Category: Regions

  • PUBL.- Ismail Gasprali, French and African Letters, Edition by A.-A. Rorlich

    PUBL.- Ismail Gasprali, French and African Letters, Edition by A.-A. Rorlich

    PUBL.- Ismail Gasprali, French and African Letters, Edition by A.-A. Rorlich

    Posted by: Azade-Ayse Rorlich <arorlich@college.usc.edu>

    Ismail Gasprali
    French and African Letters

    Azade-Ayse Rorlich, transl., ed., and Introduction

    Isis Press, Istanbul, 2008

    For information: isis@tnn.net

    The present book provides scholars as well as students access to
    primary sources critical to understanding the intellectual life of
    Russia’s Muslims in the last decades of the nineteenth century.
    Through Ismail Gasprali’s French and African Letters Professor Rorlich
    offers evidence regarding the scope of Muslim modernism in late
    imperial Russia contributing at the same time to a better
    understanding of the debates on gender issues that shaped the
    modernist discourse.

    This volume represents the first annotated English translation of
    Ismail Gasprali’s fictional travelogue, first serialized in his
    newspaper Terjuman between 1887 and 1891. Providing a window into the
    diversity of the issues that shaped the Muslim modernist discourse in
    Russia, this publication offers one of the few opportunities to
    examine primary source material in a field still marked by the paucity
    of such materials available in English translation. This annotated
    translation makes an important contribution to the field of Eurasian
    scholarship not only for bringing to the students of Muslim modernism
    and gender studies an important work of Ismail Gasprali — one of the
    leading Muslim reformers of the Russian empire, but also for offering
    an Introduction that places the French and African Letters in the
    broader context of his work.

  • Turkey: The Caucasian Challenge

    Turkey: The Caucasian Challenge

    MIKHAIL KLIMENTYEV/AFP/Getty Images Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (L) and Russian President Dmitri Medvedev in Moscow

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The recent war in the Caucasus has shifted Turkish geopolitical priorities. Given that the United States is in no position to counter Russian moves, Ankara is unilaterally trying to deal with the Russian resurgence and the threat it poses to Turkish interests in the region.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Aug. 20 made a one-day trip to Azerbaijan, where he met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to discuss regional security issues in the aftermath of the Russian-Georgian war. Erdogan’s trip to Baku is the latest in a series of Turkish initiatives in the wake of the Russian resurgence. Ankara mooted the idea of a Caucasian Union on Aug. 11 to achieve regional stability. Separately, Turkey is reaching out to its (and Azerbaijan’s) regional foe, Armenia; talks reportedly are under way to get Yerevan on board with the Caucasian Union project.

    The recent war in the Caucasus has shifted Turkish geopolitical priorities. After Turkey’s failure to secure entry into the European Union, the Turks decided to emerge as a player in the Middle East. The most significant manifestation of this has been its role as mediator in the Israeli-Syrian peace negotiations. The brief but extremely significant war in Georgia dramatically changed the Turkish calculus, however, and, in a matter of days, Turkey went from playing minor league in the Middle East to having to deal with what is essentially a new Cold War between Washington and Moscow.

    Turkey cannot afford to view the resurgence of Russia in purely Cold War terms. It wants to emerge as a major player in what is essentially its front yard. But it cannot count on help from the United States, which is preoccupied with Iraqi-Iranian and Afghan-Pakistani issues and therefore is not in any position to counter Russian moves in the Caucasus at present. Unlike Washington, which has the luxury of addressing the situation in the longer term, Ankara must, in the short term, deal with the Russian invasion of the Caucasus — an area of core national security interest to the Turks.

    The Russians have a deep interest in reconfiguring the energy infrastructure that bypasses their territory and supplies European energy needs through Turkey. From the Kremlin’s point of view, this is the key to ensuring European — and Turkish — dependence on Moscow for the continent’s energy requirements. Therefore, Turkey must deal with the Russian stranglehold of Georgia and Moscow’s moves to force the hand of Azerbaijan regarding Baku’s energy export options..

    Judging from their behavior, the Turks are in no mood to confront the Russians and instead have chosen the diplomatic route (for their part, the Russians are not itching for a fight with Turkey either). Turkey knows it cannot succeed diplomatically with Russia by simply behaving as a U.S./NATO ally in the Caucasus, which would explain its efforts to distinguish its position from that of the United States. Under Erdogan and his Justice and Development Party, Ankara has in general been trying to craft a more independent foreign policy.

    A recent example is President Abdullah Gul’s statement that the conflict in Georgia showed that the United States could no longer shape global politics on its own and should begin sharing power with other countries. In an interview with the British daily The Guardian published Aug. 17, Gul called for common decisions rather than unilateral action, saying “a new world order, if I can say it, should emerge.”

