• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • flickr
  • blogger
  • youtube

blog-logo

  • Home
  • UAE Armenians
  • Hrach Kalsahakian
  • Հայերեն բաժին
  • Archives
    • News
    • Articles
    • Directory

New Middle East hinges on Turkey

June 21, 2010
A+ A-
Email Print

 


A (visionary) G-20 leader helps shape the new Middle East


By Haroon Siddiqui*
Editorial Page


DOHA, QATAR ? A tour through this region has opened my eyes to what I had failed to see from North America: that a new Middle East is emerging.


The slow death of Arab nationalistic and authoritarian states, such as Egypt and Syria, created a power vacuum. So did the American misadventure in Iraq and its pre-occupation with Afghanistan. The void is being filled by three new regional players ? Turkey, Iran and the oil- and gas-rich states of the Persian Gulf.


Note that Turkey and Iran are not Arab. They weren?t even considered part of the Middle East but now are, given their impact on the region ? Iran for its nuisance value and Turkey for its long overdue geopolitical role, led by Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan. He is coming to Toronto for the G-20 summit. 


The Arab part of the new Middle East troika is led by Saudi Arabia. But it is the brash and assertive new Arab players, such as Qatar (home of al Jazeera, the Doha round of trade talks, etc.) and the United Arab Emirates (the ?Dubai Miracle,? Emirate Airlines, etc.) that are wielding considerable soft power through commerce, communications and culture.


Note also that Turkey, the most potent force in the new order, is a democracy. And that Qatar and UAE, though ruled by hereditary sheikhs, have become open societies, welcoming foreign investment, skills and tourists ? with their attendant modernizing global influences.


Note further that two of the three new forces ? the Turks and the Gulf Arabs ? are pro-Western, though no longer obediently so.


Erdogan (pronounced Er-doe-awn) has been acting independently of the U.S. and Israel, without abandoning either ally.


Witness his role, using Turkey's current membership in the U.N. Security Council, in joining Brazil to cobble a compromise over the Iranian nuclear dilemma, only to be rejected by Washington, which opted for a fourth round of economic sanctions on Iran.


Witness also Erdogan?s steady criticism of Israel, ever since the 2008-09 war on Gaza, and, especially, since Israeli commandos killed nine Turks May 31 aboard a Turkish ship taking humanitarian aid to Gazans. Erdogan said last week: ?Peace and stability will not come to the region as long as the blockade of Gaza persists,? a blockade that Israel has just agreed to ease under international pressure.


Critics of Turkey say that it is abandoning the West and turning East, either because Europe has spurned its bid to join the European Union ? as U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Gates complained last week ? or because Turkey dreams of a New Ottomanism, which it clearly is not. (By the way, the Ottomans always interacted with the West).


For Turkey, the U.S. and Israel remain important. But it is also pursuing a new vision of a multi-polar world, in which the U.S. no longer dictates terms and Turkey plays a key regional role.


The nation of 80 million has the second largest army in NATO after the U.S. Its economy was booming at 6-7 per cent a year until the global financial crisis and is back on track with a 3.5 per cent growth this year. It is the world's seventeenth largest economy, the seventh largest around Europe and the largest in the Muslim world (annual GDP: nearly $700 billion vs. Canada's $1 trillion). Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has identified Turkey as among the rising powers the U.S. wants to do business with.


Erdogan?s policy of ?zero problems? with neighbours, including Iran, has led to rapprochement with traditional enemies Greece, Armenia and Syria.


He has also tried to play the mediator between Israel and Syria; Israel and Hamas; Georgia and Russia; Iraq and Syria; Americans and the Iraqi insurgents; Lebanon and Syria, and the various factions within Lebanon; and the warring factions in Somalia as well as Yemen.


He has not succeeded on every front. Indeed, he has stumbled badly on some, such as when mollycoddling Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir, who was indicted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes in Darfur.


But there?s no denying the progress Erdogan has made.


Turkey and Armenia have agreed to recognize current borders, and settle historic issues ? meaning, ways to recognize the First World War genocide of Armenians in Turkey, a subject over which Turkey has been in denial. Erdogan has acknowledged that Turkey, during its ?fascist? past did ?ethnically cleanse its minorities,? and that his own ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) got ?trapped in this wrong approach.?


Equally unthinkable would have been his normalization of relations with the semi-autonomous Kurdish Regional Government in Iraq. Turkey?s relations with the Iraqi Kurds had long been clouded by mistreatment of its own Kurdish minority of about 14 million. But, having begun the process of recognizing the linguistic and cultural rights of Turkish Kurds, Erdogan has embraced the Iraqi Kurds.


Turkey is also reaching out to Africa to grow its $10 billion a year trade with the continent. (All African countries but one voted for Turkish membership in the UN Security Council last year).


Last week, Erdogan announced a free trade zone with Jordan, Lebanon and Syria, with visa-free access. (Citizens of Russia, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Libya and Pakistan already enter Turkey easily).


On Iran, Turkey shares American, Israeli and Arab fears about Tehran?s nuclear ambitions. But it feels that multilateral economic sanctions would not work, just as the unilateral American sanctions have not in the last 31 years. Indeed, isolating Iran runs several risks: galvanize the pro-American Iranian people into rallying behind the regime they don?t like; increase smuggling, thereby strengthen criminal elements within and outside the government; and push Iran into further misusing its undeniable influence in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Gaza and the Caucasus.


