Category: Turkey

  • Turkey Country Analysis Brief

    Turkey Country Analysis Brief

    U.S. Department of Energy   
    Energy Information Administration

    For information on the energy situation in Turkey, please see our updated Country Analysis Brief:

    Also included are a map, graph, and links to other related web sites.

  • Opening of borders is against Azerbaijan’s interests

    Opening of borders is against Azerbaijan’s interests

     
     

    [ 03 Apr 2009 17:23 ]
    Baku. Lachin Sultanova –APA. “Principally, every country has a sovereign right to determine its relationship with any other country, but in this situation, the issue directly concerns Azerbaijan”, said press officer of Azerbaijan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Elkhan Polukhov, commenting reports on Turkey’s intention to open borders with Armenia, APA reports.

    He said Turkish government closed the borders with Armenia in 1993. “The government of Turkey decided in 1993 to close borders with Armenia because of Armenia’s territorial claims against Turkey, occupation of Azerbaijani territories, ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijani people in the occupied territories. The Republic of Azerbaijan appreciated the Turkey’s decision as an act of support and a sign of solidarity with the Azerbaijani people. Azerbaijan always supported the Turkey’s fair demands against Armenia. Turkey’s decision to close borders with Armenia has a principal character because it was a clear message of intolerance to Armenia for its actions. This decision considers political and economic measures to force Armenia to review its policy against Azerbaijan and Turkey and to make well-considered steps in the region”. Polukhov said Armenia was always refusing the constructive proposals of its neighbors. “Armenia is always refusing constructive proposals toward settlement of the conflict and other problems as well, considers the hostile activity possible, and notwithstanding it demands the countries, which are targets of Armenia’s hostile activity, to open borders and to establish economic cooperation. Under the present conditions, reviewing of policy toward Armenia, including changing of decision on closing the borders within the context of non-progress in the settlement of Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, would have negative impact on the Armenian-Azerbaijani talks over the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict. “Armenia will accept the opening of borders as an act of encouraging of its occupier policy against Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan considers that the opening of Turkish-Armenian borders out of the context of settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict is contrary to the national interests of Azerbaijan. This action will have negative impact on the situation in both strategic and tactic plans and will intensify tensions in the region”.

  • Azerbaijanis protest opening of Turkey-Armenia border

    Azerbaijanis protest opening of Turkey-Armenia border

    Baku. Elbrus Seyfullayev, Elnur Mammadli-APA. “The opening of borders between Turkey and Armenia is contrary not only to the interests of Azerbaijan, but also to the interests of Turkey. Nobody in Azerbaijan believes that Turkey can take such step”, Malahat Ibrahimgizi from ruling New Azerbaijan Part (YAP) told APA. According to her, opening of borders between Turkey and Armenia has become a subject of discussions after Adulla Gul’s visit to Yerevan to watch the football match. She noted that Azerbaijan was seriously and justly concerned over this issue: “20 percent of Azerbaijan’s territories are under the occupation. It means that Armenians have occupied not only the territory of Azerbaijan, but also the international law.”

    Non-party deputy Ganira Pashayeva told APA that she was against the opening of borders between Turkey and Armenia before the liberation of Azerbaijani lands from the occupation. “Opening of borders is unacceptable before the solution to Nagorno Karabagh problem”. To her, Turkish Prime Minister has today refuted the information on opening of borders between Turkey and Armenia: “I would like to hope that this refutation would continue till the liberation of Azerbaijan’s lands from occupation”.

    Head of Azerbaijan-Turkey Interparliamentary Friendship Group Nizami Jafarov told APA that the opening of borders between Turkey and Armenia was not convincing. According to the MP, if such case happens the Government of Azerbaijan will protest this issue: “If the borders are opened before the solution to the Nagorno Karabagh conflict the result will not be satisfactory. Turkey has already taken certain steps in this direction, but Armenia has done nothing instead”.

    Chairman of United Azerbaijan Popular Front Party (BAXCP), Deputy Gudrat Hasanguliyev told APA if Turkish community did not protest this issue AKP administration would open the borders with Armenia: “They are seriously preparing for this. If different parties, communities, intellectuals and media of Turkey do demonstrate their strict positions in this issue, the Turkish government will realize their intentions. Turkey established economic relations with Armenia and even there are flights between the two countries, the only issue was to make these ties formal”. Hasanguliyev stated that it was a right step that Azerbaijani President refused to attend the “Alliance of Civilizations” project meeting in Turkey.

