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Turkey and the Arab Spring: Between Ethics and Self-Interest

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Turkey has redefined its geographical security environment over the last decade by deepening its engagement with neighboring regions, especially with the Middle East. The Arab spring, however, challenged not only the authoritarian regimes in the region but also Turkish foreign policy strategy, which was based on cooperation with the existing regimes without prioritizing the democracy promotion dimension of the issue. The upheavals in the Arab world therefore created a dilemma between ethics and self-interest in Turkish foreign policy. Amid the flux of geopolitical shifts in one of the unstable regions of the world, Turkish foreign policy-making elites try to rectify their strategies to overcome this inherent dilemma in question. The central argument of the present paper is that Turkey could make a bigger and more constructive impact in the region by trying to take a more detached stand and through controlled activism which will act in coalitions and in close alignments with the United States and the European countries rather than a self-attributed unilateral over-pro-activism.
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TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
1
SUMMER 2012
ABSTRACT
The Middle East, broadly de-
ned, has emerged as one of
the focal points of a new, more
assertive, and pro-active style of Turk-
ish foreign policy in recent years.1 The
unexpected and dramatic developments
in the direction of political opening in
the Arab world will have profound im-
plications for the future course of Turk-
ish foreign policy. In the longer term,
one can be more optimistic. The trends
towards political liberalization in the
Arab world are likely to boost Turkey’s
economic and diplomatic ties and will
enhance the relevance of the “Turkish
experience,” as a point of reference
for the region. The attractiveness of
the “Turkish experience” vis-à-vis the
domestic political systems of compet-
ing regional powers, like Saudi Arabia
and Iran, is likely to be enhanced in a
more open and pluralistic environment.
In the short and medium term, how-
ever, unexpected developments in the
Insight Turkey Vol. 14 / No. 3 / 2012
pp. 1-19
Articles
* Koç University, ziya.onis@gmail.com
Turkey redened its geographical
security environment over the last
decade by deepening its engagement
with neighboring regions, especially
with the Middle East. The Arab spring,
however, challenged not only the
authoritarian regimes in the region but
also Turkish foreign policy strategy.
This strategy was based on cooperation
with the existing regimes and did not
prioritize the democracy promotion
dimension of the issue. The upheavals
in the Arab world, therefore, created a
dilemma between ethics and self-interest
in Turkish foreign policy. Amid the ux of
geopolitical shifts in one of the world’s
most unstable regions, Turkish foreign
policy-making elites are attempting to
reformulate their strategies to overcome
this inherent dilemma. The central
argument of the present paper is that
Turkey could make a bigger and more
constructive impact in the region by
trying to take a more detached stand
and through controlled activism. Thus,
Turkey could take action through the
formation of coalitions and in close
alignments with the United States and
Europe rather than basing its policies on
a self-attributed unilateral pro-activism.
ZİYA ÖNİŞ*
Turkey and the Arab Spring:
Between Ethics and Self-Interest
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
2INSIGHT TURKEY
Middle East created serious uncertainties and dilemmas for Turkish foreign
policy.
Turkish foreign policy towards the region prior to the onset of the Arab Spring
during the Justice and Development Party (hereinafter, AKP) era was based on
the principles of mutual gain through
economic interdependence and close
political ties based on cultural afn-
ity and Muslim brotherhood, which
Pinar Bilgin calls “civilizational
geopolitics.”2 The, AKP govern-
ment’s foreign policy was not based
on the notion of democracy promotion. Rather it was based on the Westphalian
logic of respecting the independence of nation states and the principle of non-
intervention in the domestic politics of states. Perhaps this foreign policy logic
was based on the implicit functionalist assumption that with growing economic
interdependence and a exible visa regime, which encouraged free ow of labor
between neighboring states, authoritarian regimes would gradually crumble over
time. Nevertheless, the AKP’s soft-power based foreign policy, popularized as
“zero problems with neighbors” strategy, faced ethical dilemmas prior to the on-
set of the Arab Spring.3 The AKP’s foreign policy stance encountered criticisms
in the context of the support for the brutal and authoritarian Iranian regime,
which faced internal opposition. The ethics versus self-interest dilemma and the
failure to emphasize democratic norms as the single-minded priority became
clearly evident in Turkey’s relations with Iran and Sudan, in particular.4
The ethics versus self-interest dilemma became especially profound with the
onset of the Arab Spring. Turkish policy makers were confronted with this
dilemma most notably in relation to Libya and Syria. The key problem that
emerged was how to deal with internally polarized states such as Syria and Lib-
ya, given that serious economic interests in terms of trade and investment link-
ages had been built with such states especially as part of the pro-active foreign
policy over the course of the last decade. A key dilemma confronting Turkish
foreign policy elites was whether to encourage reform (especially in the Syrian
case) by putting pressure on the ruling authoritarian elites or support rising op-
position movements, which started to seriously challenge the existing regimes.
To be fair, this ethics versus self-interest/stability dilemma was not unique to
Turkey. Western powers have had to face the very same conundrum in a region
where they have serious and far-reaching economic interests. In this context, the
major objective of this paper is to evaluate the performance of Turkish foreign
policy in the early phase of the “Arab Spring.” It highlights the limits of over-
activism to engage in regional politics as well as illustrating the fact that Turkish
The ethics versus self-interest
dilemma became especially
profound with the onset of the
Arab Spring
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
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SUMMER 2012
foreign policy was able to display important elements of pragmatism at times
when the conditions necessitated policy adaptation and reversals.
The Nature of the Arab Awakening: The Uncertain and Reversible
Path Ahead
What renders the recent Middle Eastern experience rather distinct is that the
process of change was predominantly internally driven. The youth and the dis-
enchanted middle classes in the Arab world mobilized through the instruments
of social media, which played a key role in the series of uprisings in the urban
centers of the Arab world. The glob-
al context made an important contri-
bution to this process but in a rather
indirect fashion. The global eco-
nomic crisis certainly had an impact
through rising food prices, falling re-
mittances, and declining demand for
Arab exports. Global communication
technologies also provided the means
whereby the opposition groups could
effectively communicate with one
another and join forces, undermin-
ing the power of the authoritarian
regimes from within, as part of a bottom-up process. Yet, the negative side of
this is that the favorable external or global context that supported the previous
transformations in Latin America and Eastern Europe are largely lacking in rela-
tion to current developments in the Middle East. Given the continuing scale of
the economic crises in the United States and the European Union, the ability to
marshal signicant economic and political resources to support regime change
on the part of key external actors remain rather limited. The direct implication
is that change will have to be driven primarily by domestic actors. This, in turn,
raises serious concerns about the durability and sustainability of the region wide
political liberalization process. What is striking is that the direction of causation
appears to have been reversed in the case of the Arab Spring. The uprisings in
the Middle East appear to have generated a global impact, especially in terms of
inuencing other popular movements, such as the protests against Wall Street
in the United States, similar protests movements in Europe, Russia, China, and
elsewhere. However, the depth of this impact should not be over-emphasized,
as the protest movements in the core industrialized countries were largely re-
sponses to deep-seated economic problems like high unemployment. Similarly,
Given the continuing scale
of the economic crises in the
United States and the European
Union, the ability to marshal
signicant economic and
political resources to support
regime change on the part
of key external actors remain
rather limited
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
4INSIGHT TURKEY
the protests in countries like Russia and China were also primarily indigenous
responses to the absence of democracy.
