Temper tantrums

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Temper tantrums

Feb 5th 2009 | ANKARA
From The Economist print edition

A dramatic Davos walkout raises new questions about Recep Tayyip Erdogan

WAS it premeditated? Or did Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, lose control? Mr Erdogan’s walkout from a debate with Israel’s president, Shimon Peres, in Davos has made him the most talked about Turkish leader since Kemal Ataturk. His audience of financiers and policy wonks was stunned. But Muslims worldwide cheered as Mr Erdogan scolded Mr Peres over Israel’s war in Gaza. “When it comes to killing, you know very well how to kill. I know well how you hit and kill children on beaches,” thundered a crimson-faced Mr Erdogan.

The incident has led to new debate over Turkey’s strategic alliance with Israel, whether an increasingly erratic Mr Erdogan is fit to lead Turkey at all and, if so, in what direction: east or west? There is no question of Turkey walking away from NATO or the European Union, or scrapping military ties with Israel and America. Mr Erdogan’s critics say his outburst was a ploy to please voters. If so, it worked: his approval ratings have shot up. Polls suggest that 80% of Turks support Mr Erdogan’s actions. His mildly Islamist Justice and Development party will reap dividends in municipal elections on March 29th.

Mr Erdogan’s defiance has also helped to assuage his people’s long-running feelings of humiliation and inferiority, which date back as far as the Ottoman defeat in the first world war. Many insist that Mr Erdogan’s reaction was spontaneous and utterly sincere. Turkey has assumed “moral leadership” based on Western values, opined Cengiz Candar, a liberal commentator. Mindful of the public mood, Turkey’s secular opposition leader, Deniz Baykal, grudgingly declared that his rival had done the right thing.

Not everybody agrees, however. Mr Erdogan’s behaviour makes it less likely that Turkey can successfully mediate between Israel and Syria. His call to Barack Obama to “redefine” what terrorist means has been seen as an appeal to remove the label from Hamas. Although European and American reaction has been muted, in private officials are unhappy. “What [the Davos spat] does leave in Europe is the feeling that Mr Erdogan is unpredictable,” says a European diplomat. Mr Obama is highly unlikely now to pay Turkey an early visit.

Mr Erdogan’s temper tantrums are not new. But they used to be reserved for his critics at home. The Davos affair, says another foreign diplomat, is further evidence of “Mr Erdogan’s conviction that the West needs Turkey more than Turkey needs it.” It is of a piece with Mr Erdogan’s threat to back out of the much-touted Nabucco pipeline to carry gas from the Caspian Sea to Europe via Turkey. In Brussels recently Mr Erdogan said that, if there were no progress on the energy chapter of Turkey’s EU accession talks then “we would of course review our position”. Meanwhile, Turkey sided with Saudi Arabia and the Vatican in opposing a UN statement suggested by the EU to call for the global decriminalisation of homosexuality.

Mr Erdogan’s supporters argue that EU foot-dragging on Turkey’s membership bid explains why Turkey is now seeking new friends in the Middle East and beyond. Its growing regional clout is another reason why the EU should embrace Turkey. But the reverse is also true. It is because it is the sole Muslim country that is at once secular, democratic and allied with the West that Turkey commands such respect in the rest of the world. Growing numbers of Arab investors have flocked to Turkey, “because we see it as part of Europe, not the Middle East,” says an Arab banker in Istanbul.

To retain its allure, Turkey will need to swallow its pride and make further concessions on Cyprus. The EU may suspend membership talks altogether unless Turkey meets a December 2009 deadline to open its ports to Greek-Cypriots. The hope is that Egemen Bagis, who was chosen as Turkey’s official EU negotiator in January, will remind Mr Erdogan that, at least in these talks, it is Turkey that is the supplicant not the other way round.

Source:  Economist, Feb 5th 2009


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5 responses to “Temper tantrums”

  1. Kufi Seydali Avatar
    Kufi Seydali

    Erdogan is what he is, with strengths and weaknesses like any
    other human being! He is, no doubt, a product of our time.

    I don’t particularly like Mr. Erdogan and his style, but in the face
    of all the ill treatment, discrimination and humiliation accorded
    to Turkey by the West (EU/USA), it is no wonder, that things came so far!

    Today, it is quite acceptable – almost de rigueur – to express
    anti-turkish sentiments in Western media without being accused of
    racism. Indeed, to disagree with these sentiments is to invite suspicion.
    No wonder the Turks feel misunderstood and unfairly treated.

    As far as strategic partnerships and special relationships are concerned,
    thesemust be important to both parties, and each must have resources
    that the other needs. Partners must surely consider each others interests
    as well their own. Yet, the USA and Israel have been persuing policies that
    are unashamedly in their own interests alone. In such a case, special
    relationships have no meaning.

    What happened in Cyprus, and why should Turkey make more
    concessions? It is the EU that has to find a face-saving way out of
    its rush commitment to offer Greek Cyprus membership, with or without
    a solution to the Cyprus conflict. Any final solution to this conflict based
    on the humiliation of the other or denial of his legitimate needs is bound
    not only to fail but to curse both parties for generations. The final settlement
    must address the core interests of each party and achieve an equitable
    balance between their sacrifices and benefits. The EU must understand that
    any solution must be both balanced and flexible enough to withstand the
    buffeting of history.

  2. DCTRK Avatar
    DCTRK

    A disgrace to have this mans name in the same sentence as ATATURK!
    Erdoganin ismini ulu onderimizin ismi ile ayni cumle de bile olmasi bir rezalet!
    Sacma sapan yorumlariyla, secimler icin kendi cikarlari icin yaptigi bir hareket Turkiye Arap ve Iran ulkelerinde kahraman yapti…gecmis tarihmizde bu ulkeler Osmanlilari hep arkadan vurdu hele Filistinliler, hic birisi modern bir Turkiye icin faydasi ve katkisi olmastir Israil bize verdigi destek ve isbirlikleri ile!

  3. haluk Avatar
    haluk

    İsrail Türkiye’yi Tehdit Ediyor
    Doç. Dr. Sedat Laçiner
    http://www.usakgundem.com/haber.php?id=28781
    Dr. Laçiner, “Davos Economic Forum” tarafından verilen “2006 Genç Küresel Lider” unvanı sahibidir…

  4. haluk Avatar
    haluk

    Jewish Prof: Israel needs Turkey more than Turkey needs Israel
    http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/64250/jewish-prof-israel-needs-turkey-more-than-turkey-needs-israel.html
    “An Oxford professor, Professor Shlaim is not an ordinary Jewish academic. He is an insider, in a way, as he served as a soldier in the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) in the mid-1960s.”

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