Tag: Turkey’s Axis

  • Testing Turkey’s Influence

    Testing Turkey’s Influence

    Sinan Ülgen Q&A, September 28, 2011

    Turkey is increasingly taking a bold position on the world stage—chastising the Syrian regime for its crackdown on its citizens, denouncing the Israeli government for refusing to apologize for the 2010 flotilla raid that killed nine Turkish citizens, and threatening to freeze ties with the European Union if Cyprus takes over its rotating six-month presidency. In a Q&A, Sinan Ülgen looks at whether Turkey’s relations with the West are deteriorating and how much influence Turkey has in the Middle East.

    Why is Turkey shifting away from its traditional allies, the United States and Europe?

    Turkish policymakers believe that the country’s growing influence in the Middle East—and the Islamic world more generally—gives Ankara more maneuverability with its traditional allies in the West. The calculus seems increasingly to reflect the belief that Turkey has become such a key country in the region that its Western allies can ill afford to “lose” Turkey.

    There is also a difference in the way Ankara perceives Washington and Brussels. The European Union’s continuing ineffectiveness as a foreign policy actor, stagnating economies, and the stalled accession negotiations with Turkey have greatly undermined the EU’s leverage with Turkey. From a Turkish perspective, the main global actor and interlocutor remains the United States, not the EU.

    Are Turkey’s relations with the West deteriorating?

    It is premature to claim that Turkey’s relationship with the West is deteriorating. It is true that Turkey has a more ambitious and assertive foreign policy. Ankara pursued an independent policy toward Iran and its relationship with Israel has seriously declined.

    At the same time, however, Turkey remains a committed member of the NATO alliance. Turkey and the United States recently signed an agreement to host early warning radar systems of NATO’s missile defense shield in Turkey. Ankara’s policies vis-à-vis the crisis-prone countries of the Middle East—Libya and Syria—are increasingly being shaped in concert with its allies.

    In short, Turkey is involved in a process of testing and understanding the limits of its own influence. This period of discovery will necessarily lead to tensions between Ankara and its partners in the West. But in time it will lead to a new equilibrium reflecting the changing balance of power in the region.

    Does Turkey still seek membership in the EU?

    Turks are increasingly frustrated by the membership process. The intractability of the Cyprus problem combined with the rejectionist sentiments, as voiced by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, are fueling “euro-skepticism” in Turkey. There is a widespread sense that EU member states will never be able to reach a political consensus on Turkish accession.

    The economic crisis affecting many European countries has also made the EU less popular in the eyes of the Turkish public. As a result, support for EU membership has now decreased to around 30 percent, down from a peak of 70 percent in 2004. The fact that Turkey is doing rather well economically tends to support visions of an independent Turkey.

    Can Europe regain influence over Turkey?

    In the short term, Europe has very few options to influence Turkey. The EU’s difficult political backdrop is not amenable to ambitious initiatives that would enhance the bloc’s leverage over Turkey. Instead, this period can best be utilized for progress in less politically sensitive domains, for instance, deepening the Turkey-EU customs union.

    The EU has to overcome the problems generated by the euro crisis and regain its confidence as a global actor. This period of introversion has to end before Brussels and Ankara can rejuvenate their relationship in a mutually beneficial direction, even if a new framework for relations is very different than the membership path.

    How much influence does the Obama administration have over Turkey?

    Turkish policymakers very much value their relationship with Washington. The United States remains a strategic partner for Turkey. The priority of the Middle East in Ankara’s foreign policy reinforces the importance of the relationship with Washington. The inability of Ankara and Brussels to institutionalize their foreign policy cooperation also adds to Washington’s influence.

    How influential is Turkey in the Middle East? What impact has its deteriorating relationship with Israel had on its role in the region?

    The Turkish leadership’s anti-Israeli rhetoric has certainly helped boost Turkey’s popularity in the region. But this is not the only dynamic that explains Ankara’s growing soft power influence in the Middle East. Turkey’s economic success, liberal visa policies, and a desire to engage constructively with the main players in the region are also important factors.

    This year’s Arab Attitudes, the annual survey carried out by Zogby International for the Arab American Institute Foundation, provides a clear confirmation of Turkey’s popularity in the Arab world. According to the survey, Turkey’s policies receive wide support in the Arab world, ranging from 45 percent approval in Jordan to 80 percent approval in Morocco and even 98 percent approval in Saudi Arabia. Even in Lebanon, a stronghold of Hezbollah, 93 percent have a favorable view of Turkey.

    How is Turkey responding to the situation in Syria?

    Unlike in Libya—where the Turkish position oscillated between neutrality and support for the opposition—Ankara’s stance on Syria has been very clear from the onset. Turkish policymakers sought to leverage the relationship and trust they had built over the years with the regime of President Bashar al-Assad to nudge Syria toward a path of reform.

    Turkey’s pressure has delivered some results, with Assad speaking publicly about a calendar for reforms. A Turkish ultimatum was also instrumental in convincing the Assad regime to pull its troops back from Hama. But even Turkish pressure proved insufficient to steer the Syrian leadership towards more fundamental reforms.