Having taken these broader global upheavals into consideration, the stage has
been set for the discussion of Turkish foreign policy. It would, therefore, be use-
ful to present a broad picture of the Arab Spring to date. The onset of the Arab
Spring or awakening generated a profound sense of optimism with the uprising
in Tunisia having a domino effect, leading to the confrontation and dismantling
of authoritarian regimes in the region.5 The effects have been particularly strik-
ing and far-reaching in the cases of Egypt, and Libya. Syria’s regime, although
it has managed to remain in power, is also under serious threat. The onset of
the Arab Spring clearly delivered a serious blow to the existing orthodoxy that
the Middle East was somehow an exceptional region, which was immune to the
democratization waves that had already generated large-scale transformations in
Latin America, Eastern Europe, and elsewhere as part of the “third wave.”6
In retrospect, the picture that emerges after a year of momentous change is
that of extraordinary variation on the nature and intensity of the political opening
process in the landscape of the Middle East. What constitutes the most positive
element is that highly entrenched dictatorships in the regimes, such as the rule of
Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and Muammar Qadda in Libya, have come to an end
fostering a deep sense of optimism that popular rule will replace long-established
authoritarian regimes in that region. Recent developments, however, fail to sus-
tain the same sense of optimism. There is a profound degree of uncertainty con-
cerning the future of political liberalization in the region with many commenta-
tors pointing towards the possibility
of authoritarian reversals and even
an “Arab Winter” replacing the Arab
Spring. The central point is that even
in countries where major revolutions
have taken place, it is not clear that
the shift of power to forces opposing
the previous regimes will facilitate
a natural progression towards more
open and pluralistic political systems. The case of Egypt, in particular, neatly
illustrates these dilemmas. Fears are clearly expressed in the case of Egypt con-
cerning the extent to which the Egyptian military is likely to relinquish its pow-
ers. Questions have also been raised concerning the true democratic credentials
of the pro-Islamist Muslim Brotherhood Party in terms of helping to move the
country in the direction of a genuinely pluralistic political system.7
The situation in Syria is even more precarious. The Assad regime is under
serious pressure for reform from opposition forces. However, it is not certain
The “new” Turkish Foreign
policy vision based on the
“zero problems with neighbors”
strategy faced a dramatic and
severe test, following the onset
of the Arab Spring
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
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SUMMER 2012
whether the regime will collapse in the rst place and what kind of structure
will emerge even if the regime eventually collapses. There is even a highly
plausible risk that Syria will plunge into civil war. Furthermore, a signicant
part of the Arab world has been largely impervious to political change. Saudi
Arabia is clearly the most striking case where authoritarian rule has continued in
a largely uninterrupted fashion. Similarly, in the Gulf States, the authoritarian
regimes remain rmly intact. In spite of the presence of a mounting oppositional
challenges, Iran, a major player in the regional power game, has emerged as
largely unaffected. The authoritarian regime in Iran appears to be quite secure
at least in the medium term. Last, but not least, Iraq, following the withdrawal
of the United States, looks increasingly fragile and prone to sectarian unrest and
fragmentation. There is no doubt that the war of 2003 and the subsequent US
military presence have failed to bring stability and a genuinely open and plural-
istic polity to this country.
Any proper or fair assessment of Turkish foreign policy in the context of the
Arab Spring must be set against this highly uncertain and volatile environment.
Turkish foreign policy makers were clearly forced to react and develop a strat-
egy towards a rapidly unfolding chain of events over which they had very little
control. Hence, to argue that Turkey’s policy of “zero problems with the neigh-
bors” strategy failed in the context of the Arab Spring because Turkey started to
experience problems with countries like Syria, with which it previously enjoyed
favorable relations, would be a gross exaggeration.
Turkey’s New Assertive Foreign Policy in a State of Turbulence:
Dilemmas, Trade-os, and the Risks of Isolation
There is no doubt that the chain of events that precipitated the Arab Spring,
starting in Tunisia and then spreading to Egypt and the rest of the Arab world
has come at an unexpected moment for Turkish policy makers whose medium
term strategy rested on the notion that the authoritarian regimes in the Middle
East would be likely to endure for the foreseeable future. To be fair, this kind of
perception was not unique. Before the onset of the Arab upheavals, hardly any-
body could have predicted the scale of the dramatic transformation that affected
the Arab world during the course of the memorable year of 2011.
The “new” Turkish Foreign policy vision based on the “zero problems with
neighbors” strategy faced a dramatic and severe test, following the onset of the
Arab Spring. In principle, Turkish political elites welcomed the profound chal-
lenge mounted against the brutal authoritarian regimes. Yet, in practice, major
trade-offs emerged between the need to achieve stability in the short-run given
the serious economic interests, which Turkey had built up with these countries,
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
6INSIGHT TURKEY
versus the need to champion the cause of democracy and regime change, which
would clearly jeopardize those economic interests, at least for a considerable pe-
riod. In other words, Turkey faced a real challenge in terms of the ethics versus
self-interest dilemma. An ethical or norm based foreign policy requires single-
minded support for democratization versus an interest-based strategy, which
requires the promotion of a gradual process of transformation, which would be
compatible with a certain degree of stability and order, crucial for Turkey’s vi-
tal economic interests in the region. Needless to say, this ethical or norm-based
versus interest-driven foreign policy dilemma was not unique to Turkey. The
United States and Europe have faced this dilemma for a long-time and continue
to face it in a striking form with the onset of the Arab Spring.
The lack of coherence or inconsistency of Turkish foreign policy during the
course of 2011 has a lot to do with this ethics versus self-interest trade-off. This
could explain why the Turkish approach displayed U-turns during the course
of the year (Table 1). It could also explain the differences in the attitudes of
Photo: REUTERS, Mohamed Abd El Ghany
Egyptians greet Turkey’s Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan while holding a banner reading “Welcome dear
leader of the free” before a meeting of Arab League foreign ministers at the League’s headquarters in
Cairo.
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
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SUMMER 2012
the AKP government to developments in key Arab countries like Egypt, Libya,
and Syria.
Phase 1
Cautious Unilateralism
Phase 2
Reluctant Participation
Phase 3
Unilateral Pro-activism
Phase 4
Return to a more Cautious
Approach and Reluctant
Multilateralism
• Welcomes the spread of Arab Revolutions and the opportuni-
ties for political liberalization and reform;
• Cautious about providing explicit support since important eco-
nomic interests are at stake and given the presence of signi-
cant Turkish presence in the region, notably in Libya;
• Reluctant to endorse international pressures for regime change
and quite critical of NATO in the initial stages.