    The transformation of Turkish foreign policy notwithstanding, it is difficult for Russia to ignore Turkey’s reality as a NATO member state and hence not look at Turkish moves as part of a U.S. plan to counter Moscow. The Kremlin can afford not to seek a negotiated settlement with Turkey. After all, Russia controls the situation on the ground. Therefore, Turkish diplomacy could run into problems. Turkey must try the diplomatic work anyway, as the alternative raises specters of dark times long past.

    Should diplomacy fail, Turkey’s only other option would be to confront Russia militarily. Turkey is well-positioned to deal with Russia; for example, its navy is in a good position to defend the Bosporus from Russia’s Black Sea Fleet.

    But the critical missing element from the military option is the political will that would enable the Turks to return to their historic mode of dealing with Russians with force. Ankara is thus unlikely to readopt a course of action in a matter of weeks that it has not engaged in within some 90 years. Russia and Turkey (then known as the Ottoman Empire) fought several wars between the mid-16th century to the early 20th century, with the last one being fought in the Caucasus in 1917-1918.

    Facing a choice between unsuccessful diplomacy and reluctance toward military option, Turkey is pretty much in the same situation the United States finds itself in with regards to the Russians. The critical difference between Washington and Ankara, however, is that Ankara must deal with the situation now.

    Source : Stratfor

  • Who Do You Think You Are? (BBC1)

    Who Do You Think You Are? (BBC1)

    By Michael Deacon

    From the following quotation, guess the identity of the household name examining the branches of his family tree tonight. “She saw his name on a list of people to be hanged under a clock in the next few days. Cripes!” Yes, it could only be Boris Johnson.The London Mayor and Daily Telegraph columnist is referring to a letter his grandmother wrote 100 years ago reporting news of Johnson’s great-grandfather – a controversial political journalist in Istanbul.

    advertisementJohnson’s ancestry is a stew of nationalities: Turkish, English, Russian, German, French (“We were led to believe that Granny Butter had some immensely distinguished Alsatian antecedents. When I say Alsatian I mean ‘from Alsace’, they weren’t dogs”).

    Like almost all episodes of Who Do You Think You Are?, tonight’s is impressively varied in tone (funny, sad, even at times uplifting) and uncovers surprising things: it turns out that Johnson has ancestors even more exalted than Granny Butter let on.

    But perhaps Johnson’s most intriguing disclosure is that he won his school’s scripture prize.

    As devotees of PG Wodehouse will know, this is the regular boast of a man to whom Johnson has been fondly likened: one Bertram Wooster.

    Source : telegraph.co.uk

  • Turkey Plays Increasingly Active Role in Middle East Diplomacy

    Turkey Plays Increasingly Active Role in Middle East Diplomacy

    By Dorian Jones
    Istanbul
    20 August 2008

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad (L) and his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul in Istanbul, 14 Aug 2008

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit to Istanbul last week is seen as part of Ankara’s increasingly active role in the Middle East, after decades of passivity in the region. At the same time, some analysts say, Turkey’s ties to the West are deteriorating as its path to European Union membership continues to run into roadblocks. For VOA, Dorian Jones reports from Istanbul.

    Turkey is now emerging as an important diplomatic actor in the Middle East. Over the past few years, Ankara has established close ties with Iran and Syria, with which it had tense relations during the 1980s and 1990s; adopted a more active approach toward the Palestinians’ grievances; and improved relations with the Arab world more broadly.
    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad (L) and his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul in Istanbul, 14 Aug 2008
    Analysts are saying Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit to Turkey further proves the ties between the two countries and the region are getting warmer.

    But Gokhan Cetinsaya, a professor of international relations at Istanbul Technical University, says there is more behind the warming of relations. Ankara’s agenda, he says, is being dictated by the ruling Islamic-rooted Justice and development party, the AKP.

    “According to AKP foreign policy doctrine, Turkey with it strategic depth, Turkey with its geographic depth, Turkey’s with its economic power, military power … should certainly play a leading role in the region including the Middle East. Turkey should play a part in Africa and should play a part in central Asia, the Balkans, etc. Turkey should become a global power in the long run,” Cetinsaya said.

    The AKP’s agenda is in sharp contrast to recent administrations whose sole priority was joining the European Union. The founder of the secular Turkish Republic, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk pushed a policy of turning his country’s back on the east and orientating it towards Europe in his bid modernize Turkey.