The longstanding Turkish-Israeli relationship is severely strained but it is not broken. Nor has Turkey turned away from the U.S. or the EU. Its trade with the EU far outweighs its trade with its neighbours. There are 12,600 EU companies in Turkey.


Domestically, Erdogan has broken the army?s stranglehold on key levers of government, such as the judiciary. Prosecutors would not be able to ban political parties; that power would rest only with parliament.


All of this constitutes a peaceful revolution, made possible by Erdogan?s democratic legitimacy (in contrast to the strangling of what little democracy there was in Iran). Elected in 2002 and then in 2007, Erdogan became the first prime minister since 1954 to increase the ruling party?s support (by a staggering 14 per cent).


His domestic detractors accuse him of being autocratic, as in his clumsy attempt to muzzle the media. He is also accused, falsely, of harbouring a secret Islamist agenda. He is doing what the European Union has long demanded and the U.S. has encouraged: democratization at home and peace with neighbours.


The battle in Turkey is not between secularists and Islamists, as portrayed, but between democrats and autocrats.


The birth of the new Turkey has been welcomed by Arabs. ?Turkey has become an asset to the whole region and that constitutes a stabilizing factor in the Arab world,? Abdullah Khaliq Abdullah, professor of political science at the Emirates University, Dubai, told me. ?Turkey is welcome in all Arab capitals, whereas Iran is in two or three.?


As Morton Abramowitz, former U.S. envoy to Turkey, and Henri Barkey of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, write in Foreign Affairs magazine: ?Turkey used to punch below its weight; now it seems to be punching above it.?


*Haroon Siddiqui is the Star?s editorial page editor emeritus.


Source: “The Star”, Toronto, 19 June 2010
http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/825870–siddiqui-new-middle-east-hinges-on-turkey?bn=1

author-avatar

Posted by Azad-Hye

Like to share?

Social Media

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • flickr
  • blogger
  • youtube
Newer Post

Nor Or weekly: ADL publication from California

Older Post

The looming Kurdish challenge

POPULAR

item-thumbnail

Rebecca Malikian’s novel “The Caravan of Death”

July 10, 2015
item-thumbnail

Erebouni pen launched in Dubai and other cities

April 12, 2015
item-thumbnail

Vardavar (water pouring) international festival in Armenia gains popularity

July 17, 2015
item-thumbnail

Essam Nagy’s documentary “In The Beginning Was Armenia” (Interview)

January 11, 2020
item-thumbnail

Anna Dolabjian: I feel life coaching as a dream coming true

January 18, 2018

LATEST

item-thumbnail

Liana Ghaltaghchyan is the new Managing Director at the Children of Armenia Fund

January 10, 2023
item-thumbnail

Indian Journalist Venkatesh Remakrishnan mentions the Armenians of Chennai

October 30, 2022
item-thumbnail

Renovation of the Ghukasavan Cultural Center’s main hall

December 1, 2021
item-thumbnail

Nobel Prize winner Ardem Patapoutian

October 7, 2021
item-thumbnail

Armenian Church of the Virgin Mary in Basra, Iraq

August 30, 2021

COMMENTS

Azad-Hye on In memory of AUB Medical Alumni who died during the First World War
Azad-Hye on Kessab Ousoumnasirats celebrates centennial
Lawrence Danny CPA on Kessab Ousoumnasirats celebrates centennial
Stephensmith on Pizza making vending machine invented by Puzant Khachadourian
ALEXANIAN on Astghik Voskerchyan: Every element in my environment has a role in my creations

Categories

  • Applications
  • Art
  • Books
  • Business
  • Celebrations
  • Chinese Armenians
  • Courses and Camps
  • Cyprus Armenians
  • Diaspora Armenians
  • Documentaries
  • Education
  • Egyptian Armenians
  • Energy
  • Ethiopian Armenians
  • European Armenians
  • Festivals
  • Genocide
  • History
  • Hrach Kalsahakian
  • Indian Armenians
  • Interviews
  • Iraqi Armenians
  • Language
  • Lebanese Armenians
  • Music
  • Poetry
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Rural Armenia
  • Science
  • Syrian Armenians
  • Tourism
  • Turkish Armenians
  • UAE Armenians
  • Websites
  • Հայերեն բաժին

CUSTOM LINKS

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact

RANDOM POSTS

item-thumbnail

Սփիւռքի հայ կառոյցներէն «արտագաղթ»

item-thumbnail

Մենք կը ճանչնա՞նք զիրար (Սփիւռք – Հայաստան). Հրաչ Քալսահակեան

item-thumbnail

Essam Nagy’s documentary “In The Beginning Was Armenia” (Interview)

TAG CLOUD

Armenian Art Armenian Catholics Armenian Christmas Armenian Costumes Armenian Genocide Armenian Songs Armenian Velvet Revolution Azad-Hye Celebrations Cyprus Armenians Daniel Varoujan Hejinian Diaspora Diaspora Armenians Education Emma Kant Emma Karapetyan Ethiopian Armenians Garni Geghard Genocide Goris Greece Hidden Armenians History Iraqi Armenians Kessab Kessabtzis Language Lebanese Armenians Meri Martirosyan Music Music Application Nana Aramyan Nikol Pashinyan Norway Ottoman Empire Paris Speech Therapy Syrian Armenians Syunik Turkey Turkish Armenians UAE Armenians Vardavar Western Armenia

Search this website

© 2023 Azad-Hye . Designed by Wpinhands
Scroll