• Participating in a reluctant manner in the NATO intervention
in Libya under growing international pressure and the risk of
losing the support of Arab reformers;
• Does not take an active part and generally assumes a passive
stance in Libya;
• More pro-active in Syria but primarily through placing pres-
sure on the existing authoritarian regime to make concessions.
• Attention is diverted from the Arab Spring by domestic ele-
ments notably the electoral contest leading to the June general
elections of 2011.
• The AKP emerges with great condence from the general elec-
tions and this is reected by a renewed wave of pro-activism in
its foreign policy;
• Trying to gain center stage in the Arab Spring process by vig-
orous criticisms of Israel, particularly in relation to the publica-
tion of the allegedly biased UN report on the Flotilla crisis;
• Using the anti-Israel rhetoric and championing the Palestinian
cause as a means of maintaining Turkey’s popularity to the
Arab world;
• Visit to Egypt and much more vocal criticism of Basher-el-
Assad.
• Return to a more cautious and subdued approach towards the
end of the year;
• Economic costs of active approach in Syria resulting in a back-
lash from the established regime;
• Great uncertainty in the case of Syria since the outcome of the
contest between the existing regime and the oppositional forces
remains highly uncertain;
• Turkey steps in line with the EU in implementing sanctions
against Syria and accepts NATO initiatives aimed at Iran.
• While relations with the United States are on a favorable track,
relations with the European Union and the French, in particu-
lar, are on an increasingly negative path.
• Perhaps the cautious turn reects a sad realization on the part of
Turkish foreign policy makers that earlier they may have overly
engaged themselves in the politics of the region, while possess-
ing little leverage and resources, thus overplaying their hand.
Table 1: Cycles in Turkish Response to the Arab Spring
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
8INSIGHT TURKEY
It was with Egypt that the AKP government came out with the most strong
and vigorous position in favor of Egyptian pro-democratization forces, especially
once President Mubarak was ousted from power.8Even prior to Mubarak’s fall,
Turkey’s Prime Minister Erdoğan unequivocally urged him to leave his seat.
Erdoğan during his highly popular visit to Cairo clearly expressed his support
for political transformation in Egypt in the direction of an open and pluralistic
political order, making reference to the importance of the Turkish experience
in establishing a “secular” political order. In the cases of Libya and Syria, the
initial support for forces challenging existing authoritarian regimes was much
more ambiguous and diluted.
In the case of Libya, the Turkish government was reluctant to present itself as
an active force for regime change given the fact that Muammar Qadda was not
willing to concede defeat as readily as his Egyptian counterpart, Hosni Mubarak.
Furthermore, Turkey’s economic interests, trade, investments, and the presence
of Turkish manpower were on a far
greater scale in Libya compared to
Egypt, which clearly necessitated a
more cautious approach.9 In the ini-
tial stages, Turkey was reluctant to
endorse a NATO operation in Libya
and as a result came under serious
criticism from oppositional forces in
Libya as well from the international
community for being too passive and
lenient against the existing regime.
Realizing that remaining outside the broad Western coalition would be costly,
there was a U-turn in Turkish policy towards Libya and Turkey changed its
position in support of the NATO initiative. Much debate existed on the jus-
tication for the NATO operation in Libya. The main argument was that it
was intended to be a humanitarian intervention to protect large segments of the
civilian population against a brutal regime. However, a more critical point of
view also emerged, interpreting it as NATO overstepping its mandate by taking
an active part in regime change. Nonetheless, it was the NATO operation led
by the French and the British with strong support from the United States in the
background that eventually led to the collapse of the Qadda regime. Turkey
remained a reluctant partner and a rather passive player in the process.
Turkish foreign policy also faced serious challenges in the case of Syria.
Syria is important in the sense that it was often presented as a real success story
of Davutoğlu’s “zero problems with neighbors” strategy. Relations with Syria,
which have been poor throughout the 1990s, improved dramatically during the
Relations with Syria epitomized
the very principles on which
the “new” Turkish foreign policy
was based, a combination of
economic interdependence
and cultural anity with no
explicit agenda for democracy
promotion
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
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SUMMER 2012
post-1999 period and they enjoyed a golden age period during the AKP era.10
Expanding trade relations and a exible visa regime that allowed movement
of people between the countries on a massive scale contributed to this highly
favorable picture. Turkey presented itself as an equal partner interested in con-
tributing to Syria’s integration to the global order through a series of economic
and cultural exchanges, an approach that was clearly predicated on challenging
the existing Assad regime. Relations
with Syria epitomized the very prin-
ciples on which the “new” Turkish
foreign policy was based, a combi-
nation of economic interdependence
and cultural afnity with no explicit
agenda for democracy promotion.
Once the Arab Spring spread to
Syria and started to threaten the es-
tablished regime, however, this ap-
proach was tested. The new Turkish
foreign policy was clearly treading
on a dangerous path in the Syrian case. Inevitably, the government adopted
a more cautious approach to regime change in Syria, where the Assad regime
was confronted with serious opposition. Unlike the situation in Libya, however,
opposition groups did not receive the kind of active support from external pow-
ers. The European Union has applied economic sanctions to put pressure on the
existing regime to undertake reform. Economic sanctions alone, however, have
so far not even been able to tilt the balance in the direction of serious reform in
the Syrian context.
Relations with Syria were on a rough course and Turkish foreign policy to-
wards Syria involved a series of adaptations and U-turns (Table 2). Initially, the
Turkish approach was to encourage reform through the existing regime building
on the political capital that had been built up with the Assad regime throughout
the AKP era. The expectation was that Turkey would play a kind of mediator
role and exert its soft power to induce gradual, step-by-step political opening in
Syria. Indeed, the United States and the EU have pushed Turkey to play a more
pro-active role vis-à-vis Syria and were often critical when Turkey failed to par-
ticipate in the implementation of the economic sanctions. It was clear, however,
that Turkey’s ability to exert change on the Assad regime was more limited than
originally anticipated. Assad deed pressures for reform and has continued his
brutal policy towards the oppositional forces in his country, which resulted in
more than 15,000 deaths as of June2012 according to UN estimates. Relations
between the two countries became particularly strained when it became quite
Turkey’s growing economic
strength and strong progress
in terms of modernization
combined with a comparatively
open and pluralistic political
system has emerged
increasingly as an attractive
point of reference for the
Arab elites
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
10 INSIGHT TURKEY
clear that Turkey was also supporting opposition groups in the background,
while the ofcial policy continued to support political change through the ex-
isting regime.11 This dual approach proved to be increasingly unsustainable.