    Head of Musavat Party Isa Gambar noted that he did not believe in the opening of borders between Turkey and Armenia: “There is huge and global process today. And there are many players and factors in this process. And each player of this process has its own interests while making decisions. And of course Azerbaijan also has its own interests and the most important interest is to make Armenia refrain from its aggressive policy. At the same time, strategic and friendly relations should further be developed with Turkey”.

    Chairman of Azerbaijan Popular Front Party Ali Karimli noted that Azerbaijan was seriously and justly concerned over the opening of borders between Turkey and Armenia. The Government of Azerbaijan should speak openly in this issue. Today I’ve heard about the first steps in this respect. There should be consecutive policy and the talks should be conducted with Turkish government.

  • Turkey attempts to contain radical Islamists

    Turkey attempts to contain radical Islamists

    Cracks emerge in bridge between East and West

    By Selcan Hacaoglu

    Associated Press / April 4, 2009

    ANKARA, Turkey – As the only Muslim member of NATO and a candidate to join the European Union, Turkey has come to be seen as a bridge between East and West, held up by Washington as a shining example of how Islam is compatible with modern democracy.

    But as President Obama prepares to come here next week in a trip some herald as a diplomatic milestone, Turkish leaders are grappling with a formidable challenge: radical Islamic groups preaching jihad and vowing to unravel Turkey’s democratic achievements.

    The conundrum is twofold: A real threat from Muslim radicals intent on destabilizing the government, and the perception by many that by cracking down, Turkey is betraying the very democratic principles that have helped win it much trust and acceptance in the West.

    Listening to the radicals, it’s easy to fathom Turkey’s difficulties.

    Yilmaz Celik, a spokesman for the radical Islamist group Hizb-ut Tahrir, was released from prison last month after serving a five-month sentence on terrorism charges.

    He says he despises the United States, finds the “Alliance of Civilizations” conference Obama is attending a joke, and believes Turkey’s moderate, Islamist-leaning leadership is a stooge of the West.

    “We’re full of grudges and hatred against the United States and Britain for exporting their ideology and giving ‘soft messages’ to deceive the Islamic world, for example, in the shape of an olive branch to Iran,” said Celik, whose group has attracted a following in dozens of countries.

    The fine line Celik tries to tread puts Turkey in a quandary.

    Turkey’s EU bid depends greatly on its ability to promote itself as a nation that respects civil liberties like freedom of speech.

    But the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is also keenly aware of how fragile Turkey’s social and political equilibrium can be. The military has ousted four elected governments since 1960. The government believes its hard line is the only way to keep radical Muslim groups in check.

    Turkey has been vigilant against homegrown Islamic militants since Al Qaeda-linked suicide bombers killed 58 people in 2003. Al Qaeda’s austere and violent interpretation of Islam receives little public backing in the country.

    However, some radical Muslims here regard Turkey’s friendship with Israel, the United States, and Britain – as well as efforts to join the EU – as tantamount to treason. And the country is still debating the role of religion in the officially secular state.

    Celik accuses the United States of waging what he called a “fourth crusade” against the Muslims.

    “For us, neither Bush nor Obama is any different,” Celik said. “They are given the same mission. When you look from the outside, Obama might be using a softer language. But Obama is certainly not sincere.”

    Celik said Obama’s arrival in Turkey is aimed at “strengthening the United States’ influence in Muslim lands through soft messages.”

    Turkey and Germany are among countries that ban Hizb-ut Tahrir.

  • The Evolving Turkish Role in Mideast Peace Diplomacy

    The Evolving Turkish Role in Mideast Peace Diplomacy

     

    Author:

     
    Steven A. Cook, Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies

     

    April 2, 2009

    As President Obama arrives in Ankara, he will find a Turkish government eager to play an influential role in the Middle East. While Turkey has made important contributions to the region in recent years, its activism has been controversial in Washington. When Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stormed out of a contentious panel on the Gaza crisis at the World Economic Forum in Davos in January, he injected additional controversy into Turkey’s diplomatic foray in the Middle East.

    The incident produced a torrent of criticism from some U.S. policymakers, analysts, and journalists who regarded the uproar in Davos as proof positive that Turkey, under Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party, which is rooted in Turkey’s Islamist movement, had made the turn away from the West in favor of the radicals of the Middle East. Erdogan’s behavior at Davos, his seeming embrace of Hamas during Israel’s Gaza offensive, and his strong criticism of Israel, which at times veered into classic anti-Semitism, left observers wondering whether Turkey could continue to play a constructive role in the Middle East.

