Category: Asia and Pacific

  • TURKEY OR RUSSIA

    TURKEY OR RUSSIA

    TURKEY OR RUSSIA, EAST OF GEORGIA:

    A STRUGGLE FOR MINDS, HEARTS AND RESOURCES – August 23, 2008

    The battle for Georgia will dominate the headlines for months, probably years to come. The new Russia can be distinguished from the old Soviet Union, but regardless is committed to regaining the influence of old empires. The dismantling of the Soviet Union has been experienced as a great tragedy by the current Putin leadership and Georgia is only the opening move in righting this perceived wrong. The real battleground for supremacy will unfold further east, the resource rich, newly independent states of the Caucuses and Central Asia.

    WHERE THE ENERGY PIPELINES END
    Georgia is the transit point for the crucial new energy pipelines from the Caspian Sea Basin and the recently exploited fields in newly independent states. The problem of transport and transit had already impeded the development of such oil and natural gas fields. Pipelines through Georgia

    to the Black Sea or linked to Turkey’s Mediterranean ports was believed

    to be the optimum strategic option. This avoided Iran as well as the Armenia and Azerbaijan conflict zone. It also was designed to detour

    Russia as not to further its potential stranglehold on oil and natural gas

    flows westward.

    United States support for the Taliban in Afghanistan in the mid 1990’s was part of a broader strategy to find an alternative to the potential Russian stranglehold as well as Iran’s central geopolitical position. In that vision, energy would flow through a stabilized even if socially unpalatable Afghanistan toward an allied Pakistan and its Indian Ocean ports. The Russians did not need the revenue as much as they resented the loss of potential influence and ability to use such as political leverage on the Euro-Atlantic alliance and more importantly upon the newly independent energy producers of the Caucuses and Central Asia.

    WHERE THE ENERGY PIPELINES BEGIN
    Lost in this strategic maneuvering and the immediacy of the Georgia conflict is the situation of the states at the source of current and planned pipelines, particularly of the Caspian Basin. The issue of transit and transport remains as a key uncertainty. However, the fate and development of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan remains the fundamental consideration in terms of the stability of these regions as producers and providers of energy and other crucial natural resources sought by an East and West with ever increasing appetites.

    These Central Asian and Caucus sovereign republics are frequently viewed in a homogeneous light. They are all newly independent from the Soviet Union. They are struggling to adapt democratic methodology to a system still very much dominated by Soviet style politics and even personalities. Most of these states are indigenous Muslim majority populations with significant a Russian minorities.

    However, there are key differences and viewing these countries as homogeneous is both racist and risky. Their level of political, economic and social evolution varies significantly and is frequently influenced by local considerations rather than some global attraction. Even the Muslim religious tradition is not homogeneous. For example, Azerbaijan is majority Shia rather than Sunni Islam prevailing in most of the other states. The wealth and development of natural resource exploitation varies due in part to capital and technology commitments from competing national and commercial interests. States such as Azerbaijan have been at the forefront, as much due to geopolitical fortunes.

    Nonetheless, shared factors will have a significant sway over these states, almost as a flock just now starting to exploit untapped resources and preparing to take flight. Whether these states drift more toward Russia or even China versus Westward will be determined by economic, political and even military developments. The resolution of Afghanistan will be one factor. China’s crackdown in the neighboring traditionally Islamic majority western provinces will be another. However, perhaps the crucial, if not defining, wind will be the old sway of Soviet Russia versus the influence of the Euro-Atlantic alliance through Turkey’s deep-rooted cultural, religious and linguistic ties.

    THE TURKEY THAT BINDS
    Turkey is the core of what used to be an empire stretching from Central Europe to China. This diversity can today be seen in the melting pots that are the major Turkish metropolitan centers, such as Istanbul. Turkey seems to have been pre-absorbed with its tug and pull efforts to enter the European Union; however it has not forgotten the Ottoman roots that extended to the Caspian Basin and beyond. In fact, it is Turkey’s cultural, religious and linguistic ties to the region that give it the ability, if not necessarily the advantage to compete with old Soviet influences and potential forays from China or even Iran.

    Ironically, the Islamic elements that appear to be so undesired by some of Europe’s establishment in accepting Turkey as full partner may in the long run prove most valuable for the Euro-Atlantic families geo-strategic considerations in the Caspian Basin. Regardless, the fact that Islam may be part of the coalescing formula immediately raises wariness.

