OPINION
• SONER ÇAĞAPTAY
Thursday, July 29 2010 19:43 GMT+2
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Islamist foreign policy hurts Muslims

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What is an Islamist foreign policy, exactly? Is it identifying with Muslims and their suffering, or is it identifying with anti-Western regimes even at the cost of Muslims' best interests?

Turkey's foreign policy under the Justice and Development Party, or AKP, government demonstrates that far from protecting Muslims and their interests, it is the promotion of à la carte morals – bashing the West and supporting anti-Western regimes, even when the latter hurts Muslims.

Since coming to power in 2002, the AKP has dramatically changed Turkey's foreign policy. The party has let Ankara's ties with pro-Western Azerbaijan, Georgia and Israel deteriorate and has started to ignore Europe.

Meanwhile, the AKP has built ties with anti-Western states such as Sudan while making friends with Ankara's erstwhile adversaries, including Russia, Iran and Syria, while positioning itself as Hamas' patron.

It wasn't always this way. After casting its lot in with the United States in 1946, Ankara collaborated with the West against the communist Soviet Union, Baathist Syria and Islamist Iran.

When communism ended, Ankara worked to spread Western values, including free markets and democracy, in the former Soviet Union, becoming close with pro-Western Azerbaijan and Georgia. Turkey also developed a close relationship with Israel, based on shared values and security interests.

The AKP has now turned Turkish foreign policy on its head – bashing the West for transgressions and absolving anti-Western regimes of their sins.

A comparison of the AKP's Israel and Sudan policies helps define Turkey's Islamist foreign policy. Since coming to power, the AKP has not only built a close political and economic relationship with Khartoum but also defended Sudanese leader Omar Hassan al-Bashir's atrocities in Darfur.

Last month, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said: "I know that Bashir is not committing genocide in Darfur, because Bashir is a Muslim and a Muslim can never commit genocide." What? The International Criminal Court indicted al-Bashir and has called for his arrest for war crimes in the Darfur conflict, in which 300,000 Sudanese – mostly Muslims – have died.

The AKP's Sudan policy stands in stark contrast to its Israel policy. At a World Economic Forum meeting in January in Davos, Switzerland, Erdoğan chided Israeli President Shimon Peres, Jews and Israelis about the Gaza war for "knowing well how to kill people."

Erdoğan then walked off the panel. Days later, he hosted the Sudanese vice president in Ankara.

This is an ideological view of the world, guided not by religion but by a distorted premise that Islamist and anti-Western regimes are always right even when they are criminal, such as when they are killing Muslims. And in this view, Western states and non-Muslims are always wrong, even when they act in self-defense against Islamist regimes.

Such an à la carte morality in foreign policy is also apparent in the AKP's approach to Russia. Russian violence in Chechnya continues, yet the AKP seems not to be bothered by the Chechen Muslims' suffering.

Despite Russia's northern Caucasus policies, the rapport between Russian leader Vladimir Putin and Erdoğan and commercial ties have cemented Turkish-Russian ties. Russia has become Turkey's No. 1 trading partner, replacing Germany.

The ties between Ankara and Moscow come at a cost to the West and its allies. During Russia's 2008 invasion of Georgia, the AKP did not stand with Tbilisi, sacrificing traditional Turkish support for Georgia in favor of commercial relations with Russia. The party is also working with Russia in building South Stream, a pipeline that undermines the Nabucco pipeline that would have connected Azerbaijan to the West, abandoning both Azerbaijan and Europe.

Another example of this harmful foreign policy is the government's stance on Iran's nuclearization, a crucial issue for the West. In October, Erdoğan defended Iran's nuclear program, saying that the problem in the Middle East is Israel's nuclear capacity rather than Iran's program.

Earlier that month, he called Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad his friend and dismissed the leaders of France and Germany.

Far from helping the West, the AKP's foreign policy is challenging its regional interests, and this is also bad for Muslims. When Iranian demonstrators took to the streets in June to contest the election outcome, the AKP rushed to the defense of Ahmadinejad's regime, congratulating him on his "electoral success" while pro-Ahmadinejad forces were beating peaceful protesters.

Instead of supporting Western values, the AKP and its Islamist foreign policy undermine such values and the West, which, in turn, hurts ordinary Muslims from Darfur, to Chechnya, to Iran.