During the later part of the year, the AKP government, recognizing that change
through the existing system was not likely to materialize and a pro-regime stance
would increasingly undermine Turkey’s international standing, accomplished
another U-turn. The new approach was based on a confrontation with the Assad
regime and Turkey invested in and backed the solution proposals by the Arab
League and UN appointed mediator Ko Annan.
The result is that relations with Syria have seriously deteriorated. In the lon-
ger term, if the existing regime collapses and is replaced by pro-democratization
forces, Turkey’s relations with Syria may be revitalized. However, if the ex-
isting regime manages to hold onto to power and resist change, this will be a
serious blow to the signicant improvement in the economic, diplomatic and
Table 2: Comparison of Turkish Foreign Policy Initiatives in Egypt, Libya,
and Syria During the Era of the Arab Spring
Degree of
consistency
Changing nature
of response
Degree of
cooperation with
external actors
Desire to play a
leadership role
Mode of
inuence
Egypt
Comparatively coherent
Consistent support for
pro-reform forces
Primarily unilateral
approach; co-operation
with external actors
weak
Indirect inuence
Emphasizing the values
of “secularism;” the
need to respect the
outcome of elections;
engaging rather than
confronting the Muslim
brotherhood
Libya
Pronounced cycles
Rather passive initially;
not willing to confront
the Qadda regime in
early stages
Reluctant partner in the
international coalition;
lukewarm support for
NATO intervention;
rather passive with
France and Britain occu-
pying the center stage
Indirect inuence
Supportive of the reform
process in the post-
Qadda era; not active
participant in the process
of regime building
Syria
Pronounced cycles
Rather passive initially;
encouraging the existing
regime to reform the
political system
Supporting opposition
groups pointing towards
incoherence; primarily
unilateral approach;
EU critical of Turkey
for failing to take a
tougher stance
Direct inuence with
unexpected outcomes
Recognition that pres-
sure for reform through
the Assad regime will
work; confrontational
attitude towards the
regime and its human
rights record; imple-
mentation of sanctions
during the last stage
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
11
SUMMER 2012
cultural links that have developed in such a striking fashion over the course of
the past decade.
The Limits of Turkey’s Regional Leadership Aspirations:
The Case for Controlled Pro-Activism and Co-operative Leadership
During the AKP era, Turkey’s relations with the Middle East and the Arab
world have improved dramatically to the extent that the Middle East has be-
come increasingly the focal point of Turkey’s assertive and condent multilater-
al foreign policy initiatives in recent
years. The Arab elites and the public
at large have also been much more
receptive to Turkish presence in the
region.12 In retrospect, Turkey’s re-
discovery of the Middle East and its
growing presence in the region is a
multi-dimensional phenomenon and
is rooted in the following forces.
Turkey’s growing economic
strength and strong progress in terms
of modernization combined with a
comparatively open and pluralistic political system has emerged increasingly as
an attractive point of reference for the Arab elites. Indeed, as Turkey has moved
closer to Europe, as a candidate country for EU membership, its attractiveness
increased. It is fair to argue that it was the “new” Turkish model epitomized by
the AKP, rather than the traditional classical Turkish model based on top-down,
state-led modernization led by secular elites, which caught the imagination of
large segments of the Arab elites and the society at large. The AKP experience
represented a mixture of “conservatism” and “globalism.”13 Unlike its hyper-
secularist, Kemalist counterpart, it projected a more exible and nuanced under-
standing of “secularism” that allowed more space for religion in public space
and everyday life. In other words, the AKP’s understanding of secularism was
similar to what Ahmet Kuru has classied as “passive secularism” as opposed
“assertive secularism” associated with the Kemalist modernization project.14
The AKP was “globalist” in the sense that it was willing to engage with the West
and develop strategies to capitalize on the benets of global integration. At the
same time, it was willing to stand up against the West and to take independent
positions especially in relation to the dominant power, the United States.
In that respect, the decision not to send Turkish troops to Northern Iraq in
support of the American war effort in March 2003 proved to be a turning point
It was the “new Turkish model
epitomized by the AKP, rather
than the traditional classical
Turkish model based on top-
down, state-led modernization
led by secular elites, which
caught the imagination of large
segments of the Arab elites and
the society at large
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
12 INSIGHT TURKEY
that effectively started to erase the negative memories of the Ottoman legacy and
tilted the balance towards a more positive and favorable perception of Turkey in
the Arab world. Subsequently, the strong and assertive positions taken by Prime
Minister Erdoğan, in terms of his vocal criticisms of Israel starting in Davos
and his championing of Palestinian cause have helped to bolster the popular-
ity of Turkey quite dramatically in most Arab countries.15 It is not perhaps an
exaggeration to state that the appeals
of Erdoğan’s popularity in the Arab
streets and the overall popularity of
the second-generation Turkish model
represented by the AKP experiment
have become quite inseparable. In-
deed, one can quite legitimately ask
the question of whether it was the
personality and standing of Erdoğan himself, or the attractiveness of the new
Turkish model generally that contributed more to Turkey’s rising popularity
in the region. While the Arab Spring was a predominantly internally driven
process, the Turkish experience in Kemal Kirişçi’s terminology had a positive
demonstrative effect in the region.16 The Arab world’s growing encounters with
Turkey both in economic and cultural terms have helped to build up perceptions
and expectations that the authoritarian regimes in the Arab world were increas-
ingly unable to accommodate the growing social and economic demands of their
own citizens. Turkey’s total trade with Middle Eastern countries increased from
4.4 billion dollars in 2002 to almost 26 billion dollars in 2010. Turkey’s out-
ward foreign direct investment stock, apart from construction investments, also
improved in the same period. Accordingly between 2002 and 2009, it reached
11.2 billion dollars, 3.1 of which is directed to Asia, including Near and Middle
Eastern countries.17
Hence, one can argue that the Turkish experience and presence had a role to
play in the emergence of the Arab Spring and once the Arab Spring was under-
way there was growing recognition that the Turkish experience could prove to
be an important source of inspiration or a reference point for Arab reformers,
even though the term “Turkish model,” as something that can be readily repli-
cated, might be somewhat far-fetched and inappropriate.18 For Turkey to play a
constructive role in the context of the highly uncertain, volatile and potentially
reversible environment of the on-going Arab spring, which some commenta-
tors quite legitimately state may turn out to be an Arab Winter, there is a need
to recognize the limits of its regional power and inuence.19 A predominantly
unilateralist and over-assertive approach, which will raise fears of the rise of
“Neo-Ottomanism” is most likely to backre.
Over-engagement and over-
assertiveness on Turkeys part
could contribute to further
instability in an already highly
unstable region
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
13
SUMMER 2012
The Middle East is a contested space. Turkey is in competition with Iran and
Saudi Arabia. These two countries clearly have the resources and would like to
shape the developments of many countries in the region, such as Egypt (which
itself is a contender in the regional power game), Syria, and Iraq - all of which
are in a state of ux.20 The reform process is under way in these countries, but
the outcomes are highly uncertain. The worst that Turkey could do would be to
take active positions in sectarian conicts that seem to be endemic to most Mid-
dle Eastern regimes in transition. For example, championing the Sunni cause
in Iraq against the rising support of Shiite inuence reecting the growing en-
gagement of Iran in the region could
prove to be a recipe for disaster. In
other words, over-engagement and
over-assertiveness on Turkey’s part
could contribute to further instability
in an already highly unstable region.