    The politics and government of Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Erdogan have come under suspicion by simply being defined as “Islamist.” However, the evidence is that this government is moving Turkey closer to aspirations and meeting the standards for European Union inclusion, notwithstanding or perhaps because of its Islamist pedigree. Turkey’s commitment and contributions to NATO have been enhanced under these so termed “Islamists.” Turkey’s relationship with Israel has not suffered.

    ANOTHER BRIC IN THE WALL
    The BRIC economic marvels, (Brazil, Russia, India and China), are the most focused upon as the up and coming economic states. However, while Turkey is geographically and by population smaller, it is perhaps even a more impressive phenomenon in view of the more limited natural resources within its own borders. The economic boom that Turkey has experienced over the last decade has been fueled by the stability afforded by Erdogan’s government and the new political force behind it. Compared to five previous decades of disruptive interventions and coups by the military establishment, it has been difficult to accredit protests of longstanding elite. Turkey’s transformation may not yet be complete, but there is a distinctly traceable trend toward greater democratic and economic inclusion.

    This egalitarian economic boom has also fueled the rise of mercantilism. The impact has been most profound in the states with historic ties to Turkey. Perhaps the Hanseatic League or the evolution of Dutch City states of Northern European are other profound examples of where social, political and economic factors amalgamated to give rise to new trade, wealth, republican ideals, social mobility and a broader Renaissance.

    Time will only tell if the comparison is remotely appropriate; however many Turks trace their new renaissance to the philosophy of Rumi, the Sufi philosopher who lived in the 13th century, the time that Ottoman rulers oversaw the further rise and expansion of their already sizable Empire. Any philosophy based upon Islam, especially with Europe’s long competition with the Ottoman Empire, may fuel unease in some quarters, even if there is recognition that the Euro-Atlantic family must enhance common ground with Muslim peoples. There is a tendency to favor those social and political leaders within the Muslim majority world who project the most non-Islamic characteristics, even beyond secularism.

    It is naïve as well as indicative of intolerance though to believe that radical Islam will be effectively confronted by anti-Islamic dogma. Rumi’s philosophy grounded both in Islamic theology and tolerant ideology justifies optimism for a new page in today’s broader Islamic world. The personification of this rejuvenated philosophy in Turkey is Fetullah Gulen, recently voted the most influential philosophic contributor globally.

    Mr. Gulen, who currently lives in the US, stands as the ideologue behind many of today’s rising social, political and mercantilist leading lights in Turkey, but also the Turkic influence in much of the Caspian Basin and Central Asia.

    THE REMNANTS OF ROMANOV AND SOVIET EMPIRE
    The Russian influence in the Caspian Basin and Central Asia is more recent, dating back initially to the expansion of Romanov Russia and culminating with Soviet consolidation a century earlier, much at the expense of the Ottomans and its allies. The Soviet influence is evident in political and economic methodology and social custom. The Russian alphabet became dominant over Arabic or European script. Much of the population speaks Russian, and it has been the language of choice for the political elite. And, larger Russian minorities call these states home, largely as a legacy Soviet designed resettlement efforts.

    The Soviet influence has had a mixed impact, and would be judged from progressive to regressive depending on the observer’s own perspective. And, despite the historical perspective of the Russians by some as occupiers, the Russian influence remains significant, if not dominant, in style and substance. While the US has established a military as well as diplomatic presence in a few of these states, Russian sway is frequently dominant. Soviet authoritarian style still too frequently dictates, and the need for political reform is dampened by cumulative internal and external factors.

    THE NEW
    The influence of the Euro-Atlantic states is most evident through the economic development of the region’s abundant natural resources. NGO’s, such as George Soro’s Open Society, are present in promoting democratic and open society policies, although their impact is still largely undetermined.

    In a few of these states, political Islam had become the main alternative to old style authoritarian rule. These competing forces have frequently collided, a few times with thousands of casualties as the specter of radical Islam has frequently been relied upon as a pretext for crack downs and perpetuation of ruling elites. The confrontation is likely to be repeated, and the influence of radicalism could grow, without progressive alternatives for change.

    Many hold out Turkey as the hope. Future religious leaders from these traditional Turkic states are now increasingly educated in Turkey. (Many from the Balkans have also adopted Turkey as refuge). The influence of a more robust Turkish media is spreading despite differences in dialect. Turkish secular universities are hosting many of the regions future business, professional and political leaders.

