic politicking or simply an instance of Erdogan losing his temper. But Erdogan is an astute politician, and he is now reacting to changes in Turkish society. After seven years of the AKP's Islamist rhetoric, public opinion has shifted to embrace the idea of a politically united "Muslim world." According to independent polling in Turkey, the number of people identifying themselves as Muslim increased by ten percent between 2002 and 2007; in addition, almost half of those surveyed describe themselves as Islamist.

The AKP's foreign policy now has a welcome audience at home, making it more likely to become entrenched. After Erdogan stormed out of his session at the World Economic Forum, thousands gathered to greet his plane as it arrived back home in what appeared to be an orchestrated welcome. (Banners with Turkish and Hamas flags stitched together appeared from nowhere in a matter of hours.)

The transformation of Turkish identity under the AKP has potentially massive ramifications. Guided by an Islamist worldview, it will become more and more impossible for Turkey to support Western foreign policy, even when doing so is in its national interest. Turkish-Israeli ties -- long a model for how a Muslim country can pursue a rational, cooperative relationship with the Jewish state -- will continue to unravel. Such a development will be greeted only with approval by the Turkish public, further bolstering the AKP's popularity. Thus, the party will be able to kill two birds with one stone: distancing the country from its former ally and shoring up its own power base.

The same dynamic will also apply to Turkey's relations with the European Union and the United States. The AKP has a tactical view of Turkey's possible accession to the EU: it pushes for membership when it brings the party public approval, but it does not take a strategic view of closer ties with Europe. Thus, the AKP is reluctant to take on tough, potentially unpopular reforms mandated by the EU, making accession seem less and less a likely reality. Statements such as Erdogan's calling the West "immoral" in 2008 only erode popular support for EU membership: by last year, about one-third of the population wanted their country to join the EU, down sharply from more than 80 percent in 2002, when the AKP took power.

Meanwhile, as the United States devotes much of its energy abroad to Muslim countries, from opposing radicalism to countering Iran's nuclear program, the AKP will oppose these policies through harsh rhetoric and opt out of any close cooperation.

Many suggested that the AKP's rise to power presented Turkey with an opportunity to "go back to the Middle East" and adopt more of an Islamic identity. The hope was that such a shift would help "normalize" Turkey, recalibrating the secularizing and nationalist reforms of Kemal Atatürk, who turned Turkey to the West in the early twentieth century. The outcome, however, has not been so positive. Turkey's experience with the AKP proves that Islamism in the country's foreign policy may not be so compatible with the West, after all..

Sigaba
10-27-2009, 13:55
More food for thought. Source is here (http://www.economist.com/PrinterFriendly.cfm?story_id=14416843).Turkey, Cyprus and NATO

Fogh in the Aegean
Sep 10th 2009 | ANKARA
From The Economist print edition

NATO’s secretary-general seeks better ties with the EU

THE (perhaps vain) hope of Anders Fogh Rasmussen, NATO’s newish secretary-general, when he visited Greece and Turkey recently was to get these hostile NATO members to set aside their longstanding rivalry so as to improve co-operation between the alliance and the European Union. Turkey objects to this because of a Greek and Cypriot block on its own participation in EU military planning, and on its putative membership of the European Defence Agency. As Mr Fogh Rasmussen complains, this means NATO cannot formally protect EU policemen in Afghanistan. “It’s a security issue. It’s absurd,” he says.

Turkey, which has NATO’s second-largest army, fiercely opposed Mr Fogh Rasmussen’s candidacy for NATO’s top job because he was Denmark’s prime minister during the Prophet Muhammad cartoon crisis and because the Danes have refused to ban Roj TV, a satellite channel run by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) that is beamed out of Denmark.

Mr Fogh Rasmussen’s choice of Ramadan as the time to visit Turkey was calculated to ease Muslim anger. He took part in a lavish iftar (breaking of the fast) organised by the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. It was, says Mr Fogh Rasmussen, “a clear manifestation” of his respect for Islam. Yet his Turkish hosts remained unswayed. His request for combat troops for Afghanistan seems to have been rebuffed, as were his entreaties that Turkey allow Cyprus to join NATO. But at least he wangled a commitment of more Turkish troops to work on reconstruction projects in Afghanistan.