There is clearly a paradox here. The
more Turkey is actively engaged in
the region and becomes an active
participant in on-going conicts, the
less likely it will have the ability to play a constructive stabilizing and reformist
role. What Turkey should aspire to is to involve itself as part of a co-operative
leadership process working through multilateral channels, similar to the way it
operates and works with the Arab League. The aim should be to inuence de-
velopments in such a way as to support co-operative solutions to avoid sectarian
violence and to overcome deep political divisions that clearly hamper the path to
reform and eventual stability in many of these countries.21 Fortunately, recent
Turkish foreign policy in Iraq constitutes an attempt to play a constructive role
in this direction. Turkey has clearly avoided presenting itself as a supporter of
Sunni groups and has been working for the unity of Iraq while engaging with
the Kurdish authorities at the same time. Furthermore, Turkey has been trying
to inuence Iran not to engage in sectarian politics by providing overt support to
Shiite elements although the likelihood of success seems to be low.
Arab Awakening as an Opportunity Space: Democratic Deepening
and the Case for Re-Engagement with the European Union
The rediscovery of Turkey’s immediate neighborhood, notably the Middle East,
as part of a broader multi-lateral strategy to diversify its economic, political,
and diplomatic relations constituted the positive side of the AKP’s increasingly
pro-active foreign policy in recent years. The negative side was that it was ac-
The more Turkey is actively
engaged in the region and
becomes an active participant
in on-going conicts, the less
likely it will have the ability to
play a constructive stabilizing
and reformist role
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
14 INSIGHT TURKEY
companied by a parallel process involving a progressive retreat away from the
West and notably from the long-established ideal of EU membership. A central
and often voiced critique of the new BRICS-like foreign policy behavior was the
following. Turkey could have developed its multi-dimensional foreign policy
and rediscover the Middle East while remaining rmly anchored to the West
and the European Union, in particu-
lar.22 Indeed, the two elements could
be seen as complementary rather
than contradictory, as one of the key
reasons that made Turkey attractive
to the Arab world was the country’s
deepening relations with the Euro-
pean Union. The reverse was also
the case in the sense that Turkey was
attractive to the European Union as
part of its broader neighborhood pol-
icy and the special assets that Turkey
seemed to possess culturally and eco-
nomically in terms of further engagement with the Middle East. Although key
Turkish foreign policy gures denied the fact that Turkey had lost interest in EU
membership, in rhetoric, there appeared to be little concrete evidence in practice
to suggest that the stalemate would be overcome.23
Although not openly admitted, Turkey, from the perspective of the United
States and Europe, increasingly looked like an independent Middle Eastern pow-
er. As Larrabee underlines, Turkey “enhances its freedom of action and increase
its leverage, both regionally and globally.”24 While the importance of Turkey
was duly recognized, the image of Turkey as a country rmly committed to a
Western course came under increasing scrutiny. Turkey’s over-blown criticisms
of Israel, while helping to bolster the AKP’s positive image in Turkish domestic
politics and the Arab streets, tended to support this growing sense of a new Tur-
key that was changing direction, although this did not mean a total withdrawal
from the West and its key institutions such as the EU and NATO. Similarly, the
overly favorable treatment of Iran in negotiations over nuclear disarmament and
a lenient attitude towards its authoritarian political style also helped to project
a similar image. In the main policy circles of the United States and Europe, the
AKP no longer seemed to sustain its reformist, pro-western stance of its early
years of government. Indeed, the conservative elements of its “conservative
globalist” makeup rose more clearly and openly to the surface and it were only
natural that these elements would be reected in the government’s foreign policy
style. Indeed, the third successive victory of the AKP in the general elections of
The crisis in Syria reected the
limits of Turkeys soft power
resources, in economic and
diplomatic terms, to induce
eective reform by putting
pressure on Bashar-al-Assad,
a leader with which the AKP
leadership was previously on
friendly terms
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
15
SUMMER 2012
June 2011 rendered the party leadership even more condent and this condence
was directly reected in the party’s foreign policy approach towards the Middle
East. The onset of the Arab Spring was important in highlighting the changing
position of Turkey. While the Turkish experience was clearly important and
relevant for the construction of the New Middle East, its limits of being able of
playing a largely independent role was also seriously exposed. The crisis in Lib-
ya clearly highlighted the fact that effective foreign policy required re-alignment
with the West and participation in Western-led coalitions. The crisis in Syria
reected the limits of Turkey’s soft power resources, in economic and diplo-
matic terms, to induce effective reform by putting pressure on Bashar-al-Assad,
a leader with which the AKP leadership was previously on friendly terms.
Although the European Union is in a state of crisis, it still has the combina-
tion of economic and diplomatic resources to affect change in the Middle East
in a signicant direction that far outweighs the resources that Turkey could
marshal on its own initiative.25 Clearly, the structural context that emerged with
the Arab Spring involves a convergence of interests between Turkey and the EU
and encourages co-operative behavior. With the Obama administration, relations
with the United States have improved considerably. Yet, the EU element in the
Turkey-US-EU triangle appears to be weak. Structural forces may open new
opportunity spaces, but they alone cannot determine the outcomes. The role of
key actors both in Europe and Turkey are crucial in this context. It is not enough
for Turkish policy makers to engage
with their European counterparts.
Their European counterparts must
also be willing to engage in a simi-
lar dialogue. The role played by the
French President Nicolas Sarkozy,
for example, has been particularly
negative in this respect. The current
mood with a dramatic decline in Turkish-French relations, following the French
Parliament’s recent decision on the Armenian question does not generate much
hope for the near future. Yet, in the medium-term, there is an opportunity for ef-
fective re-engagement between Turkey and the EU, especially with the election
of Francois Hollande as new president in France. The outcome of the French
election could help both parties to play a more constructive role in the context of
Arab awakening, if only the key actors could seize the occasion and capitalize
on the opportunity to work together in the Eastern Mediterranean. In the longer
term, this could also pave the way for a revitalization of Turkey’s EU member-
ship drive, with its continued importance not only in the economic realm, but in
terms of raising the quality of democratic standards in Turkey.
