By New Age Islam Edit
Bureau
8 October
2020
•
Egypt’s Ban of Jewish Festival Raises Controversy
By
Mohamed Saied
•
Islamic State 'Beatles' Charged With Hostage-Taking of Americans
By
Elizabeth Hagedorn
•
British Archaeology Falls Prey To Turkey's Nationalist Drive
By
Amberin Zaman
•
How Europe Has Misunderstood Turkey
By
Sami Hamdi
------
Egypt’s Ban of Jewish Festival Raises
Controversy
By Mohamed Saied
Oct 7, 2020
A
general view of the ceiling of the Shaar Hashamayim Synagogue, also known as
Temple Ismailia or Adly Synagogue, Cairo, Egypt, Oct. 3, 2016. Photo by KHALED
DESOUKI/AFP via Getty Images.
------
Egypt’s
Supreme Administrative Court upheld Sept. 26 a previous ruling prohibiting the
annual celebration of the birth of a Jewish rabbi in Beheira governorate, in
the Nile Delta in the northern part of the country.
The court,
which is the highest administrative court for administrative appeals in Egypt,
ordered removing the shrine in which Rabbi Yaqoub bin Masoud, known as Abu
Hasira, is buried, from the list of Islamic and Coptic antiquities in Egypt. In
addition, it rejected a request to transfer his remains to Israel, which was
submitted by Tel Aviv through UNESCO in 2012.
The court
based its refusal to transfer the rabbi's remains because Islam respects the
divine religions and rejects the exhumation of graves, and because Palestine is
an occupied land and legitimizing the Jewishness of the state must be avoided
by keeping this shrine on Arab land.
The appeal
was filed by the Egyptian government; the previous ruling thus became final and
irrevocable.
The
previous ruling was issued by the Administrative Judicial Court in Alexandria
governorate in December 2014, before the government challenged it without
disclosing the reasons for the appeal.
The
Administrative Judicial Court ruling was issued following a lawsuit filed by
Egyptian lawyer Ahmed Mohammed Attia, in which he demanded transferring Abu
Hasira’s remains to Israel and canceling the annual Jewish celebration that
takes place at the shrine.
Following
the December 2014 ruling, concerns emerged about its implications on cultural
diversity in Egypt and the freedom to hold religious rites. Magda Haroun, head
of the Jewish community in Egypt, denounced the court’s decision to ban the
celebration of Abu Hasira’s birth, describing it as unconstitutional.
On Dec. 30,
2014, Haroun told the press that the Egyptian Constitution guarantees followers
of the three monotheistic religions the right to conduct their religious rites.
In another
statement that same year, Haroun had rejected the decision to remove Abu
Hasira’s shrine from the records of Egyptian antiquities and said that this
would lead to the demolition of his tomb, even though Abu Hasira has a great
position with the Jews of the Middle East in general and Moroccans in
particular because he was of Moroccan origin, and it could increase religious
tourism.
The
Administrative Judicial Court’s decision, which was upheld by the Supreme
Administrative Court, annulled the 2001 decision of then-Minister of Culture
Farouk Hosni to include the Abu Hasira shrine, the Jewish cemeteries around it
and the hill on which it is located, among the Egyptian antiquities.
The court
also ordered removing the shrine from the records of Islamic and Coptic
antiquities in Egypt because it lacks archaeological characteristics, and
informed the UNESCO World Heritage Committee of this decision.
Abu Hasira
was a Jewish rabbi of Moroccan origin who lived in the 19th century
(1808-1880). He hailed from a large Jewish family, some of whose members
immigrated to Egypt and other countries, while others remained in Morocco
throughout the ages. Many Jews believe that he is a blessed figure, but some
question this narrative.
A
celebration of the birth of Abu Hasira is held every year between Dec. 26 and
Jan. 2, in a synagogue in Damatyuh village near the city of Damanhur in Beheira
governorate. Hundreds of Jews make the pilgrimage to the shrine, especially
from Morocco, France and Israel.
In 2001, an
Egyptian court banned the celebration, but the Egyptian authorities allowed it
to be held annually until 2010.
