The Mideast Channel
A Partnership of the NAF Middle East Task Force and the Project on Middle East Political Science Twitter Facebook RSS
Daily Brief Latest from the Blog Latest from FP

Posted By Joshua W. Walker Share

Listening to the Beltway rhetoric one would think that Turkey is a newly emerging threat to the United States and interests in the Middle East. The speed with which Washington has gone sour on its self-declared "model partner" is astonishing and should be cause for concern. Having just returned from Turkey and with meetings with Turkish officials, it is clear that Turkey has not suddenly "switched sides" but rather still objectively represents America's best ally. Not because Ankara blindly goes along with Western policies or is subservient to America, but because it offers the U.S. more strategic possibilities and support than any other state in the region.

Unlike Arab allied governments which lack legitimacy among their own populations and Israel that is besieged on all sides, Turkey is a truly democratic, independent, and powerful ally to be courted, not demonized by the U.S. Today, Turkey represents a critical partner to the U.S. on its three most urgent strategic issues: Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran. On Afghanistan, Turkey is better placed culturally and militarily than any other NATO ally to play a leading role in Kabul; in this respect, it is America's ideal partner on Afghanistan. The soft and hard power advantages that the Turks enjoy among the Afghan population offer a sorely needed bright spot in an otherwise dark struggle for America. On Iraq, there is renewed impetus to resolve the long-simmering Kurdish issue given the battle against the PKK and continued incursions into northern Iraq. Without Turkey's constructive engagement, America's vital interests and the future of Iraq cannot be secured. Short of coercive action, Ankara is determined to prevent a nuclear Iran and has been attempting its own trilateral diplomacy with the help of Brasila to deal with Tehran. Unfortunately, these attempts -- which were originally encouraged by the Obama administration -- have led to a divide on the means necessary for the same end goal of a nuclear weapon-free Iran.

Given the timing of the Mavi-Marmara incident in the lead-up to the Iran sanction vote at the UN, former friends of Turkey are linking the two events and blaming the AKP's "Islamist" roots rather than looking at the tough domestic realities confronting Turkey's leaders. While the AKP has admittedly gone over the top in its rhetoric given the domestic pressures it faces from a resurgent nationalist movement and upcoming national elections, its actions speak much louder than its words. Diplomatic relations remain intact with Israel despite the killing of nine Turkish citizens (one of whom was a dual American citizen) and Turkey remains actively engaged in all of its Western commitments and institutions.

As the two oldest democracies in the region experiencing dynamic demographic and economic growth with vastly differing consequences, Israeli-Turkish relations will continue to ebb and flow. The present crisis is serious, but it is not unprecedented. The norm for Israeli-Turkish relations is tension, contrary to the rosy pictures now being painted retrospectively about historic relations to legitimate sensational claims. The fact is that Turkey's nationalist military government downgraded relations with Israel in the 1980s and it was only as a result of domestic politics and the PKK threat from Syria that brought about the "strategic alignment" in the 1990s that was always predicated on progress toward a permanent peace and two-state solution. In this context, the role of the United States is not to take sides, but help mediate the immediate crises with a perspective on longer-term strategic objectives.

For the United States, Turkey's newfound swagger can make it either a valuable asset or an uncertain partner. By claiming that Ankara is determined to join the Arab League or the Hamas-Hezbollah-Iran axis, rather than focusing on the fact that this traditionally conservative Muslim-majority, secular democracy is still a European Union candidate and NATO ally since 1952, Washington is only hurting its own interests.

Turkish policies can complement the United States' if framed within a broader and longer-term perspective of the transatlantic alliance that shares common goals and values even if the short-term means differ. What is needed now is not an emotional and reactional appraisal of Turkish rhetoric but one that recognizes that contributions to American and European goals may come in a new, and perhaps unfamiliar, guise that requires more, not less engagement.