The relevance of the Turkish
experience to the rest of the
Arab world will rest not only
on the depth of its economic
modernization, but also on the
quality of its democracy
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
16 INSIGHT TURKEY
This brings us to an important point that developments in domestic politics
and foreign policy are intrinsically interrelated. The relevance of the Turkish
experience to the rest of the Arab world will rest not only on the depth of its
economic modernization, but also on the quality of its democracy. While the
AKP era has been quite successful for the growth and expansion of the Turkish
economy, still major questions exist concerning the quality of its democracy.26
To criticize Israel and its maltreatment of the Palestinians is perfectly legiti-
mate. Yet, for this kind of criticism to be effective and achieve wide-ranging
international attention, it is impor-
tant for Turkey to overcome deep
divisions within its own polity and
move towards a genuinely open and
pluralistic political order, as opposed
to simply a kind of procedural and
majoritarian democracy in which the
basic rules of the game are not embraced by all segments of society. Clearly,
if Turkey is not able to put an end to violent conict and resolve its own Kurd-
ish conict in a peaceful and democratic manner, the same kind of criticisms
that are leveled against Israel will also be leveled against Turkey, which will
clearly undermine the valuable features that Turkey can project to the rest of
the region.27
Concluding Observations
The dramatic set of events in the Middle East, described as the Arab Spring,
creates a tremendous bias for hope for the future of open and pluralistic political
systems in a region, which has often been identied as being one of the major
exceptional strongholds of authoritarianism. The Arab Spring in the longer-run
is also likely to have positive repercussions on the relevance of the Turkish ex-
perience and the nature and depth of its inuence. Turkey is more likely to build
up its economic and cultural ties if countries in the region are characterized by
open, democratic systems. In the short-term, however, the Arab Spring exposed
the assertive foreign policy of the AKP to a series of major challenges and in
doing so exposed some of its major limitations. In economic terms, Turkey’s
relations with the Arab Middle East, notably in countries like Libya and Syria
have experienced serious setbacks.28 Turkey was able to withstand the impact
of the global nancial crisis in 2008 by diversifying its trade away from Europe
towards the Middle East and North Africa. In the midst of continuing global
recession in 2011 and 2012, further diversication towards the Middle Eastern
markets may not be a viable option. Furthermore, “the zero problems with
Turkish foreign policy was
clearly confronted with an
ethics versus self-interest
dilemma
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
17
SUMMER 2012
neighbors approach” experienced serious setbacks as Turkish policy makers
were squeezed between the existing regimes that they previously supported in
the past and the opposition movements that challenged these same regimes. The
result was lack of coherence and a series of adaptations, which led to a U-turn
in Turkey’s foreign policy.
Turkish foreign policy was clearly confronted with an ethics versus self-in-
terest dilemma. An ethical approach demanded a single-minded commitment to
democratic policy. This, in turn, however, came into contradiction with stability
and economic interests, at least from a short-term to medium term perspective.
Our major conclusion is that this dilemma is not unique to Turkey. Similar criti-
cisms apply to Europe and the United States. One could easily criticize that the
Western response also lacked coherence. Why, for example did a NATO inter-
vention take place in Libya and not in Syria where the regime was equally brutal
against its domestic opposition forces? Clearly, important economic interests
were involved in Libya, which were not present in the Syrian case. Similarly,
how could one explain the lack of pressure or action in much of the Arab world
where authoritarian regimes continued without any kind of opposition, such as
Saudi Arabia or where opposition movements were repressed at an early stage
in gulf countries such as Bahrain?
A central argument of the present paper is that Turkey could make a bigger
and more constructive impact in the region through controlled activism, acting
through coalitions and in close alignments with the United States and major Eu-
ropean countries. Excessive pro-activism and the overly vocal criticism of Israel
may pay dividends in Turkish domestic politics and reaching the Arab streets.
Yet, it may not be the best strategy in terms of Turkey’s longer-term interests.
The more that Turkey is actively involved in the domestic and regional politics
of the Middle East, the more its likely to contribute to further instability and
divisiveness in an already highly volatile region where political change for the
time being may lead to further divisions and sectarian violence, as opposed to a
relatively smooth transition to open and pluralistic political systems.
Endnotes
1. The present paper should be considered as a sequel to two earlier contributions, see Ziya
Öniş and Şuhnaz Yılmaz, “Between Europeanization and Euro-Asianism: Foreign Policy Activism
in Turkey during the AKP Era” Turkish Studies, Vol. 10, No. 1, (2009), pp. 7-24; Ziya Öniş,
“Multiple Faces of the ‘New’ Turkish Foreign Policy: Underlying Dynamics and a Critique,”
Insight Turkey, Vol. 13, No. 1, (2011), pp. 47-65. On recent dynamism of Turkish foreign policy,
see Ronald Linden et. al., Turkey and its Neighbors: Foreign Relations in Transition (Boulder Co:
Lynne Rienner, 2011). For the political economy of Turkish foreign policy, see Kemal Kirişci,
“The Transformation of Turkish Foreign Policy: The Rise of the Trading State,” New Perspec-
tives on Turkey, No. 40, (2009), pp. 29-57. For the domestic Dynamics of Turkish foreign policy,
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
18 INSIGHT TURKEY
see Fuat Keyman, “Globalization, Modernity and Democracy: Turkish Foreign Policy 2009 and
Beyond,” Perceptions: Journal of International Affairs, Vol. XV, No. 3-4, (2010), pp. 1-20. For
a recent special issue on Turkey’s changing relations with Middle East, see Turkish Studies, Vol.
12, No. 4, (2011).
2. Pınar Bilgin,A return to ‘Civilizational Geopolitics in the Mediterranean? Changing Geo-
political Images of the European Union and Turkey in the post-Cold War Era” Geopolitics, Vol. 9,
No. 2, (2004), pp. 269-291; Pınar Bilgin, and Ali Bilgiç, “Turkey’s New Foreign Policy Towards
Eurasia,” Eurasian Geography and Economics, Vol. 52, No.2, (2011), pp. 173-195.
3. On the AKP’s zero problems with neighbors strategy and the importance of Ahmet
Davutoğlu’s “strategic depth” perspective in this context, see Ahmet Davutoğlu, Stratejik Derinlik:
Türkiye’nin Uluslararası Konumu, (İstanbul: Küre Yayınları, 2001).
4. In the case of Sudan, for example, Erdoğan backed Omar al-Bashir, the infamous Sudanese
leader due to his human rights violations, by saying, “a Muslim can never commit genocide.”
5. Asef Bayat, Life as Politics: How Ordinary People Change the Middle East (Amsterdam:
Amsterdam University Press, 2010); Robert Springborg, ‘The Precarious Economics of Arab
Springs,’ Survival, Vol. 53, No. 6, (2011), pp. 85-104.