    Critics argue that Turkish officials’ frequent visits to Arab and African nations has given them little time to court Europe’s leaders in Turkey’s bid to join the European Union. In addition, Turkey’s relations with the United States have become increasingly strained, largely because of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

    As a result, Turkey is now in the unprecedented situation of having poor relations with the EU and the United States simultaneously – a position seen by some analysts as turning their backs on the West.

    But, Akif Emre a columnist for the pro Islamic daily Yeni Safak, disagrees.

    “Given a choice, Turkey would be more close with Russia, India and China. Even the Islamic world,” Emre said. “That doesn’t mean Turkey would break all relationships with the West. They are looking for some new power to balance [its] European Union relationship.”

    The current holder of the EU presidency, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, was elected on a platform of opposing Turkey’s bid for EU membership. Such opposition has taken it toll on the Turkish public’s attitude toward Europe.

    On the streets of Istanbul, this woman’s view is typical.

    “They don’t want us, because [of] culture, religion, living style. It is all about us,” she said. “This shows prejudice to our country but I believe Turkey does not need the European Union to be a powerful or strong country.”
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan (file)
    Also contributing to the waning public support of EU membership are important domestic changes in Turkish society. The pro-Western elite that has shaped Turkish foreign policy since the end of World War II is gradually being replaced by a more conservative, more religious, and more nationalist elite that is suspicious of the West. This group has a more positive attitude toward Turkey’s Ottoman past. The ruling Islamist Justice and Development Party, or AKP, headed by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has managed to tap into rising popular nationalism by fusing it with Islam.

    But the AKP party has run into problems recently when it narrowly escaped being shut down by the country’s constitutional court last month on the charge of undermining the secular state. Since then, there has been a marked change in government policy towards the EU membership process. According to Sabiha Senyucel of the Turkish political think tank Tesev.

    “If you want to save your self in the country then the EU is your only guarantee for you,” Senyucel said. “The AKP knows very well that, If they don’t get back track with the EU process, if they don’t continue their commitment with the EU process, they are going to lose their support from the intellectuals circles and from the business circles.”

    Recent opinion poll numbers show there has been an upsurge in support of EU membership especially amongst government supporters. International relations expert Mensor Akgun says there is now understanding within the government that the process of EU membership is more important than the outcome.

    “They may not want us , but that does not matter as long as we fulfill the necessary requirements,” Akgun said. “As long as we become a fully democratic country with all the human rights observed, then I don’t think it matters lot, whether EU accepts or not.”

    Prime Minister Erdogan has pledged that he will re-energize his government’s efforts to join the EU. Honoring that promise is seen by critics as a crucial test of the government’s commitment to protect the secular state. Another test, analysts say, will be whether the AKP will again make Europe its diplomatic priority.

    Source : Voice of America

  • McCain Attacks Obama’s Support For Israeli Peace Negotiations

    McCain Attacks Obama’s Support For Israeli Peace Negotiations

    So the McCain campaign is attacking an Obama adviser, and former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Daniel Kurtzer, for going to an American Bar Association conference in Damascus and calling on the Syrians to make peace with Israel. I guess to the McCain campaign, anyone that calls for peace through negotiations instead of “peace” through war is asking to be attacked. But this seems like a really dumb thing to do for two reasons.1. If McCain is attacking Kurtzer (and therefore the Obama campaign) for being an appeaser, doesn’t that mean that McCain also thinks that the Israelis are Chamberlin-like appeasers? The Israeli government is after all engaged in very public negotiations with Syria. In fact the Israeli military is one of the chief advocates of trying to negotiate a deal with Syria. Additionally, Assad recently had a very public meeting with Olmert and Sarkozy at the Mediterranean Conference where Olmert expressed hope that negotiations would develop. Does McCain oppose these efforts to negotiate peace? And if so doesn’t that once again put McCain squarely in line with the Bush administration.

    2. McCain himself once upon a time advocated talking to Syria. McCain is forgetting what he said about Colin Powell’s trip to Damascus five years ago. On the Today Show on April 18th 2003 McCain said that despite Syria being a state sponsor of terrorism, he was glad Powell was going there.

    LAUER: Let me ask you about Syria.

    Mr. McCAIN: Sure.

    LAUER: They have denied possessing weapons of mass destruction, they’ve also denied harboring any senior members of the Iraqi leader. The US administration says they have evidence to the contrary. How would you proceed with that situation?

    Mr. McCAIN: I think it’s very appropriate that Colin Powell is going to Syria. I think we should put diplomatic and other pressures on them. It’s also a time for Mr. Asad Bashar to realize that he should be more like his father was. I think he’s too heavily influenced by a lot of the radical Islamic elements and–and militant groups.