Encouraging Ankara's newfound assertiveness and diplomatic initiatives, rather than demonizing it for tactical differences, will ensure that Turkey remains a constructive transatlantic partner and committed U.S. ally in the long run. The fact is that Turkey is a rising power on the international scene as a G-20 founding member, with a European seat on the UN Security Council, and head of the Organization of Islamic Conference in one of the most critical geographies in the world. Turkey has arrived and is not going anywhere, regardless of Washington's rhetoric about "Who lost Turkey?" Or  "Where is Turkey going?" Therefore, despite all of its bluster and rhetoric, Turkey remains America's most crucial ally in region.

Joshua W. Walker is a Fellow at the Transatlantic Academy where the yearlong report on Turkish foreign policy "Getting to Zero: Turkey, its Neighbors, and the West" was recently published.

AFP/Getty Images

EXPLORE:MIDDLE EAST, TURKEY
 

AVRAHAM FLEISHER

6:27 PM ET

June 25, 2010

Turkey and anti-American alliance

Turkey in recent years has wasted no tme in getting very cozy with Iran, Syria and Venezuela. This has been indicative over the past few years. Many people tend to see this as a brand new thing, but it isn't.

Turkey has seen a growing tendancy towards integrating itself with the Arab/Islamic Middle East. This has come with some abandonment of the Turkish drive to intigrate itself into Europe. This may be a reaction to failed attempts to join the EU.

It chose the Israeli defensive action in Gaza in early 2009 as the public starting point for driving a wedge between itself and Israel, the U.S. and the West. It has only strengthened this wedge by subsequent increase of relations with Iran and Syria and it's open support for terror supporters like the IHH which has ties to Al-Qaeda.

 

TURAN K.

10:15 PM ET

June 27, 2010

Avraham forgets to include to

Avraham forgets to include to his list of Turkey's infamous allies. Let me help: North Korea, Cuba, Zimbabwe, Sudan, the Third Reich, the Darht Vader and yes also, the one he who must not be named. Yes, these unspeakable Turks, the bastards!, and their allies.

 

FRANKIER

6:50 PM ET

June 25, 2010

Hey, wasn't Israel USA's best

Hey, wasn't Israel USA's best ally in the ME? LOL!!

Maybe the US would have a lot more allies in the ME if only would treat them all equally.

 

LEONKUSHNER

10:50 AM ET

June 27, 2010

Is Turkey US's best ME Ally?

You guys are all fools. Keep sticking your heads in the sand. Every year Turkey becomes more radical in it's Islamic beliefs. When Turkey partners with Iran who's side are you going to be on?

Israel is the west's first line of defense against these terrorists. They have our back and we should have theirs. Wake Up!

 

AVRAHAM FLEISHER

1:43 AM ET

June 26, 2010

IPPON, you really need to get your facts straight

"after all we give them $10 million daily, even though poverty is at record level in US. Give them latest arms and technology that they then sell to our enemies. Not to mention the recent expose of them trying to sell nuclear arms to what was at that time the rogue and apartheid state of South Africa. Moreover, they still continue to refuse stop building a few houses(that by the way whole world says are illegal) so that there would be less of anti american sentiment in places like Iraq and afghanistan and will lead to fewer of our soldiers being killed."

1.) Most of what Israel recieves from the U.S. is military aid. Economic aid is in the process of being phased out. This relationship is mutually beneficial. Israel does recieve money for weapons and 75% of that money is spent in the U.S. to procure weapons and keep Americans at work. America also recieves Israeli military technology such as the trophy anti-RPG system which will protect your tanks from rockets. Many joint endevours also exist.

2.) Yes, Israel has sold some unmanned arial vehicles(developed in Israel, NOT by the U.S.) to China. We also sold the same equipment to the U.S. Israel was going to sell the Phalcon, an early warning defense system to China but you persuaded our government to back out of the deal even though it was NOT your technology we were selling. The U.S. sold what is basically the same thing to Saudi Arabia in 1981. The U.S. has sold billions in arms to Egypt and Jordan and still supplies Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan with the latest in military technology.