6. Eva Bellin, “Coercive Institutions and Coercive Leaders,” Marsha Posusney and Michele
Angrist (ed.), Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Regimes and Resistance (London: Lynne Ri-
enner Publishers, 2005), pp. 36-37; Oliver Schlumberger (ed.), Debating Arab Authoritarianism:
Dynamics and Durability in Non-democratic Regimes (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007);
Milan Svolik, “Power Sharing and Leadership Dynamics in Authoritarian Regimes,” American
Journal of Political Science, Vol. 53, No. 2, (2009), pp. 477-94; Erica Frantz, and Natasha Ezrow,
The Politics of Dictatorships: Institutions and Outcomes in Authoritarian Regimes (Boulder: Lynne
Rienner, 2011)
7. Recent impact of the elections in Egypt and its likely political consequences is visible as of
January 2012. Indeed, the rise of Islamist politics is not a phenomenon unique to Egypt. Similar
processes are occurring in countries such as Tunisia and Libya. See, “Egypt election tallies favor
Islamists,” Al Jazeera, December 1, 2011; Martin Indyk, “Prospects for Democracy in Egypt,”
Brookings Institute Foreign Policy Trip Reports 35, (January 23, 2012).
8. Erdoğan called Mubarak to leave by saying that “You should listen to the people and their
rightful demands... You should take the necessary steps to satisfy the Egyptian people’s demands
rst without providing an opportunity for those who have other plans for Egypt. Demands for free-
dom cannot be postponed and cannot be neglected.” For details, see “Erdoğan urges Mubarak to
heed people’s call for change,” Today’s Zaman, February 2, 2011. For further discussion on Tur-
key’s approach to Egypt, see İhsan Dağı, “Turkish Model: Neither Authoritarian Nor Islamist,”
Today’s Zaman, February 14, 2011.
9. Turkey heavily invested in Libya especially in the contracting sector. Projects worth up to
20.5 billion dollars in total were undertaken by Turkish contracting and construction rms. The
number of registered companies operating in Libya by the end of 2009 was 115. The total trade
volume in 2010 amounted to 2.36 billion dollars. This data was gathered from The Republic of
Turkey Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
10. For the improvements in Syrian-Turkish relations during the AKP era, see Meliha Benli
Altunışık and Özlem Tür, “From Distant Neighbors to Partners? Changing Syrian-Turkish Rela-
tions,” Security Dialogue, Vol. 37, No. 2, (2006), pp. 229-248.
11. Liam Stack, “In Slap at Syria, Turkey Shelters Anti-Assad Fighters,” The New York Times,
October 27, 2011.
12. According to a recent survey, 73 percent in the Arab world believes that Turkey has be-
come more inuential in the Middle Eastern politics and 66 percent of them think that Turkey can
be a model for countries in the Middle East, as a recent survey reveals. See, Mensur Akgün et al.,
The Perception of Turkey in the Middle East 2010 (İstanbul: TESEV Publications 2011), p. 12.
According to Telhami’s survey results Erdoğan is the most favorable leader in the Arab world, see
TURKEY AND THE ARAB SPRING: BETWEEN ETHICS AND SELF-INTEREST
19
SUMMER 2012
Shibley Telhami, “The 2011 Arab Public Opinion Poll,” conducted in October 2011. Available at
www.brookings.edu.
13. Ziya Öniş, “Conservative Globalists versus Defensive Nationalists: Political Parties and
Paradoxes of Europeanization in Turkey,” Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans, Vol. 9,
No. 3, (2007), pp. 247-261.
14. Ahmet Kuru, Secularism and State Policies toward Religion: The United States, France,
and Turkey (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
15. Malike Bileydi Koc, “Reections on the Davos Crisis in the Turkish Press and the Views
of Opinion Leaders of the Turkish Jews on the Crisis,” Turkish Studies, Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 383-
398.
16. Kemal Kirişci, “Turkey’s ‘Demonstrative Effect’ and the Transformation of the Middle
East,” Insight Turkey, Vol. 13, No. 2, (2011), pp. 35-55.
17. Data is obtained from the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey.
18. On discussion of the relevance of the “Turkish model” or “models” with reference to the
Middle East, see Seymen Atasoy, “The Turkish Example: A Model for Change in the Middle
East?,” Middle East Policy, Vol. 18, No. 3, (2011), pp. 86-100.
19. For a comprehensive empirical account of Turkey’s regional power capabilities in the
Middle East, see O. Bahadır Dinçer and Mustafa Kutlay, “Türkiye’nin Ortadoğu’daki Bölgesel
Güç Kapasitesi: Mümkünün Sınırları,” USAK Reports, Report No: 2012-03.
20. Sean Kane, “The Coming Turkish Iranian Competition in Iraq,” USIP Special Report,
276, (June 2011).
21. See Mohammad Ayoob’s recent contribution in this context, “Beyond the Democratic
Wave in the Arab World: The Middle East’s Turko-Persian Future,” Insight Turkey, Vol. 13,
No.2, (2011), pp. 57-70.
22. Ziya Öniş, “Multiple Faces of the ‘New’ Turkish Foreign Policy: Underlying Dynamics
and a Critique,” Insight Turkey, Vol. 13, No. 1, (2011), pp. 47-65.
23. Adrian Michaels, “Turkey says joining EU is still top priority,” The Telegraph, July 8,
2010.
24. F. Stephen Larrabee, “Turkey’s New Geopolitics,” Survival, Vol. 52, No. 2, (2010), p.
159.
25. On the importance of a reformed European neighborhood policy in promoting democracy
in the wider Middle east in the context of the Arab Spring and the need to co-operate with Turkey
in this respects see Eduard Soler I Lecha, “The EU, Turkey, and the Arab Spring: From Parallel
Approaches to a Joint Strategy?,” Natalie Tocci et. al. (eds.), Turkey and the Arab Spring: Impli-
cations for Turkish Foreign Policy From a Transatlantic Perspective, GMF Mediterranean Paper
Series, 2011; see also, Nathalie Tocci and Jean-Pierre Cassarino, “Rethinking the EU’s Mediter-
ranean Policies Post-1/11,” IAI Working Papers, No.11|06, (March 2011).
26. On Turkey’s continuing democratization challenges see Meltem Müftüler-Baç and Fuat
Keyman, “The Era of Dominant-Party Politics,” Journal of Democracy, Vol. 23, No. 1, (2012),
pp. 85-99; Berna Turam, “Are Rights and Liberties Safe?”, Journal of Democracy, Vol. 23, No.
1, (2012), pp. 109-118.
27. On Turkey’s continued inability to resolve the Kurdish question, see Ragan Updegraff, “The
Kurdish Question,” Journal of Democracy, Vol. 23, No. 1, (2012), pp. 119-128. Also relevant in
this context is Kerem Öktem, Angry Nation: Turkey Since 1989 (London: Zed Books, 2011).
28. After the crackdown of relations, Turkey-Syria economic relations deteriorated abruptly.
For example, Damascus had closed down its crossing near Urfa, in eastern Turkey. Turkish truck
drivers in Syria were forced to leave their trucks on the Syrian side of the border and walk to Turk-
ish side. In December 2011, Syria unilaterally suspended its free trade agreement with Turkey, and
introduced taxes of up to 30 cents on Turkish exports entering Syria, whereby Turkey retaliated
quickly by doing the same. For further details, see Dan Bilefsky, “Turkish Border Businesses Miss
the Syrian Neighbors,” The New York Times, December 12, 2011.