Mr Fogh Rasmussen concedes that, unless and until the Cyprus dispute is resolved, there is little chance of a big improvement in NATO’s relations with the EU. Turkey does not recognise the Greek-Cypriot government. Its continuing refusal to open ports and airports to Greek-Cypriot carriers may yet lead to a freezing of its EU membership negotiations later this year.

Mr Fogh Rasmussen wants pragmatism to prevail because the “lives of our forces are at risk”. He suggests that “the EU must accept a security arrangement with Turkey, and NATO a security arrangement with Cyprus”. Yet Greece recently protested that eight Turkish fighter jets had flown dangerously close to a Rhodes-bound Greek passenger aircraft. Western diplomats talk of a marked escalation in dogfights between Turkish and Greek pilots over the Aegean. Another NATO crisis in the making?And from Al Jazerra. Source is here (http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2009/10/2009102711739736523.html).
UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
21:13 Mecca time, 18:13 GMT
News Europe
Iran hails Turkey's nuclear support

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran's president, has said that he "appreciates" the support shown by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's prime minister, over Tehran's nuclear programme.

Erdogan, who arrived in Tehran for bilateral talks on Tuesday, has accused Western nations of hypocrisy in criticising Iran's uranium enrichment programme while remaining silent on Israel, which is believed to have an undeclared nuclear arsenal.

Ahmadinejad told Erdogan: "When an illicit regime possesses nuclear arms, one can not talk about depriving other nations from the peaceful nuclear programme.

"Your clear stance towards the Zionist regime had a positive effect in the world, especially the Islamic world, and I am sure that everyone was satisfied," he said, according to the Iranian presidential website

'Peaceful' programme

Erdogan had told journalists travelling with him to Iran that the country's nuclear programme, which Western nations say could be a cover for building weapons, "is an energy project with peaceful, humanitarian purposes".

He said talks between Tehran and world powers in Geneva on October 1 showed that it "can work with" the United States and Russia on uranium enrichment.

"If their positive attitude is answered with a positive attitude, this will bring forward the process in the positive direction," Erdogan said.

His latest remarks came after an interview in Britain's The Guardian newspaper in which he accused Western powers of treating Iran unfairly and referred to Ahmadinejad as a "friend".

Ties between Israel and Turkey have deteriorated since the December-January war on Gaza.

Ankara had previously attempted to mediate relations between Israel and other Middle Eastern nations, but earlier this month, Turkey banned Israel from an international air exercise because of the Gaza conflict.

Gas 'co-operation'

The Turkish prime minister has brought a 200-member delegation, comprising ministers, members of parliament and business leaders, to Iran to discuss a wide range of bilateral, regional and international issues.

Isna, the Iranian students news agency, said that Ahmadinejad had told Erdogan there were no limitations to Iranian-Turkish co-operation.

Taner Yildiz, Turkey's energy minister, said that one of the areas in which the two neighbours would work together was gas exploration.

He said that Turkey would start exploration work at Iran's South Pars gas field next month as part of a project to sell gas to Europe, the state-run Anatolian news agency reported.

"Turkish Petroleum will be exploring in the South Pars Field ... The work will have started by the first or second week of November," Yildiz said.

It was not immediately clear whether the gas would go through the planned $11.76bn European Union-backed Nabucco pipeline, which was agreed with [A]nkara in July.

Erdogan on Tuesday said he supported Iran's presence in the Nabucco project and added: "I believe that sooner or later, the project will understand the importance of Iran's participation".

Iranian-Turkish trade stands at around $12bn a year and the two nations are seeking to expand it to $20bn in the next two years.

Erdogan is also expected to hold talks with Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader and Ali Larijani, the parliamentary speaker during, his visit.The interview mentioned above is available here (http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/oct/26/turkey-iran1).