    The Prodigal Pasha

    Since the Justice and Development Party (known as AKP) came to power in late 2002, Ankara has pursued a conscious strategy of reestablishing Turkey’s links with the former Ottoman domains to the south and the east. To be sure, there have long been Turkish diplomatic missions throughout the Middle East, but given Ankara’s foreign policy orientation, which placed a premium on relations with the West and the official secularism of the republic, Turkey was a marginal player at best in the Middle East. The AKP governments, first under Prime Minister Abdullah Gul and since early 2003 under Erdogan, embarked on an ambitious foreign policy–concomitant with their equally bold domestic political and reform program–that sought to secure Turkey’s bid to become a member of the European Union while simultaneously cultivating relationships with Cairo, Damascus, Baghdad, Riyadh, and Tehran. Turkey’s effort to draw closer to both Europe and the Middle East reflected a belief within the AKP that its foreign policy needed to be normalized. Although Turkey’s almost exclusive orientation toward Europe and the United States might have been appropriate during the Cold War, when its membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was a paramount foreign policy fact, Turkey’s interests now demanded a multidimensional foreign policy.

    The Justice and Development Party’s approach was met almost immediately with skepticism in Washington.  The often testy negotiations between Washington and Ankara in late 2002 and early 2003 over the use of Turkish territory for the planned invasion of Iraq and the parliament’s subsequent inability to pass legislation giving U.S. forces permission to launch the attack from Turkey angered the United States.  Yet Iraq was just the first in a series of episodes where Ankara and Washington found themselves on opposite sides in the Middle East. In 2005, for example, as the United States sought to isolate Syria over Damascus’s alleged responsibility for the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and its central role in funneling jihadis into Iraq, the Turkish government continued a policy of deepening its diplomatic and economic ties with the Syrians. After Hamas won the Palestinian elections in January 2006, then Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and other Turkish foreign ministry officials hosted Hamas’s external leader, Khaled Meshal, at AKP headquarters in Ankara. These developments came against the backdrop of improved relations between Ankara and Tehran and Prime Minister Erdogan’s periodic tough rhetoric that Israeli military operations in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank were tantamount to “state terrorism.”

    Ties Shift, Eyebrows Rise

    Each of these developments at first blush raises serious questions about Turkey’s foreign policy orientation. Ankara’s seemingly abrupt divergence from the Western consensus was disorienting to policymakers and other observers who concluded that Turkey could no longer be considered a reliable partner or play the “honest broker” role in Middle Eastern conflicts that Turkish officials coveted. Hosting Khaled Meshal, who is responsible for a fair number of both Israeli and Palestinian deaths, was clearly a mistake. Not only did the Hamas leader resist Turkish entreaties to recognize Israel and to renounce armed struggle, the encounter also angered Jerusalem and Washington–two strategically critical relationships for Ankara. Yet, it is important to note that with all the questions about who “lost” Turkey and whether Turkey is “tilting East,” there is nothing extraordinary about Ankara’s approach to the Middle East. Against the backdrop of the end of the Cold War, Turkey’s tortured relationship with the European Union, and the security fallout from the invasion of Iraq, any Turkish government would likely pursue a foreign policy similar to that of AKP.  The Hamas episode aside, it is abundantly clear that Turkey’s Middle East policy is consistent with Turkey’s national interests, and importantly, one that Washington can leverage to advance its own regional goals.

    On the range of important issues from Iraq and Iran to Middle East peace, Turkey’s policies are generally consistent with those of the United States. The Turks have long sought a stable, federal Iraq. The flowering of relations between Ankara and Irbil, the seat of the Kurdish Regional Government, combined with considerable Turkish investment in northern Iraq mitigates a complicating factor in Washington’s Iraq policy. The situation in Kirkuk and the persistence of Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) violence against Turkey remain flashpoints, but as the Turks and Iraqi Kurds develop closer ties, the magnitude of these problems diminishes, forestalling some of the most dire scenarios about Turkish military intervention that could unravel the progress that Iraq has made over the last eighteen months. In the context of improved Turkish-Iraqi Kurdish relations, the Kurdish president of Iraq, Jalal Talabani, has called upon PKK terrorists to lay down their arms or leave Iraq. For the United States, Turkey is no longer the malevolent wildcard in the game of stabilizing Iraq.

    Iran, Syria, and Mammon

    Viewed from a U.S. standpoint, Turkey’s two most controversial relationships in the Middle East are Iran and Syria. While critics have often used these ties as clear indications of AKP’s Islamist worldview, Ankara nurtured relations with Tehran and Damascus in the late 1990s (before Justice and Development even existed) and early 2000s.  The Turkish leadership supports the Obama administration’s efforts to establish a dialogue with Tehran. From Turkey’s perspective, good bilateral relations with Iran and regional stability are critically important, not for ideological reasons, but economic calculation. Iran is the largest supplier of natural gas to Turkey only after Russia. Although the Turks would like to diversify their supplies and have plans to invest in large-scale renewable energy programs, in the short and medium term, Ankara will do all that it can to ensure its relations with both Tehran and Moscow remain cooperative and friendly.