    LAUER: Do you think Syria meets the criteria set forth by the president in his post-9/11 address to Congress that they pose an imminent threat to the US in that they are either sponsoring or harboring terrorists?

    Mr. McCAIN: I think they’re–they’re sponsoring and harboring terrorists. I think they have been occupying Lebanon, which should be free and independent for a long time, but I don’t think that that means that we will now resort to the military action. We–we can apply a lot of pressure other than military–than the military action. So what I’m saying, we’re a long way away from it.

    LAUER: Under what circumstances–under what circumstances would you back military action?

    Mr. McCAIN: When we’ve exhausted all other options. And we have a lot of options to–to exercise. And I’m glad Colin Powell’s going there, but the Syrians have got to understand there’s a new day in the Middle East.

    Source :

  • What Did We Expect? By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN / YORUM ATILLA BEKTORE TARAFINDAN

    What Did We Expect? By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN / YORUM ATILLA BEKTORE TARAFINDAN

    Thomas Friedmanin’nin NY Times daki makalesini entersan buldum, benim daha evvel bu mevzuda gonderdigim bir analizle paralleligi var. Atilla Bektore [bektorea@bellsouth.net]

     

    August 20, 2008

    OP-ED COLUMNIST

    What Did We Expect?

    By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

    If the conflict in Georgia were an Olympic event, the gold medal for brutish stupidity would go to the Russian prime minister, Vladimir Putin. The silver medal for bone-headed recklessness would go to Georgia’s president, Mikheil Saakashvili, and the bronze medal for rank short-sightedness would go to the Clinton and Bush foreign policy teams.

    Let’s start with us. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, I was among the group — led by George Kennan, the father of “containment” theory, Senator Sam Nunn and the foreign policy expert Michael Mandelbaum — that argued against expanding NATO, at that time.

    It seemed to us that since we had finally brought down Soviet communism and seen the birth of democracy in Russia the most important thing to do was to help Russian democracy take root and integrate Russia into Europe. Wasn’t that why we fought the cold war — to give young Russians the same chance at freedom and integration with the West as young Czechs, Georgians and Poles? Wasn’t consolidating a democratic Russia more important than bringing the Czech Navy into NATO?

    All of this was especially true because, we argued, there was no big problem on the world stage that we could effectively address without Russia — particularly Iran or Iraq. Russia wasn’t about to reinvade Europe. And the Eastern Europeans would be integrated into the West via membership in the European Union.

    No, said the Clinton foreign policy team, we’re going to cram NATO expansion down the Russians’ throats, because Moscow is weak and, by the way, they’ll get used to it. Message to Russians: We expect you to behave like Western democrats, but we’re going to treat you like you’re still the Soviet Union. The cold war is over for you, but not for us.

    “The Clinton and Bush foreign policy teams acted on the basis of two false premises,” said Mandelbaum. “One was that Russia is innately aggressive and that the end of the cold war could not possibly change this, so we had to expand our military alliance up to its borders. Despite all the pious blather about using NATO to promote democracy, the belief in Russia’s eternal aggressiveness is the only basis on which NATO expansion ever made sense — especially when you consider that the Russians were told they could not join. The other premise was that Russia would always be too weak to endanger any new NATO members, so we would never have to commit troops to defend them. It would cost us nothing. They were wrong on both counts.”

    The humiliation that NATO expansion bred in Russia was critical in fueling Putin’s rise after Boris Yeltsin moved on. And America’s addiction to oil helped push up energy prices to a level that gave Putin the power to act on that humiliation. This is crucial backdrop.

    Nevertheless, today we must support all diplomatic efforts to roll back the Russian invasion of Georgia. Georgia is a nascent free-market democracy, and we can’t just watch it get crushed. But we also can’t refrain from noting that Saakashvili’s decision to push his troops into Tskhinvali, the heart of Georgia’s semiautonomous pro-Russian enclave of South Ossetia, gave Putin an easy excuse to exercise his iron fist.

    As The Washington Post’s longtime Russia watcher Michael Dobbs noted: “On the night of Aug. 7 …, Saakashvili ordered an artillery barrage against Tskhinvali and sent an armored column to occupy the town. He apparently hoped that Western support would protect Georgia from major Russian retaliation, even though Russian ‘peacekeepers’ were almost certainly killed or wounded in the Georgian assault. It was a huge miscalculation.”

    And as The Economist magazine also wrote, “Saakashvili is an impetuous nationalist.” His thrust into South Ossetia “was foolish and possibly criminal. But unlike Putin, he has led his country in a broadly democratic direction, curbed corruption and presided over rapid economic growth that has not relied, as Russia’s mostly does, on high oil and gas prices.”