    TURKEY’S TRANSFORMATION BEYOND ITS BORDERS
    Turkey’s current makeover has decisive implications for its place within the Euro-Atlantic family. However, it goes beyond whether Turkey will be accepted into the European Union. The potential rise of Turkey as economic and political power will decisively influence the development and inclinations of culturally linked states of Central Asia and the Caspian Basin.

    Turkey has been a staunch backer of Georgia and its integration into NATO. Undoubtedly Turkey is more cognizant of its ever increasing role as fronting Euro-Atlantic interests in the region, as well as its historical rivalry with first Russia and then the Soviet Union. Turkey is working on closer economic ties to the US to reflect already the integral defensive relationship through NATO and beyond.

    A resurgent Russia may or may not be reverting to cold war tendencies. The newly independent states of Central Asia and the Caspian Basin, with their abundant natural resources, are in the sway of redrawn spheres of influence. Turkey or Russia will be the two immediate polar attractions.

    Muhamed Sacirbey

    ——————–

    Mr. Muhamed Sacirbey holds B.A. degree in history and J. D. degree from Tulane University in New Orleans. He also holds M.B.A. degree from the Columbia University. He is a former foreign minister of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

    ——————–

  • BORDERS WITH ARMENIA CAN BE OPENED

    BORDERS WITH ARMENIA CAN BE OPENED

    TURKISH PARLIAMENTARIANS VISITING US: THE BORDERS WITH ARMENIA CAN BE OPENED AFTER NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT IS SOLVED
    APA

    Members of Turkish parliament Shukru Elekdag (CHP), Murat Merjan (AKP), Nursuna Memejan (AKP) and Mithat Melen (MHP) met with experts on Turkey and journalists in the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, APA’s US bureau reports. CSIS director for Turkey Bulent Alirza chaired the discussions.

    The discussions focused on the issues causing tension between the two countries.
    Chairman of Turkish parliament’s foreign affairs committee Murat Merjan said during Obama’s presidency the U.S. policy aimed at holding dialogue, not creating tension. The parliamentarian said Turkey pursued multiple-vector foreign policy after the collapse of the Soviet Union and noted that it was connected with four big conflicts around the country. He said the philosophy of Turkey’s foreign policy consisted of “zero problem” item, integrating into Europe and using its political influence.
    “This political influence was seen in the Balkans, Syria and in the recent war between Georgia and Russia. Turkey is a pro-western country and bears responsibility for the ongoing processes in the region,” he said.
    Touching on the country’s policy with regard to Armenia, the parliamentarian said their aim was not only to establish relations with official Yerevan, but also to serve establishment of peace in the Caucasus.
    Parliamentarian from CHP Shukru Elekdag Turkey was concerned over the so-called Armenian genocide, PKK terrorist organization in the north of Iraq and Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Former Turkish ambassador to the U.S. said:
    “The borders with Armenia should not be opened”.
    He said it can be done after Nagorno Karabakh conflict is solved.
    MP touching upon PKK issue stated that they were supported by the Republic of North Iraq and noted that Barack Obama would not recognize developments in 1915 as genocide during his traditional message on April 24, 2009. Elekdag stated that relations between Israel and Turkey on military, economy, and tourism were at high level and both of countries are strategic partners.
    MP Mithat Melen from MHP touching upon developments in 1915 said that the problems is not linked with Armenia, but Armenian Diaspora. The poor Armenia is not interested in adoption of resolution by the US on so-called genocide. He mentioned that 80.000 Armenians worked in Istanbul. Melen noted that we should not forget the interests of Azerbaijan on Nagorno Karabakh conflict while establishing business relations with Armenia. He added that Turkey needed the energy resources transmitted via Azerbaijan and business done with North Iraq. To him, if there are not business relations, there wil not the development of the region.
    After the assembly Shukru Elekdag gave an interview to APA U.S bureau and commented on restoration of Armenia-Turkey relations.
    “Turkey should not open the border with Armenia without solution to Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Turkey can loose Azerbaijan in such kind of situation. What will be the fate of the word” one nation, two states”? How early have we forgotten it? We are not against the restoration of the relations with Armenia. We should do it after solution to the conflict. If the borders open, we will leave Azerbaijan alone and the power of Azerbaijan will decrease in negotiation process,” he said.
    Elekdag commented on the fact that three subjects – Nagorno Karabakh conflict, so-called Armenian genocide, opening of borders with Armenia were debated during Turkey-Armenia negotiations.
    “If these three issues are solved at the same time, there will not be any problem. The borders between the two countries will not open in 2009,” he said.