Since the
January 2011 revolution and until now, no programs, grave visits or
celebrations have been organized, due to popular rejection. Egypt informed
Israel at that time that it was difficult to hold the celebration due to
security reasons. Celebrations stopped in 2011, but some were held to a very
limited extent in 2018, then ceased again.
Annual
celebrations used to take place in Damatyuh village, where the hill where Abu
Hasira is buried is located; buses full of visitors used to travel there to hold
religious and ceremonial rituals in the vicinity of the shrine. However, the
celebration always sparked great controversy, as the citizens of the village,
in addition to political forces and movements, expressed their rejection of
what they considered normalization with Israel. As a result, security guards
would need to be present during the event.
Those who
oppose holding the celebration believe the celebrants often engage in
activities that violate the values and customs of the rural community in Egypt,
such as drinking alcohol, among other rituals contrary to public morals. This
was stressed by the Administrative Court in the merits of its ruling when it
said that the celebration contradicts the dignity and purity of religious
rites.
The Israeli
media has always expressed anger at banning the celebration and refusing to
transfer Abu Hasira’s remains to Jerusalem.
Prior to
all the controversy, the annual official trips from Israel to the shrine began
following the 1979 peace treaty with Egypt.
On Sept. 29,
Al-Masry Al-Youm reported that the residents of Beheira governorate were
overjoyed with the ruling banning the Abu Hasira celebration, explaining that
the residents used to suffer under the celebration’s strict security measures
that impeded movement inside the village and nearby villages.
Meanwhile,
Egyptian experts expressed concern that the decision to ban the celebration
would be used to tarnish Egypt's image regarding the freedom to practice
religious rites or be exploited politically by Israel.
Ammar Ali
Hassan, a professor of political sociology at Cairo University, told Al-Monitor
that Egyptians in general do not differentiate between Judaism as a religion
and Zionism as a political project through which the State of Israel came to
exist, considering that this is a major reason for the popular refusal to
celebrate the birth of Abu Hasira.
He added,
“Israel presents itself as a state for the Jews, and its exploitation of the
Jewish religion as the ideology of the state created this confusion and justified
it.”
Hassan
noted that although Egypt and Israel have signed a peace agreement, Egyptian
society still does not accept the idea of full normalization with Israel. He
added that the collective mind of Egyptians refuses to let relations with
Israel go beyond an agreement concluded between two authorities to end a state
of war between them.
“There are
always doubts among Egyptians about whether or not Israel has good intentions
toward Egypt. As long as these doubts exist, I do not think that Egyptian society
can go beyond normalization of formal relations between the two countries,”
Hassan concluded.
https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2020/10/egypt-court-ban-jewish-rabbi-grave-israel-normalization.html
-----
Islamic State 'Beatles' Charged With
Hostage-Taking Of Americans
By Elizabeth Hagedorn
Oct 7, 2020
Alexanda
Kotey (left) and El Shafee Elsheikh were captured by Syrian Kurdish forces
----
Two Islamic
State members linked to the kidnapping of four slain Americans will stand trial
in the United States for hostage-taking and terrorism-related charges, the
Justice Department announced Wednesday, in what the families of victims said
was “the first step in the pursuit of justice.”
British
nationals El Shafee Elsheikh and Alexanda Kotey, whom their captives nicknamed
the "Beatles" for their accents, make up half of the notorious
Islamic State cell that the US government has tied to the murder of more than
two dozen hostages, including American journalists James Foley and Steven
Sotloff and American aid workers Peter Kassig and Kayla Mueller.
Elsheikh,
32, and Kotey, 36, are each charged with conspiracy to commit hostage-taking
resulting in death, four counts of hostage-taking resulting in death,
conspiracy to murder US citizens outside of the United States and conspiracy to
provide material support to both terrorists and a designated foreign terrorist
organization resulting in death. If convicted, each faces a maximum penalty of
life in prison.
“They have
underestimated American resolve to obtain justice for our fellow citizens,”
said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Demers in a news
conference unveiling the charges Wednesday. "These men will now be brought
before a United States court to face justice for the depraved acts alleged
against them in the indictment."
The
indictment comes more than two years after Elsheikh and Kotey were captured by
US-allied Kurdish fighters in Syria. Since last October, the US military has
held them without charge at an airbase in Iraq.