ZİYA ÖNİŞ
20 INSIGHT TURKEY
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Due to its geographical proximity to conflict zones, Turkey has become the target country for asylum seekers and refugees from different countries having diverse ethnic origins. Turkey’s emerging role as a target country became even more problematic due to the outbreak of the Syrian Civil War in 2011, triggered by the Arab Spring. The Syrian conflict not only led to an increased flow of refugees but also destabilized the Turkish borders. In this regard, Turkey has established a set of strategies and transformations to tackle these issues. This paper examines how migration has evolved as a security issue for Turkey in the last four decades, in general. In particular, the study deals with the security-related issues in terms of migration from the Turkish perspective and evaluates the refugee crisis in 2016 and its implications for Turkey and the European Union. The article concludes with reactions to irregular migration and the refugee flow by shedding light on both Turkey and the European Union’s perspectives.
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The Syrian conflict led to a countrywide realignment in both territorial and demographic traits with catastrophic consequences for the population. More than 6,6 million people were forced to leave their homeland, and a further 6,9 million became Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). Lately, a subsequent consolidation of the population ensued, which witnessed a partial self-repatriation of IDPs. Here, we report the preliminary results of a study to explore migration motives in the framework of the repatriation aid programme provided for these IDPs. The programme was coordinated by the Melkite Greek Catholic Archeparchy of Homs in and around the city of Homs. Moreover, we provide an overview of the geographic territory covered by the initiative and of the relevant events of the conflict which affected IDPs from the region. Key results from our analysis include the observation that individual experiences of traumatization and deterioration of social status are major contributing factors that fuel resettlement. Our work provides timely guidance for other ongoing struggles and emerging crises by highlighting the causes and circumstances of internal migration.
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This chapter focuses on the Kurdish question, which has remained one of the most important issues in Turkey since the Republic’s foundation a hundred years ago. It argues that the Kurdish question should be unpacked by addressing three sub-questions that have shaped modern Turkey in fundamental ways: who belongs, who gets to be represented, and how to manage territorial differences and territorial borders. These three important aspects of nation-state building have been directly influenced by the presence of Kurds, their shifting ways of agency, and how the political elites have responded to these ideational and structural constraints. In other words, rather than being merely a question of how to manage ethnic minorities, the Kurdish question is a constitutive factor in envisioning modern Turkey’s national identity, institutions, and territory.
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The "axis-shift" discussions on Turkish foreign policy activism over the last couple of years have attracted remarkable international attention. Some pundits have attempted to place Turkey's increasing relations with its neighbors within the context of an ideological and identical reshuffling of Turkish foreign policy principles. While finding the "shift of axis" argument a rather crude characterization, the paper nevertheless argues that there are subtle shifts in Turkish foreign policy orientation. In this context, the paper aims to identify both the elements of continuity and rupture in the style and behavior of Turkish foreign policy. In fact, there are solid political economy fundamentals and legitimate reasons for Turkey to pursue a multidimensional and more assertive foreign policy in the emerging multi-polar world system. However, the present paper underlines that Turkey's multi-dimensional foreign policy activism with no firm axis may have potentially counterproductive consequences regarding Turkey's longterm national interests as well as its ability to play a stabilizing role as a pro-active and benign regional power.
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Why do secular states pursue different policies toward religion? This book provides a generalizable argument about the impact of ideological struggles on the public policy making process, as well as a state-religion regimes index of 197 countries. More specifically, it analyzes why American state policies are largely tolerant of religion, whereas French and Turkish policies generally prohibit its public visibility, as seen in their bans on Muslim headscarves. In the United States, the dominant ideology is “passive secularism,” which requires the state to play a passive role, by allowing public visibility of religion. Dominant ideology in France and Turkey is “assertive secularism,” which demands that the state play an assertive role in excluding religion from the public sphere. Passive and assertive secularism became dominant in these cases through certain historical processes, particularly the presence or absence of an ancien régime based on the marriage between monarchy and hegemonic religion during state-building periods.
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Two geographers specializing in Turkey's international relations examine the reframing of foreign policy issues under the country's Justice and Development Party (JDP; also known by its Turkish acronym AKP), in power since 2002. After first locating the JDP within Turkey's current political landscape, the authors investigate how notions of civilizational geopolitics have led to a "new geographic imagination" under JDP that has influenced foreign policy thinking. The authors argue that JDP foreign policy exhibits some continuity with that of earlier governments in terms of activist policies toward Central Eurasia (comprising the Middle East, Central Asia, and Transcaucasia), but are based on a new conceptual foundation that views Turkey not as part of Western civilization but as the emerging leader of its own "civilizational basin" (consisting of the former Ottoman territories plus adjoining regions inhabited by Muslim and Turkic peoples). They then explore the implications for Turkey's future relations with the Central Eurasian region (of which Turkey is assumed to be the leader) and countries of the West (viewed now as "neighbors" but no longer "one of us").
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Cooperation between Israel and Turkey has always been important for both states. In line with the historical process, although relations between the two countries have fluctuated from time to time, they have always been maintained at a certain level. An incident that caused tension in relations between the two countries occurred in Davos on January 29, 2009 causing global repercussions. This study analyzes the Davos incident within the context of Atatürk's national policy, and is based on an analysis of the relevant news in the Turkish media, as well as on interviews of the opinion leaders of the Turkish Jews. The analysis aims to evaluate reflections in Israel and Turkey on the 2009 Davos meeting, within the context of Atatürk's national policy and in relation to the views of the opinion leaders. As a result of the analysis of four newspapers with different publication policies, it was determined that conservative newspapers commented that the Davos meeting had been positive for Turkey. On the other hand, a newspaper with a leftist world view reported the news with exactly the opposite comments. In the interviews, opinion leaders evaluated the Turkish prime minister's words as serving to factionalize Turkish Jews, by giving them a feeling of insecurity, and to mobilize radical factions in the society.
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While Turkey remains tied to the West through its membership in NATO, the Council of Europe and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, under the leadership of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his energetic foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu, the country has launched a number of new foreign-policy initiatives that have increased its international stature and regional influence. Ankara's new foreign-policy activism has been particularly visible in the Middle East, where Turkey has sought to strengthen ties with its Muslim neighbours, especially Iran and Syria. Relations with Russia have improved as well, especially in the economic field, and Ankara has recently sought to mend fences with Armenia, another long-time adversary. This does not mean, however, that Turkey is turning its back on the West or that 'Econo-Islamism' (a blend of business and religious-political interests) has taken charge in Ankara. Turkey still wants, and needs, strong ties with the United States. But in future Turkey is likely to continue to broaden and diversify its foreign policy and be more hesitant to automatically follow Washington's lead Managing the US-Turkish relationship will require patience and skilful diplomacy on both sides, more so now than ever before.