  • 12th EURASIAN ECONOMIC SUMMIT

    12th EURASIAN ECONOMIC SUMMIT

    The 12th Eurasian Economic Summit will be held by the Marmara Foundation in Istanbul, on May 6-8, 2009, at the Conference Hall of the Istanbul Chamber of Commerce.

    The Eurasian Economic Summit is organized annually by the Marmara Group Economic and Social Research Foundation. It is aimed to explore ways of enhancing relations between the European Union, the Countries of Central Asia and the Middle East. It is noteworthy that we will celebrate our twelfth anniversary this year.

     

    The agenda is quite interesting, featuring many up-to-date themes with world class leaders. Please note that there will be public policy makers and distinguished speakers from the private and academic sectors. This year the main themes of the summit will be “Energy”, especially the “Nabucco Project”, “International Economy” and “Ecology & Global Environmental Problems”.

    We also would like to stress that in the year of 2007; His Holiness Pope Benedict 16th has accepted the executive board of the Marmara Foundation to his high presence and expressed his kind support for all our activities.

    187 high level dignitaries and relevant authorities from 34 different countries attended the past summit meeting in Istanbul last year. Among those, were Former Presidents, Prime Ministers, Vice Premiers, Ministers, Deputies, high level Government Officials, representatives of national, regional and international organizations and top executives from the world business community. H.E. Gediminas Kirkilas, Prime Minister of Lithuania, has also attended the last year’s summit as the Keynote Speaker in the opening session.

    12th EURASIAN ECONOMIC SUMMIT

     

    CONFERENCE HALL OF THE ISTANBUL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

     

    MAY 6-8, 2009

    “DRAFT PROGRAM”

    MAY 5, 2009 Tuesday

    –                            Welcoming Guests

    – 20.30                  Welcome Dinner

    MAY 6, 2009 Wednesday

    – 10.00- 13.00       Registration

    Opening speeches

    – 13.00-14.00       Lunch

    – 14.00-17.30       Energy Session

    World Energy Prospects in 2009 and beyond

    Joint Approaches to the Nabucco Project

    Natural Gas for Europe: Joint Discipline Strategies, Security and Cooperation

    Alternative Energy Lines

    Turkey-Greece and Greece-Italy Natural Gas Pipelines: Transportation of natural gas from Caspian region via Turkey and Greece to Italy.

    – 20.30                  Gala Dinner

    MAY 7, 2009 Thursday

    – 10.00-13.00      Sagacious Statesmen of Europe from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea Region

    Common Innovative Models for the prevention of the global financial crisis, suppression of global instability and implementation of mutual assistance in post-crisis periods over the lands from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea.

    An Economic Government from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea

    13.00-14.00       Lunch

    – 14.00-15.30       Starting points of the Global Instability

    New concepts to secure productivity gain, to break current global economic downturn and instability in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Central Asia, the Middle East and Europe.

    – 15.30-17.00       New Prospects in the Black Sea Region

    The Black Sea Region which was experienced the first period of geopolitical transformation after the fall of the Soviet Union, is experiencing a new challenge as a result of the growing interests of Euro-Atlantic world into this region. In the light of this new progress, new ideas and conceptions will be discussed.

    – 17:00-18:00       The Rise of China: An Emerging Superpower

    People’s Republic of China is one of the world’s fastest growing economies in terms of nominal GDP growth, and is the fastest-growing major economy. The PRC is considered to be a major power and an emerging superpower in the coming 20 years. The secrets of their success will be discussed.

    – 20:30                  Dinner

    MAY 8, 2009 Friday

    – 10.00-12:00        Ecology Session

    Growing evidence of local and global pollution in parallel with growing technology and an increasingly informed public over time have given rise to environmentalism and the environmental movement, which generally seek to limit human impact on the environment.

    – 12.00 -13.00 Lunch

    13.00-14.00       Climate Change and Global Warming

    Most national governments have signed and ratified the Kyoto Protocol aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions. But still there is a need for a “Global Agreement” which will be planned for a longer period and take all countries of the world under its umbrella. Is this kind of an agreement possible without promising “Global Justice”?

