TURKEY RISKS BEING PULLED INTO THE ORBIT OF THE MUSLIM
BROTHERHOOD INSTEAD OF SERVING AS A MODEL THAT COMBINES ISLAM AND LIBERAL
VALUES
The TURKISH presumption to be a
“model” for the MIDDLE EAST will be undermined if the UNITED STATES were to
withdraw from the affairs of the region. Absent a strong U.S. involvement, TURKEY
risks being pulled into the orbit of the Muslim Brotherhood instead of serving
as a model that combines Islam and liberal values. That is illustrated by TURKEY’S
SYRIA policy. TURKEY is a crucial partner for the U.S., but it will only be the
“model” that Washington hopes and needs, if the U.S. itself remains committed
to the MIDDLE EAST.
Since the end of the Cold War,
developments in the BALKANS, the CAUCASUS, CENTRAL ASIA and the MIDDLE EAST have
provided the ground for continued strategic cooperation between the UNITED STATES
and TURKEY; concurrently, the two NATO allies have been at odds over issues
such as IRAQ and most recently IRAN. However, despite the frictions that have
been generated by these disagreements, the U.S. and TURKEY have succeeded in
maintaining their close relation, and they have not let their points of
disagreement poison the atmosphere among them. During President Barack Obama’s first
term, a close working relationship evolved between him and TURKISH Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
When TURKEY, then a holder of a
temporary seat on the U.N. Security Council, in 2010 voted against imposing
sanctions on IRAN, the relationship with the UNITED STATES was adversely
affected; however, when TURKEY subsequently agreed to host a radar station as
part of NATO’s missile shield, it was essentially mended. Nonetheless, TURKEY
is not participating fully in the common Western front against IRAN, as it has
not imposed sanctions on a neighbor with whom it enjoys a relation of economic
interdependence. Meanwhile, the hostile nature of the TURKISH-ISRAELI relations
is also a complicating factor between TURKEY and the UNITED STATES.
LOOMING ENERGY ISSUES
Even though the Obama administration
is prosecuting a Pacific pivot, the instability that reigns in the MIDDLE EAST will
ensure that the region maintains a prominent place on the UNITED STATES’ foreign
policy agenda. The unresolved crisis over IRAN’S nuclear ambitions, the ISRAELI-Palestinian
conflict, SYRIA, IRAQ and AFGHANISTAN are all issues that have an impact on TURKISH-AMERICAN
relations. In addition to the conflicts in the wider MIDDLE EAST, developments
in the CAUCASUS, the CASPIAN basin and RUSSIA, with energy issues looming
large, will also provide grounds for cooperation between Ankara and Washington.
However, the IRANIAN issue, the SYRIAN
crisis and TURKISH-ISRAELI tensions are going to be problematic for the two
allies to handle. In addition, the approaching centennial of the ethnic
cleansing of the ARMENIANS from Anatolia in 1915 is destined to cause further
friction, as pressures on the U.S. Congress to pass a genocide resolution can
be expected to mount.
Concerning the IRANIAN nuclear
issue, there is no disagreement between TURKEY and the U.S. as to the principle
that IRAN should not become a nuclear armed power; however, there is
disagreement concerning how that outcome is to be prevented. Even though the
Obama administration is set to pursue the attempts to persuade Tehran from
withdrawing from the nuclear threshold by further tightening sanctions and by
applying diplomatic pressure, it has also made clear that the military option
is on the table. TURKEY, on the other hand, wants to avoid another war in its neighborhood.
Since TURKEY is not even participating in the Western economic sanctions
against IRAN, it is most unlikely that it would take part in a military
operation against IRAN. Most probably, such a development would create tensions
between TURKEY and the U.S. just as the AMERICAN invasion of IRAQ did.
TURKISH AND AMERICAN VIEWS OF A POST-ASSAD SYRIA DO NOT
CONVERGE
In the SYRIAN crisis, Ankara and
Washington are in agreement that President Bashar al-Assad must go. But the TURKISH
and AMERICAN views of a post-Assad SYRIA do not converge. TURKEY has been the
main backer and sponsor of the SYRIAN National Council (SNC), which aspired to
be the leader of the SYRIAN opposition, although it is dominated by the Muslim
Brotherhood, which cannot claim to command anything that resembles majority
support among the SYRIAN population. Indeed, after U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton sharply criticized and disavowed the SNC, a new, supposedly
more inclusive opposition body was recently set up at an opposition gathering
in DOHA. TURKEY did not make its displeasure with the AMERICAN disavowal of its
creation, the SNC, public; instead, Ankara encouraged the SNC to go along with
the change and take its place within the new body. Indeed, the SNC in fact
wields considerable and disproportionate influence within the new opposition council,
which raises the question if the U.S. initiative will achieve the desired
outcome of creating an opposition that is not Islamist-dominated. And the
question still remains whether Ankara will help Washington to bring about a
pluralistic post-Assad SYRIA. The determination of the TURKISH government to
promote the Muslim Brotherhood, as well as TURKEY’S fierce opposition to KURDISH
autonomy in parts of northern SYRIA has the potential to put TURKISH-AMERICAN relations
to test.
HELPING THE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD TO POWER IN DAMASCUS IS THE
MAIN MOTIVATION OF TURKEY’S SYRIAN REGIME CHANGE POLICY
The developments in the MIDDLE EAST in
the wake of the ARAB upheavals have come to illustrate the ambivalence of TURKEY:
on the one hand, TURKEY aspires to present itself as a “model”, of democracy
and economic development; and as it seeks to project power, it ultimately draws
on its participation in a WESTERN security and economic system. It is the very
fact that TURKEY historically enjoys a special relationship with the democratic
West, combining Islam, democracy and market economy, that sustains whatever
soft power it has to inspire potential, budding democracies in the region.