    On Syria, Turkey’s position and actions were fully in line with those of its Western partners and were fully coordinated with them. Turkey was and remains—with regard to Syria—the most influential member of the Western community. This principled position is creating tension in the Turkey-Iran relationship as Tehran has different priorities and a different agenda regarding the future of Syria.

    How is Russia responding to Turkey’s shifting allegiances?

    Ankara has traditionally enjoyed good relations with Moscow. Russia is essentially an economic partner and has no leverage on Turkey’s domestic or international agenda. And Russia will never replace the United States or the EU on Ankara’s strategic roadmap.

    Turkey’s relationship with Russia is dominated by economic concerns. Turkey is dependent on Russia for its natural gas imports. The country’s first nuclear plant is also set to be built by Russia’s state atomic energy corporation, Rosatom. Russia is also an important market for Turkish investors, particularly in the public works sector.

    There is a natural limit to the rapprochement that can take place between Ankara and Moscow. That will remain the case even if Turkey continues to pursue its vision of becoming a regional power that can act independently of its Western partners.

    Do Turkish citizens have concerns about the state of Turkey’s democracy?

    The government’s track record on the democracy agenda is increasingly acquiring a more mitigated color. Gone are the ambitious days of democratic reform that the country witnessed during the Justice and Development (AK) Party’s initial years in power. Today it seems that the ruling party has lost much of its enthusiasm for large-scale reforms.

    The rhetoric on the Kurdish issue is turning more acrimonious. Turkey is sliding back in the area of press freedom and the independence of the judiciary is being undermined by attempts to increase the executive’s influence.

    Turkey’s fundamental challenge remains the delimitation of political power. The country needs to strengthen its institutions of horizontal accountability such as its judiciary and independent agencies to provide a counterweight to political power. This is the role that was espoused by the military in the previous era. Now the country has to find a more democratic solution to this fundamental structural deficiency.

  • Turkey Seeks New ‘Axis’ With Egypt

    Turkey Seeks New ‘Axis’ With Egypt

    While President Obama blathers about Warren Buffett’s secretary and her tax rates, the world continues to grow ever more dangerous. The latest shift is coming from Turkey’s foreign minister and his vision for a new “axis” (his word) in the Middle East.

    The portrait was described by Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu of Turkey in an hourlong interview before he was to leave for the United Nations, where a contentious debate was expected this week over a Palestinian bid for recognition as a state. Viewed by many as the architect of a foreign policy that has made Turkey one of the most relevant players in the Muslim world, Mr. Davutoglu pointed to that issue and others to describe a region in the midst of a transformation. Turkey, he said, was “right at the center of everything.”

    He declared that Israel was solely responsible for the near collapse in relations with Turkey, once an ally, and he accused Syria’s president of lying to him after Turkish officials offered the government there a “last chance” to salvage power by halting its brutal crackdown on dissent.

    Strikingly, he predicted a partnership between Turkey and Egypt, two of the region’s militarily strongest and most populous and influential countries, which he said could create a new axis of power at a time when American influence in the Middle East seems to be diminishing.

    “This is what we want,” Mr. Davutoglu said.

    “This will not be an axis against any other country — not Israel, not Iran, not any other country, but this will be an axis of democracy, real democracy,” he added. “That will be an axis of democracy of the two biggest nations in our region, from the north to the south, from the Black Sea down to the Nile Valley in Sudan.”

    Israel is a real democracy, and it did not isolate itself as Davutoglu says. Turkey broke with its long-standing ally and sided with the Gaza flotilla. Davotoglu’s vision isn’t really about democracy in any regard. It seems to be more about strengthening an Islamist-military rule. Turkey has that now; Egypt didn’t under Mubarak but probably will before too long. What this will mean for Turkey’s role in NATO, and Israel’s future of increased isolation as two of its former allies become its enemies and link up with each other, remains to be seen.

    via The PJ Tatler » Turkey Seeks New ‘Axis’ With Egypt.

  • Bagis Meets Danish FM, Says No Shift in Turkey’s Axis

    Bagis Meets Danish FM, Says No Shift in Turkey’s Axis

    Turkey’s State Minister for EU affairs and Chief EU negotiator Egemen Bagis met with Danish Foreign Minister Lene Espersen as part of his talks in Copenhagen on Tuesday.

    espersen bagis

    Following his meeting with Espersen, Bagis spoke to reporters and ruled out any shift in Turkey’s axis.

    “Turkey will continue to be the most western country of the East and most eastern country of the West. Our allies are aware of this,” Bagis said.

    “Turkey has always been seen as a bridge between the East and the West. Nobody wants to cross a bridge with one pier decayed. All piers of the Turkey bridge, in the east, west, north and south, all of them are being reinforced concurrently,” he said.

    Asked about Turkey’s EU bid, Bagis said political stonewalling against opening of negotiation chapters was very annoying for Turkey.However, Bagis said, in this period Turkish government was working to raise standards of the country, not to open chapters.

    “We have done what we had to. But of course, Turkey will not throw up the sponge or be demoralized just because some countries blocked chapters. The important thing is priorities of the Turkish people,” Bagis said.

    Bagis also said that Danish government’s support to opening of chapters continued. He said Danish Foreign Minister Espersen would pay a visit to Turkey in February.

    AA