The
families of the four Americans kidnapped and killed by the Islamic State
welcomed the news in a statement Wednesday.
“We are
hopeful that the US government will finally be able to send the important
message that if you harm Americans, you will never escape justice. And when you
are caught, you will face the full power of American law,” they said.
During
interviews with foreign journalists, the two men have downplayed their role in
IS. Elsheikh and Kotey deny taking part in the executions and said their duties
consisted mostly of extracting information from the detainees to be used in
ransom negotiations.
According
to the indictment, Kotey and Elsheikh worked closely with Abu Muhammed
al-Adnani, a former IS commander and chief media spokesperson who reported
directly to former IS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. Prosecutors allege that in
their role supervising detention facilities the pair engaged "in a
prolonged pattern of physical and psychological violence against
hostages."
It wasn’t
clear until recently whether Elsheikh and Kotey would ever face trial in the
United States. Attorney General Bill Barr had threatened to hand them over for
prosecution in Iraq, where human rights groups say trials of IS fighters lack
due process, if the United Kingdom did not promptly share key evidence.
British
authorities have hundreds of witness statements and intelligence intercepts
collected on the Beatles. A court ruling prevented them from transferring that
evidence to the United States, a country where capital punishment is a possible
outcome.
The parents
of the American hostages urged the White House privately and publicly to rule
out their execution so that US prosecutors could build the strongest case
possible using the British-supplied evidence.
Barr
relented in August, telling the UK government that he would take the death
penalty off the table. That assurance cleared the way for a UK judge to reverse
the ruling on evidence-sharing.
The Justice
Department said Elsheikh and Kotey will make their first appearance in the US
Court for the Eastern District of Virginia later on Wednesday.
The
families were also unanimous in asking that the pair stand trial in a federal
courtroom rather than be sent to the US military prison in Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, which they feared could be used as a further recruitment tool for groups
like IS.
Marsha
Mueller, whose daughter Kayla was held captive and killed by the group, told
Al-Monitor in August she preferred the men receive a life sentence in a
supermax prison.
“My hope is
that they are tried and put away in life in prison and solitary confinement,
and they are pretty much forgotten about,” she said.
https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2020/10/el-shafee-elsheikh-alexanda-kotey-isis-charges-indictment.html
-----
British Archaeology Falls Prey To Turkey's
Nationalist Drive
By Amberin Zaman
Oct 7, 2020
Turkish
authorities have seized possession of the country’s oldest and richest
archaeobotanical and modern seed collections from the British Institute at
Ankara, one of the most highly regarded foreign research institutes in Turkey,
particularly in the field of archaeology. The move has sounded alarm bells
among the foreign research community and is seen as part of President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan’s wider xenophobia-tinged campaign to inject Islamic nationalism
into all aspects of Turkish life.
In a
confidential letter dated Sept. 17 that was addressed to the institute’s
members, Chairman Stephen Mitchell described how on Sept. 3 the Ministry of
Culture and Tourism had served notice that the collections belonged to the
Turkish state and “would be removed the same day.”
“Beginning
that afternoon and continuing the following day,” Mitchell wrote, “staff from
the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, the General Directorate for Museums and
Heritage from the Ministry of Culture and the Turkish Presidency took away 108
boxes of archaeobotanical specimens and 4 cupboards comprising the modern seed
reference collections” to depots in a pair of government-run museums in Ankara.
The institute’s request for extra time “to minimize the risk of damage or loss
to the material was refused.”
The
institute's director, Lutgarde Vandeput, confirmed in emailed comments to
Al-Monitor that the Ankara-based center’s botanical collections had been
seized. “The British Embassy is aware of the issue and we are in contact with
the relevant authorities in the Turkish government,” she said. Vandeput
declined to elaborate.
The British
Embassy in Ankara confirmed in an email to Al-Monitor the issue had been raised
with the Turkish government, but gave no further details. A British official
speaking not for attribution said, “We will continue to push for best practice
when it comes to preserving the collection.”
Firdevs
Robinson, a London-based analyst who follows Turkey closely, said that Britain
identifies Turkey as a strategic partner and “with the UK’s exit from the
European Union, Turkey has gained additional value for securing a post-Brexit
trade deal.” Yet while Britain does not engage in “megaphone diplomacy” with
Turkey, its envoys “claim they do raise concerns and objections behind closed doors.”