3.) There has only been speculation that Israel gave Apartheid South Africa weapons of mass destruction and never any deffinitive evidence of proof. If it should be found true in the future that Israel did give apartheid South Africa WMD, then I think an honest and sincere apology to the current South Africa by Israel via diplomatic channels is in order.

From 1982-1984 the largest suppliers of military equipment to South Africa in order were Arab oil exporters like Saudi Arabia and Iraq, The U.S., West Germany, Japan, the UK, France, Other African countries and lastly, Israel. We played a miniscule role in supplying them when compared to other countries.

I do believe we are guilty of two things in regard to South Africa.

We were among the last to join the boycott and divestment of the Pretoria regime when we should have been among the first.

Secondly, we abandoned some of our own principles to accomodate some of the aprtheid leaders like one man who we allowed to visit our country and place a wreath at the Holocast Memorial in Jerusalem while fully knowing he had been a Nazi sympathizer. He will go unnamed here.

4.) The U.N. general assembly has condemned the settlements, yes, but this hardly makes them illegal. UN general assembly resolutions must be interpreted by who constitutes them and it should be remembered that these resolutions represent the views of the consituents who voted on them rather than any legal standing. Many international figures have spoken on the legality of the settlements and agree that they are not illegal.

On an entirely different matter, a settlement freeze is currently in place and does not apply to Jerusalem. Jerusalem is a matter that must be negotiated on rather than a unilateral withdraw. No new homes are being built in the settlements. What is happening is some rennovation and additions being added to current homes. Who says an Israeli living in Pesagot can't install an new bathroom? Does Israel tell Americans where they can build in Washington D.C.?

The settlements are completely irrelevant. People are going to hate the U.S. regardless of what Israel does. Our not building a bathroom in a town isn't going to save your soldiers already in harms way. I wish this were the case and then I would be most vocal on my support for saving American lives by ending construction.

Most, if not all the settlements will be evacuated in a final peace agreement with the PA. We cannot just unilaterally withdraw like we did from Lebanon in 2000 and Gaza in 2005 without some form of peace agreement. This formula of peace and then Israeli withdraw is what allowed us to successfully end the official state of war between us and Egypt in 1978 and Jordan in 1994.

 

FRANKIER

10:45 AM ET

June 26, 2010

Fleisher - Everybody can see

Fleisher -

Everybody can see through your reply the zionist tactics. When caught with your hands in the cookie jar: make the offense look modest, admit to it and promise not to do it anymore. Then, keep working toward implementing the zionist final solution to complete the stealing of as much land as possible via the ethnic cleansing of the palestinian people from the region.

Behind all the nice words and facade civility, Israel is doing to the palestinian people the same thing Germany did to the jewish people. The only difference is the methodology. If Israel could only fully silence the international media and kill the internet, Israel would consider seriously using the same methodology as Germany.

I doubt that one day the US people will wake up and see that the hate around the world directed toward the US is the result of the "special" relationship with Israel. And BTW, you can keep the development of your weapons and anti-RPG to yourself as we would not need them if the US didn't have to go to Iraq and Afghanistan to fight a war that you manufactured. And people still ask if we miss Bush-Cheney .....

 

BUDAHH

4:16 PM ET

June 26, 2010

Iran is sponsoring the shia goups and is suppling the deadly

IED's which kill the most U.S soldiers. Saudi Arabia on the other hand sponsors the Sunni groups. But lets blame Israel for SHia and Sunna murdering each other, lets blame Israel for the death of U.S troops by muslim fanatics. Lets blame evryone except for the people who cause all thes horrors.

 

FRANKIER

12:10 AM ET

June 27, 2010

BUDAHH .... can you offer a

BUDAHH .... can you offer a reason why these people want to kill US soldiers?

 

FRANKIER

12:12 AM ET

June 27, 2010

LITZ ... can you offer a

LITZ ... can you offer a reson why (some) arabs with guns want to kill US soldiers?