    That is why the gold medal for brutishness goes to Putin. Yes, NATO expansion was foolish. Putin exploited it to choke Russian democracy. But now, petro-power-grabbing has gone to his head — whether it’s invading Georgia, bullying Western financiers and oil companies working in Russia, or using Russia’s gas supplies to intimidate its neighbors.

    If it persists, this behavior will push every Russian neighbor to seek protection from Moscow and will push the Europeans to redouble their efforts to find alternatives to Russian oil and gas. This won’t happen overnight, but in time it will stretch Russia’s defenses and lead it to become more isolated, more insecure and less wealthy.

    For all these reasons, Russia would be wise to reconsider Putin’s Georgia gambit. If it does, we would be wise to reconsider where our NATO/Russia policy is taking us — and whether we really want to spend the 21st century containing Russia the same way we spent much of the 20th containing the Soviet Union.

                                                                             ____________________________________________

     

    YORUM  BY ATILLA BEKTORE

    ————-

     

    the article by George Friedman regarding the Russo-Georgian conflict.

     

    The points indicated  in the the article “The Russo-Georgian War and the Balance of Power” regarding 

    the latest Russo–Georgian conflict are well taken.

     

    And here  is somewhat shortened view on the conflict from  my perspective:

     

    North Atlantic Treaty  was signed in Washington,_D.C. on 4 April 19949. It included  Netherlands, Luxembourg, France,  

    United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Portugal, Italy, Norway, Denmark and Iceland. And  the treaty stated that:

     

    The Parties of NATO agreed that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against them all.

    Consequently they agree that, if such an armed attack occurs, each of them, in exercise of the right of individual or collective self-defense will assist the Party or Parties being attacked, individually and in concert with the other Parties, such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area.

    Whom were they afraid of? Certainly not Germany or Japan who were already totally defeated in 1945. The new threat was the Soviet Union (a member of the Alliance defeating   Hitler) which at the occupied almost all the Eastern Europe including Eastern Germany. It was feared that her influence would tilt the post-war governments to be formed in parts of the  the Western Europe  towards socialism.  In April of 1949 with the help of CIA Italy barely escaped from  the clutches of the Communist Party of Italy. The so called “Cold War” was beginning and the so called “containment” of the Soviet Union was being  put into effect. The direct application of it was realized when in 1952 Greece and Turkey became members of NATO ( the Democratic Party government under premiership of Adnan Menderes was in power at the time). What has  Turkey had to do with North Atlantic? Black Sea or Mediterranean Alliances maybe, but certainly not North Atlantic. It did not really matter. The Soviet Union had to be contained, and Turkey could be instrumental in blocking its path to warm waters of the Mediterranean. American military aid poured into Turkey. But that was not all. American bases with nuclear tipped missiles were established in  Eastern Turkey aimed at the  Soviet Union (those missiles were later  removed from Turkey by a  secrete agreement between by J.F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev in Oct. of 1962,  following the Cuban Missile crisis, in exchange for removal of the Soviet missiles from Cuba, but American bases stayed).

    Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991, by its own weight. As a nuclear power in competition with the United State, the military budgets of the country  at times approached 80% of the total at the expense of civilian needs. Long lines for the ordinary items did not really  disappear  from the old days, when  I was  growing up as a kid in  the Soviet Union. USSR (Union  of the Soviet Socialist Republics) dissolved and transformed itself into the Commonwealth of the Independent Republics (Georgia, Russia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan) the largest of them Russian Federation became today’s Russia. Michail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin were instrumental in this transformation. 

    What precipitated   Russia’s latest anger towards Saakashvili resulting in military action in breakaway South Ossetia area of Georgia was not primarily his treatment of South Ossetians, but  his application for the Membership of NATO – supported by the US – and urging Ukraine to do so, and  his recent declaration that Georgia will leave the Commonwealth of the Independent Republics.  

    NATO is a defensive military alliance supported by military-industrial enterprises. Defense against whom one might ask? Its original formation was based against the threat of the Soviet Union against Western Europe. It is no more, but  Russians think it is still aimed  against them. That is why they cannot tolerate Georgia at their southern  border between  Caspian and Black seas armed with NATO’s weapons. It is that simple. US  by invoking  The Monroe Doctrine – which, on December 2, 1823, proclaimed that European powers were no longer to colonize or interfere with the affairs of the newly independent nations of the Americas– brought the successful removal of Soviet missiles from Cuba in 1962, but US to this day  ostracizes Cuba  by maintaining an economic embargo on the island located only 90 miles from the US. Could we call it a double standard? The world needs respite from the military alliances, and the tensions and economic hardships it creates. Enough already.

     

    Respectfully, 

    Atilla Bektore