    14.00-15.00       Tourism and Environment

    Perceptions of the Environmental Impacts of Tourism and vice versa

    – 15:00-15:30        Closing

    12th EURASIAN ECONOMIC SUMMIT

    May 6-7-8, 2009

    CONFERENCE HALL OF THE ISTANBUL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

    List of confirmed personalities as of March 4, 2009

    ALBANIA H.E. Genc RULI

    Minister of Economy, Trade and Energy

    BOSNIA HERZEGOVINA H.E. Sven ALKALAJ

    Minister of Foreign Affairs

    BULGARIA H.E. Zhelyu ZHELEV

    Former President

    President of the Balkan Political Club

    Awarded Medal of Honour of the Eurasian Economic Summit

    ESTONIA H.E. Arnold RÜÜTEL

    Former President

    GEORGIA H.E. Alexander KHETAGURI

    Minister of Energy

    KOSOVO                                         H.E. Mahir YAĞCILAR

    Minister of Environment and Spatial Planning

    KYRGYZSTAN H.E. Akylbek JAPAROV

    Minister for Economic Development and Trade

    LATVIA H.E. Guntis ULMANIS

    Former President

    H.E. Oskars KASTENS

    Minister of State

    MACEDONIA H.E. Hadi NEZIR

    Minister of State

    MONGOLIA H.E. N. ENKHBOLD

    Deputy Speaker of Parliament

    H.E. Natsagiin BAGABANDI

    Former President

    Hon. D. ODBAYAR

    Member of the Parliament

    PALESTINE H.E. Dr. Omar KITTANEH

    Minister of Energy

    H.E. Nabil SHAATH

    Former Minister of Foreign Affairs

    Member of Parliament

    ROMANIA H.E. Cristian DIACONESCU

    Minister of Foreign Affairs

    H.E. Ion ILIESCU

    Former President

    H.E. Emil CONSTANTINESCU

    Former President

    H.R.H. Prince Radu of Romania

    Prince of Romania

    H.E. Constantine GRIGORIE

    Ambassador of Romania to the Russian Federation

    Awarded Medal of Honour of the Eurasian Economic Summit

    RUSSIA H.E. Ambassador Albert CHERNISHEV

    Former Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs

    Awarded Medal of Honour of the Eurasian Economic Summit

    TURKEY H.E. Köksal TOPTAN

    Speaker of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey

    H.E.  Mehmet ŞIMŞEK

    Minister of State

    TURKEY H.E. Egemen BAĞIŞ

    Minister of State

    H.E. Mehmet Hilmi GÜLER

    Minister of Energy and Natural Resources

    H.E. Mehmet Zafer ÇAĞLAYAN

    Minister of Industry and Trade

    H.E. Ertuğrul GÜNAY

    Minister of Culture and Tourism

    ZAMBIA H.E. Godwin Kingsley CHINKULI

    Ambassador of Zambia in Germany

    ORGANIZATIONS

    AUSTRIA Nabucco Gas Pipeline International GmbH

    OMV Gas GmbH

    Managing Director – Hon. Reinhard MITSCHEK

    Vienna Economic Forum

    Secretary General – H.E. Ambassador Dr. Elena KIRTCHEVA

    CHINA China Association for International Friendly Contact (CAIFC)

    Vice-President – H.E. Ambassador Zhang DEGUANG

    GERMANY RWE Supply & Trading GmbH

    Head of the Business Development – Hon. Jeremy ELLIS

    Procurist, Nabucco Gas Pipeline International GmbH

    Hon. Dr. Anneli Ute GABANYI

    Political Scientist

    GREECE Biopolitics International Organization

    President and Founder – Hon. Prof. Dr. Agni Vlavianos ARVANITIS

    LEBANON General Union of Arab Chambers (GUCCIAAC)

    President – Hon. Adnan KASSAR

    LEBANON Union of Mediterranean Confederations of Enterprises (BUSINESSMED)

    President – Hon. Jacques Jean SARRAF

    MOLDOVA Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Republic of Moldova

    President – Hon. Gheorghe CUCU

    HUNGARY Budapest Chamber of Commerce and Industry

    President – Hon. Kristof SZATMARY

    ROMANIA Black Sea Project Center (B.S.P.C)