 

FRANKIER

12:14 AM ET

June 27, 2010

BUDDHA .... "Iran is

BUDDHA .... "Iran is sponsoring the shia goups and is suppling the deadly
IED's which kill the most U.S soldiers" ... from their point of view, the US is supplying Israel with the deadly apache helicopters and F16 that kill ALL the palestinians. And that was way before Iran started to play a role in the palestinian conflict. It is all a matter of perspective.

 

FRANKIER

12:14 AM ET

June 27, 2010

BUDDHA .... "Iran is

BUDDHA .... "Iran is sponsoring the shia goups and is suppling the deadly
IED's which kill the most U.S soldiers" ... from their point of view, the US is supplying Israel with the deadly apache helicopters and F16 that kill ALL the palestinians. And that was way before Iran started to play a role in the palestinian conflict. It is all a matter of perspective.

 

BUDAHH

6:01 PM ET

June 27, 2010

Frankier sure I can give you a reason

Iran sees itself as a hegemonial power and it wants to spread it's influence around the middle east, the only reason that Iran cares about the sunni palestinian's because it serves their intersts, spread the revolution, they want to get the little satan before the big satan.
If Iran will see that Iraq is democratic it will threaten their power because the Iranian poeple will see democracy and stability in Iraq and they will want the same, they cannot efford a big shia population without their influence it will be the end of their rule and the mullahs don't care to sacrifice a million Iraqis to keep in power, if you think they kill us troops because of Israel you are wrong, why do they support the hutti rebels terrorists in Yemen????Why do they support the shia's in the gulf and are meddling in every country's affairs, not because of love, it is the old fight between shia and sunna and the domination of the muslim world, the mullahs smell fear that is why they are killing us troops. Nothing to do with Israel if you belive they are doing what they are doing becaus eof palestinians you are living in a dream.

 

TURAN K.

10:23 PM ET

June 27, 2010

Josh, Thank you for

Josh,

Thank you for articulating the common sense and presenting it forcefully. It is time for the cooler heads to prevail on the Turkish-American relations.

 

VILKSSWEDEN

1:51 AM ET

June 28, 2010

Yeah, Turkey is still an ally, but a changing one.

First of all, these statements are blatant falsehoods:

Without Turkey's constructive engagement, America's vital interests and the future of Iraq cannot be secured. Short of coercive action, Ankara is determined to prevent a nuclear Iran and has been attempting its own trilateral diplomacy with the help of Brasila to deal with Tehran.

Turkey has been less than constructive with Iraq. Just recently, they were invading Iraq themselves, bombing Kurdish villages. I hardly see that kind of violence as "constructive" particularly considering that the Kurdish north is pretty much the most peaceful, settled area of the whole country for US forces to deal with.

The Iran deal is laughable. Turkey was trying to create a deal that would prevent sanctions on one of its new regional best friends. Without getting into details, the Turkey-Iran nuclear deal would still allow Iran enough enriched uraniam, through Turkey and clandestine sources (N. Korea and that already processed in Iran) to build at least one bomb, if not more. Turkey knows this well.

Finally, Turkey's demographics are changing. It was our best ally when it was ruled by a secular, economic and military minded elite. Now, the peasants from the countryside have streamed into the city. Their traditional, religious mentality and new voting prowess coupled with the corruption of the secular parties has given rise to a change in Turkish politics. Failure to recognize this is tantamount to sleeping at the wheel.

 

LINQINGSHAN003

4:18 AM ET

June 28, 2010

yuhjkhkhj

sfsd;fspkfdskfsdsukfuofodjfuio

 

QPZMGR

2:17 AM ET

July 12, 2010

This looks like another

This looks like another American administration, chain-jerked by its client state -- a sign of either pathetic stupidity or pathetic inability to put the nation's interests before the screams of a well-financed domestic lobby.

The "no" votes of Turkey and Brazil represent the views of a world turning ever more strongly against the little Prussia we have inserted into a volatile region, against the will of its inhabitants -- except for hootchie mama leaders such as the Little King of Jordan, the senile monarchists of Saudi Arabia and the tin-pot Pharaoh of Egypt. Everybody sees the hypocrisy of sanctioning Iran while ignoring Israel's nuclear threat. And few are deluded that the hysteria about Iran comes from any other source.