* A different version of this column originally appeared in The Los Angeles Times


 

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READER COMMENTS

Guest - Mr Goksel Doganay
2009-12-15 13:12:59
  Ali Erdogan is a human being he is not a magician or superman. Forming a liberal democracy takes dedication and hard work. Many liberal democracies are 100’s of years old for example in Holland it is 400 years old. So expecting Turkey to reach those standards within 7 years is a tough ask considering the elites of Turkey are not firm believers of liberal democracy. Establishing a liberal democracy is also a team effort where there needs to be consensus. Unfortunately some individuals find it upon themselves to hinder this process for their own benefits, namely generals and judges. For the millionth time Islam is a religion and not an ideology. All this talk of a Universal Islamic state with a caliphate and its ideology behind it as Islamism is in my words ‘Palavra’. Many people use Islam and Islamism interchangeably to actually hinder Muslims and use it as a pretext to restrict religious practice.
 

Guest - ali
2009-12-12 21:59:02
  @ Mr Goksel Doganay If saying what Erdogan said about a muslim not capable of doing a genocide, is not islamist, then what is your definition of islamism??? This guy is dangerous, and the bizzare alliance he made with the military and the judges ( who benefits the ban on the DTP, seriously??? ) makes him even more frightening... I honnestly thought he could deliver on his promises in 2002 and make Turkey a liberal democracy ( as he started doing, and indeed, as he did more than any PM before...) What a disapointment...
 

Guest - Mr Goksel Doganay
2009-12-11 21:47:40
  Soner Cagaptay never disappoints. This author together with Burak Bekdil has formed a anti-AKP coalition. They accuse the AKP of being Islamist but prove nothing to back up their claims. So it is ok for Western countries to form friendly relations with countries that are authoritarian such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Algeria and Russia. Even Switzerland a country that is the bastion of freedoms has very warm relations with the Saudi government. The Saudi government has Swiss accounts and nothing is said. But when Turkey tries to form friendly relations with Iran, Sudan and Syria it is labelled anti-Western, Islamist and criminal. Gee, who are you trying to fool Soner Cagaptay. Do you think the CHP and MHP are pro-Western parties? Both these parties are against Western values. They are anti-Semitic, anti-EU and very anti-American. Soner Cagaptay is very contradictory in his arguments. On the one hand he accuses the AKP of being Islamist but on the other hand he writes that the AKP has built friendly relations with Russia. I don't know what the author is trying to explain here, but it seems consistency is totally lacking. Russia is not a Muslim country and if the AKP is so Islamist as he contends why the AKP is pursuing friendly relations with Russia. Even the Russian Prime Minister has said that the Turkish PM is very trustworthy. So in conclusion the author is totally confused. The AKP policy with its neighbours is based upon pragmatism rather than ideology of so called Islamism. Those who claim the AKP is an Islamist party are wrong and ignorant. Islam is a religion not an ideology. The so called utopian Islamist ideology of forming a super state based on Islam is comical. You cannot base a state that includes almost 1.5 billion people spanning from Indonesia to Algeria. Do you think the 50 Muslim countries will relinquish their sovereignties? In conclusion this so called Islamist ideology cannot be taken seriously and therefore the author's arguments do not reflect reality.
 

Guest - donha
2009-12-10 21:53:50
  Keep it up AKP. Play the Russian card, they are really delighted with you. All you are doing is just sealing your own and Turkey's demise. Russia is hell bent on dismantling this old enemy on its southern flank. They will do anything, promise anything to be rid of this large and potentially dangerous NATO member, thereby weakening the alliance. Even splitting up the country. There are enough groups in Turkey that could be duped into insurrection, spurred on by Russia. Whatever you do, don’t trust the Russians.
 

Guest - khalid
2009-12-10 18:07:24
  "Instead of supporting Western values", See this is where the problem stems from, instead of talking about humanist universal values, this writer talk of "Western Values", maybe this is the problem why lots of muslims having difficulties identifying with our fellow human beings in the west, because of this mentality that whatever good comes from the west then they are "western", ie foreign and don't belong to those of us who live in the east. This writer is a typical euro-centric, a typical kemalist maybe? A typical intellectual that does not have the capacity to define and embrace moral concepts in it pure humane form without copying blinding of what comes from foreign writers(mostly Europeans in his case). Maybe if we a have culture of positive humanism instead of labeling things in west and east, calling turkey a bridge etc, maybe just maybe people will feel more comfortable for transformation without the hesitation and fear of uprooting them self and belonging to something else.
 

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