    President – H.E. Ambassador Constantine GIRBEA

    RUSSIA Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Russian Federation

    Member of the Board and Head of Committee of SMEs support Hon. Victor ERMEKOV

    General Director of the Russian Agency for Small and Medium Business Support

    SENEGAL Dakar Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture

    President – Hon. Mamadou Lamine NIANG

    SWITZERLAND World Trade Institute

    Director – Hon. Prof. Dr. Thomas COTTIER

    TURKEY Istanbul Chamber of Commerce (İTO)

    President  – Hon. Dr. Murat YALÇINTAŞ

    Istanbul Chamber of Industry (İSO)

    President – Hon. Tanıl KÜÇÜK

    Association Of Turkish Travel Agencies (TÜRSAB)

    President – Hon. Başaran ULUSOY

    Turkish International Cooperation & Development Agency (TİKA)

    President – Hon. Musa KULAKLIKAYA

    TURKEY Turkish Industrialists and Businessmen’s Association (TÜSİAD)

    President -Hon. Arzuhan YALÇINDAĞ

    Koç Holding

    Honorary President – Hon. Rahmi KOÇ

    Turkish Petroleum Pipeline Corporation (BOTAŞ)

    Member of the Board – Hon. Osman GÖKSEL

    Procurist, Nabucco GmbH – Hon. Emre ENGÜR

    Turkish Prime Ministry General Directorate for Foundations

    General Director – Hon. Yusuf BEYAZIT

    U.S.A. Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC)

    Director – Hon. Peter BALLINGER

  • Turkey’s New Mission

    Turkey’s New Mission

    Shlomo Ben-Ami

    TEL AVIV – Ever since Turkey’s establishment as a republic, the country has oscillated between the Western-oriented heritage of its founder, Kemal Ataturk, and its eastern, Ottoman legacy. Never resolved, modern Turkey’s deep identity complex is now shaking its strategic alliances and recasting its regional and global role. Indeed, Turkey’s changing perception of itself has shaped its so-far frustrated drive to serve as a peace broker between Israel and its Arab enemies, Syria and Hamas.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s missionary zeal to replace Egypt as the essential regional mediator, and his violent tirades against Israel’s behavior in Gaza, looks to many people like an attempt to recover Turkey’s Ottoman-era role as the guarantor of regional peace and security. Its credentials for this role in the Middle East are by no means negligible.

    Turkey is a true regional superpower, with one of the largest armies in the world. At the same time, it is the only Muslim country that, while no less worried than Israel about Iran’s nuclear ambitions, can maintain excellent economic and political relations with Iran, regardless of American displeasure. Of course, Syria is Iran’s ally, too, but no country in the region has the leverage with it that Turkey possesses. And Turkey’s diplomatic reach in the region is also reflected in its recent signing of a friendship treaty with Saudi Arabia, while maintaining excellent relations with Pakistan and Iraq.

    Europe’s persistence in snubbing Turkey’s attempts to join the European Union, the rise of violent anti-Western popular sentiment in the wake of the Iraq war, and strained relations with the US – owing in part to the forthcoming Armenian Genocide Act – are major factors in Turkey’s change of direction. The civilizing efforts that Ataturk’s revolution directed inward and in favor of disengagement from the Arab and Muslim worlds are now being revisited. The Turkey of Erdogan’s dominant Justice and Development Party (AKP) appears to be seeking a new mission civilisatrice , with the Middle East and the former Soviet republics as its alternative horizons.

    The uneasy challenge for Turkey is to secure its newfound regional role without betraying Ataturk’s democratic legacy. Turkish democracy and secular values have been greatly enhanced by the country’s dialogue with Europe and its American ties. Turkey can be a model for Middle Eastern countries if, while promoting its regional strategic and economic interests, it resists the authoritarian temptation and continues to show that Islam and democracy are fully compatible.

    For Israel, the long overdue message is that its future in the Middle East does not lie in strategic alliances with the region’s non-Arab powers, but in reconciling itself with the Arab world. In the 1960’s, David Ben-Gurion’s fatalistic pessimism about the possibility of ever reaching a peace settlement with the Arab countries led him to forge an “Alliance of the Periphery” with the non-Arab countries in the outer circle of the Middle East – Iran, Ethiopia, and Turkey (he also dreamed of having Lebanon’s Maronite community as part of that alliance).

    All of these countries did not have any particular dispute with Israel, and all, to varying degrees, had tense relations with their Arab neighbors. The myth of Israel’s military power, resourcefulness in economic and agricultural matters, and an exaggerated perception of its unique capacity to lobby and influence American policy combined to make the Israeli connection especially attractive to these countries.