The US "distinguished" itself from the rest of the world by reacting tepidly to the Israeli killing of peace luxury rolex watches demonstrators on an unarmed ship bearing relief supplies.

That's called "isolation." Self-imposed -- and what do we get for it? An increasingly loopy right-wing Israeli government that misses few opportunities to spoil our interests.

 

BUYNFLSHOP

5:18 AM ET

July 21, 2010

buynflshop

Wholesale NFL Jerseys
Cheap NFL Jerseys
NFL Jerseys
NFL Football Jerseys
Women NFL Jerseys
Kid NFL Jerseys
Super Bowl Jerseys
Super Bowl NFL Jerseys
Throwback Jerseys
Throwback NFL Jerseys
Cheap Throwback Jerseys
Wholesale Throwback Jerseys
Cheap Super Bowl Jerseys
Wholesale Super Bowl Jerseys
youth nfl jerseys wholesale
youth nfl jerseys cheap
nfl youth jerseys
Baltimore Ravens Jerseys
Chicago Bears Jerseys
Cincinnati Bengals Jerseys
Denver Broncos Jerseys
Dallas Cowboys Jerseys
Green Bay Packers Jerseys
Indianapolis Colts Jerseys
Minnesota Vikings Jerseys
New England Patriots Jerseys
New Orleans Saints Jerseys
New York Jets Jerseys
Arizona Cardinals Jerseys
Buffalo Bills Jerseys
Atlanta Falcons Jerseys
Carolina Panthers Jerseys
Cleveland Browns Jerseys
Houston Texans Jerseys
Detroit Lions Jerseys
Jacksonville Jaguars Jerseys
Kansas City Chiefs Jerseys
Miami Dolphins Jerseys
New York Giants Jerseys
Philadelphia Eagles Jerseys
San Francisco 49ers Jerseys
Oakland Raiders Jerseys
Seattle Seahawks Jerseys
Pittsburgh Steelers Jerseys
St Louis Rams Jerseys
San Diego Chargers Jerseys
Tampa Bay Buccaneers Jerseys
Tennessee Titans Jerseys
Washington Redskins Jerseys
Ray Lewis Jerseys
Ed Reed Jerseys
Joe Flacco Jerseys
Terrell Suggs Jerseys
Dick Butkus Jerseys
Greg Olsen Jerseys
Matt Forte Jerseys
Devin Hester Jerseys
Walter Payton Jerseys
Brian Urlacher Jerseys
Lance Briggs Jerseys
Jay Cutler Jerseys
Carson Palmer Jerseys
Rey Maualuga Jerseys
Chad Johnson Jerseys
Demarcus Ware Jerseys
Jason Witten Jerseys
Terrell Owens Jerseys
Felix Jones Jerseys
Marion Barber Navy Jerseys
Marion Barber Jerseys
Emmitt Smith Jerseys
Miles Austin Jerseys
Roger Staubach Jerseys
Troy Aikman Jerseys
Tony Romo Jerseys
Eddie Royal Jerseys
Brandon Marshall Jerseys
Aaron Rodgers Jerseys
A.J. Hawk Jerseys
Donald Driver Jerseys
Greg Jennings Jerseys
Peyton Manning Jerseys
Dallas Clark Jerseys
Robert Mathis Jerseys
Marvin Harrison Jerseys
Drew Brees Jerseys
Marques Colston Jerseys
Pierre Thomas Jerseys
Reggie Bush Jerseys
Jeremy Shockey Jerseys
Tarvaris Jackson Jerseys
Adrian Peterson Jerseys
Jared Allen Jerseys
Mark Sanchez Jerseys
Thomas Jones Jerseys
Leon Washington Jerseys
Brett Favre Jerseys

 

The Middle East Channel offers unique analysis and insights on this diverse and vital region of more than 400 million.

Read More

Enter your email address to get twice-weekly updates from the Mideast Channel:

Delivered by Constant Contact