IS TURKEY GOING TO HELP BRING ABOUT A MODERATION OF THE
RISING ISLAMISM IN THE REGION, OR IS THE RISE OF THE BROTHERHOOD ON THE
CONTRARY GOING TO INCITE THE AKP TO REVERT TO ITS ISLAMIST ROOTS
But on the other hand, TURKEY’S
ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) is encouraged by the rise of the
Muslim Brotherhood in the region; helping the Brotherhood to power in Damascus
has indeed been the main motivation of TURKEY’S SYRIAN regime change policy.
Thus, the question becomes who will inspire whom — is TURKEY going to help
bring about a moderation of the rising Islamism in the region, or is the rise
of the Brotherhood on the contrary going to incite the AKP to revert to its
Islamist roots, a tendency that is already visible? It can be assumed that the
policies that Brotherhood governments in the MIDDLE EAST — today in EGYPT,
tomorrow perhaps also in SYRIA — elect to pursue are going to have an impact on
the AKP, as these Sunni movements share much common intellectual ground.
On an early stage, Erdoğan did make
statements that encouraged EGYPTIANS and others to emulate Turkey’s example of
“secularism”; that was not something that went down well with audiences in
Cairo, and Erdoğan has not pursued this line, perhaps because he concluded that
posing as the champion of secularism was not a particularly rewarding tactic,
even though TURKISH “secularism” has in practice privileged Sunni Islam.
WITHOUT A STRONG U.S. INVOLVEMENT, TURKEY RISKS BEING PULLED
INTO THE ORBIT OF THE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD
It is too early to predict whether
Erdoğan’s TURKEY is going to inspire related, ascendant political movements in
the MIDDLE EAST to reform themselves and their countries, or if it will be the
other way around, with these movements providing inspiration for TURKEY. But
there is reason to suspect that the Islamic movements in the region are
ultimately going to remain faithful to their historic legacies, ushering in
another form of authoritarianism instead of a democratic, liberal order.
Indeed, the TURKISH example is itself less than reassuring on this account.
The TURKISH presumption to be a
“model” will be further undermined if the UNITED STATES were to withdraw from
the affairs of the MIDDLE EAST; without a strong U.S. involvement, TURKEY risks
being pulled into the orbit of the Muslim Brotherhood. Indeed, the Syrian
example, where Washington seeks to counter the influence of the Brotherhood
which Ankara has privileged serves as an illustration of the importance of U.S.
involvement. It can be assumed that the AMERICAN disavowal of the SNC
displeased TURKEY, but it is nonetheless likely that Washington’s determination
to midwife a non-Islamist SYRIA will have a sobering effect on Ankara’s
calculus, just as was the case concerning IRAN; when push came to show, TURKEY
joined the U.S. effort to contain Iran, by agreeing to host a crucial part of
NATO’s missile shield. But absent Washington’s involvement, Ankara is certainly
not going to be encouraged to abandon its sponsorship of the Brotherhood.
Even though the Obama administration
is intent on reorienting U.S. strategy, giving priority to the PACIFIC region,
the MIDDLE EAST is sure to retain its prominent place on the U.S. foreign
policy agenda. President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
have enjoyed a close working relationship, and TURKEY will remain a crucial
partner for the UNITED STATES in MIDDLE EASTERN affairs. But the issue of Iran
and the crisis in SYRIA have the potential to put the U.S.-TURKISH relation —
and the Obama-Erdoğan relationship — to test.
UNITED STATES CANNOT OUTSOURCE SYRIAN REGIME CHANGE POLICIES
TO TURKEY
If the political, diplomatic and
economic pressures put in place under U.S. leadership fail to yield the desired
outcome, the IRANIAN nuclear issue may cause new tensions between the UNITED
STATES and TURKEY, as it is highly unlikely that Ankara will be accommodating
if Washington resorts to military action against IRAN. SYRIA meanwhile,
demonstrates how important it is that the U.S. remains involved in the MIDDLE
EAST; Washington’s attempt to midwife a more inclusive SYRIAN opposition that
is not dominated by Islamists, may have challenged Ankara — whose creation, the
Muslim Brotherhood dominated SYRIAN National Council is now submerged within a
broader opposition grouping — but ultimately it may have the effect of encouraging
TURKEY to revise its calculus.
If on the other hand the UNITED
STATES were to withdraw from the MIDDLE EAST, TURKEY would likely be drawn into
the orbit of the ascendant Muslim Brotherhood. What makes TURKEY special as a
“model” in the MIDDLE EAST is — alongside its history — the relationship that
it enjoys with the WEST; but it cannot represent the WEST alone. As the SYRIAN
example clearly illustrates, the UNITED STATES cannot outsource regime change
policies to TURKEY; left to its own devices, an AKP-ruled TURKEY will
invariably be tempted to project power in the region in homegrown ideological
terms. TURKEY is a crucial partner for the U.S., but it will only be the
“model” that Washington hopes and needs, if the U.S. itself remains committed
to the MIDDLE EAST.
By Halil M. Karaveli who is Senior Fellow with the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute
& Silk Road Studies Program Joint Center, and Editor of the Turkey Analyst.
And . Kemal Kaya who is a
Nonresident Senior Fellow with the Center.
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