    The “Alliance of the Periphery” was a creative attempt to escape the consequences of the Arab-Israeli conflict. It reflected the yearning of the Jewish state to unleash its creative energies in economic and social matters, as it created space for an independent, imaginative foreign policy that was not linked to, or conditioned by, the paralyzing constraints of the Arab-Israeli conflict.

    Shlomo Ben Ami, a former Israeli foreign minister who now serves as vice-president of the Toledo International Centre for Peace, is the author of Scars of War, Wounds of Peace: The Israeli-Arab Tragedy.

    But the security that this scheme was supposed to produce could never really be achieved; the centrality of the Arab-Israeli conflict could not be attenuated. The Arabs’ capacity to maintain their pressure on Israel and to keep world opinion focused on the Palestinians’ plight made Israel’s quest for evading the consequences of the conflict, either through periodic wars or by forging alternative regional alliances, a futile exercise.

    The Islamic revolution in Iran, the changes in Ethiopia following the end of Haile Selassie’s rule, the collapse of Maronite Lebanon, and Hezbollah’s takeover of that country left Turkey as the last remaining member of Israel’s Alliance of the Periphery. Turkey’s powerful military establishment may want to maintain close relations with Israel, but the widely popular change in Turkey’s foreign policy priorities, and the serious identity dilemmas facing the nation, send an unequivocal message that the alliance can no longer serve as an alternative to peace with the Arab world. From now on, it can only be complementary to such a peace.

    Shlomo Ben-Ami is a former Israeli foreign minister who now serves as the vice-president of the Toledo International Center for Peace. He is the author of Scars of War, Wounds of Peace: The Israeli-Arab Tragedy.

    © Project Syndicate 1995-2009

    Source:  www.guatemala-times.com, 03 March 2009

  • Khojaly Genocide commemorated in EP

    Khojaly Genocide commemorated in EP

     
     

    Brussels. Viktoria Dementieva – APA. Event on the 17th anniversary of Khojaly Genocide was held with support of Heydar Aliyev Foundation in the European Parliament on March 3.

    Members of the European Parliament, representatives of diplomatic corps accredited in the European Union, mass media, research centers in Brussels, nongovernmental organizations and Azerbaijani community attended the event.

    Press service of Azerbaijani embassy in Belgium told APA that the participants of the event familiarized themselves with the photo exhibition on Khojaly Genocide prepared by Heydar Aliyev Foundation. Head of Azerbaijani representation to the European Union, Ambassador Emin Eyyubov made a keynote speech at the event.

    Following this, member of the European Parliament Gisela Kallenbach called the participants to commemorate the Khojaly victims with a minute silence. Senior Fellow of Jamestown Foundation Vladimir Socor shared his views on Khojaly genocide.

    The participants were informed about the international campaign “Justice for Khojaly” initiated by Leyla Aliyeva, Coordinator on Intercultural Dialogue of OIC Youth Forum, the campaign was supported with signatures.

    The event finished with the screen showing the names of Khojaly Genocide victims.

  • Armenia’s aggression against Azerbaijan

    Armenia’s aggression against Azerbaijan

    Baku. Kamala Guliyeva – APA. The signature collection campaign organized among children by Human Rights Commissioner Elmira Suleymanova under the slogan “We are messengers of peace! Join us!” on the eve of the 17th anniversary of Khojaly genocide has ended, press service of Human Rights Commissioner told APA. The signatures of over 310,000 children from different cities and regions of the country have been collected. The letter describing the impact of Armenian aggression on the fate of Azerbaijani children and the signatures have been sent to UN Under-Secretary-General, Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict Radhika Coomaraswamy with support of Foreign Ministry.

    The letter addressed to the UN says that 20 percent of Azerbaijani territories have been occupied as a result of Armenian aggression, 1 in every 8 people have been displaced and hundred thousand children born in tents have been deprived of all human rights. The letter writes that civilians, women, old people, handicapped persons, children were atrociously killed during Khojaly genocide committed by Armenian nationalists, their rights to live were violated.

    UN Special Representative has been invited to the international conference “Protection of children’s rights in extreme situations” that will be held in Baku on the eve of June 1 – Children’s Day on the initiative of Human Rights Commissioner and with support of UNICEF.