    The exigencies of energy supplies are not bound up in Turkey’s relations with Syria, but there is a strong economic component to the relationship. Turkey’s predominantly underdeveloped southeast is closer to Damascus than to Kayseri, Ankara, or Istanbul. The Turks believe that increased bilateral trade serves two critical purposes–it promotes development in places like Cizre, Gaziantep, and Diyarbakir and provides a boost to the Syrian economy. The architects of AKP’s foreign policy make the argument that if Turkey’s neighbors prosper, they are also more likely to be pacific, ensuring Turkish security and providing a regional environment more conducive to peace. Turkey’s ties with Syria serve another geostrategic interest. In 2006-2007, some foreign policy analysts were seized with the idea that Damascus could be “peeled away” from its strategic relationship with Iran. Although it is unlikely that Damascus will easily relinquish its ties with Tehran, the Turks can play an important role in providing the regime of Bashar al-Assad with an attractive alternative to Iran. It is surely preferable to Washington for the Turks to be engaging in dialogue with the Syrians than for Assad to be speaking with Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in isolation. Turkey’s ties with Syria have already paid dividends in the Middle East as Ankara sponsored indirect talks between Israelis and Syrians in 2008. Those negotiations did not produce an agreement and were halted over Israel’s invasion of Gaza in December 2008, but by all measures the Syrians and Israelis made progress with the help of Turkish mediation.

    O, Jerusalem

    Perhaps Turkey’s most complex relationship in the Middle East is with Israel. While the two countries maintain close military and economic ties, relations have been decidedly uneasy. From the start, the Israelis perceived a Palestinian tilt in AKP’s approach to the Middle East and were wary of Ankara’s relations with Tehran. At the same time, the Israelis, by their own admission, have complete trust in Prime Minister Erdogan’s efforts to mediate between Israel and Syria. For their part, the Turks were concerned about reports that the Israelis were developing ties with both the Iraqi Kurds and an organization related to the PKK, the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan or PJAK, which is battling Iran. Ankara also argues that Israeli actions in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip only undermine their efforts and those of others to broker peace. Relations between the two countries deteriorated during Israel’s Gaza offensive, yet recent reports that the Israelis have dispatched a senior foreign ministry official to Ankara may indicate that both governments are looking for ways to reestablish trust. If incoming Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu places an emphasis on striking a deal with Syria, as many expect, Turkey will initially play a prominent role in bringing the two parties together and brokering their negotiations.

    Ultimately, the challenge for Turkey is, first, whether it has the capacity to pursue an activist role in the region without undermining its other priorities, and second, the extent to which other regional powers want Ankara to play the role it intends. Thus far, the Turks seem able to balance their desire to be influential in the Middle East with other national interests in the Caucasus, Cyprus, and Europe. There is also a palpable sense in the Middle East that Turkish activism, while helpful at times, can nevertheless undermine the efforts of more traditional regional powers like Saudi Arabia and Egypt. As Cairo and Riyadh seek Palestinian reconciliation, there is concern that Turkish activism will provide a way for Hamas to resist Arab pressure to come to terms with Fatah. Still, there is no question that Turkey can play a constructive role in the Middle East. It has gained the confidence of the regional players on most of the major issues of great importance. As a result, in an era of diminished resources for the United States, Turkey can be a critical ally in the pursuit of Washington and Ankara’s overlapping interests.

  • Turkey’s state radio begins broadcasting in Armenian, Kurdish

    Turkey’s state radio begins broadcasting in Armenian, Kurdish

     

    ISTANBUL – Turkey’s state run Television and Radio Corporation, or TRT, has launched Armenian and Kurdish channels in the latest in a series of planned foreign language broadcasting mediums being launched by the state.

    Kurdish radio programs began on April 1, while Armenian radio programs began on April 2.

    Radyo 6 will air in Kurdish 24-hours a day, TRT said in a written statement. 

    Armenian programs would be broadcast everyday between 7.00-7.30 a.m. and 6.00-6.30 p.m. as part of “The Voice of Turkey” radio, the statement added.

    The move comes as Ankara and Yerevan continue to engage in a normalization process between the two neighbors that for decades have had no diplomatic relations.

    Turkey also recently took steps to boost the cultural and democratic rights of Kurds with the Jan. 1 launch of TRT-6, a TV channel that airs in Kurdish 24-hours a day.