Coming on
the heels of the controversial conversions of the Hagia Sophia and Chora Museum
into full service mosques this summer, the seizure has left the research
community in a state of shock, sources familiar with the affair said.
In
hindsight, the writing was on the wall.
The formal
justification for the raid was based on a decree issued on Sept. 3, 2019. It
authorizes the government to assume control of local plants and seeds and to
regulate their production and sales.
Two days
after the decree was published in the official gazette, Turkey’s first lady
Emine Erdogan, a passionate advocate of herbal and organic food products,
introduced the so-called “Ata Tohum” or “Ancestral Seed” project that envisages
“agriculture as the key to our national sovereignty.” The scheme is aimed at
collecting and storing genetically unmodified seeds from local farmers and to
reproduce and plant them so as to grow “fully indigenous” aliments.
“Our
farmers opened their treasure chests. In order to ensure that the heritage of
this soil is transferred to future generations they entrusted their seeds to
the state’s care,” the first lady said in a speech to mark the occasion. She
said more than 1,000 different varieties had been donated since the project’s
initial launch in 2017 and 11 different fruits and vegetables, including
cucumbers and melons, had been grown as a result.
Ata Tohum
is thought to be the brainchild of Ibrahim Adnan Saracoglu, an Austrian-trained
biochemist.
He is among
Erdogan’s ever expanding legion of advisers. The 71-year old has written
academic tracts about how broccoli consumption can prevent prostatitis. He was
with the first lady at the Sept. 5 Ata Tohum event.
Saracoglu
took the stage after her and made no bones about the ideological underpinnings
of Ata Tohum.
The
professor railed against assorted Westerners who had plundered Anatolia’s
botanical wealth and carried it back home. The late American archaeobotanist
Jack Harlan was among the top culprits. “When the power that aimed to alter the
genetic makeup of seeds and thereby bring humanity under its own control
realized it was wrecking its own soil, it set its sights on Mesopotamia,”
Saracoglu noted, in a thinly veiled reference to the United States. “Seeds” he
intoned, “are the foundation of our national security.”
James Ryan,
associate director of the Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies at
New York University, described the Ata Tohum project as a “classic nationalist
move to dig deeper and deeper into the past for justification of the
[nationalist] policies that you are currently putting in place.” Ryan noted in
an interview with Al-Monitor that these were nothing new.
He drew
parallels with the founder of modern Turkey, Kemal Ataturk, who “connected
Turkish civilization back to the Phrygians and the Hittites” as part of his
nation-building project.
Erdogan and
his Islamist predecessors on the other hand “essentialise Turkish Islamic
civilization as a competitor to the secular identity of the Kemalists.”
The Ata
Tohum project displays “a similar kind of impetus,” he added. “You have these
genetic ties to the land through these seeds as proof that our civilization
belongs here and has been here since time immemorial. To want to have these
[seeds] in the first place is part of the nationalist framework.”
Saracoglu
did not respond to Al-Monitor's request for comment.
Turkish
officials told the British Institute that its seed collections would be added
to the soon to be completed Ata Tohum seed bank that is to be under the authority
of the Turkish presidency.
In his
letter to board members, Mitchell said Turkish authorities had offered oral
assurances that the collections would continue to be accessible to researchers,
“subject to necessary permissions being granted by the relevant authorities.”
He said
that the institute was in touch with other researchers and projects, whose work
had been “directly affected” by the government’s decision and that it was
receiving legal advice on the matter.
Al-Monitor
was unable to verify that other research centers had been subjected to similar
confiscations. Bayram Balci, who heads the Istanbul-based French Institute of
Anatolian Studies, told Al-Monitor that Turkish authorities had not removed any
of its collections.
The
ultimate fate of the British Institute’s seeds remains a mystery. It’s just as
unclear what practical purpose they will serve. Dorian Fuller of the University
College London Institute of Archaeology, who is counted among the world’s top
archaeobotanists, has studied the institute’s collections. He told Al-Monitor
in an interview that “the archaeology seeds are essentially charcoal, dead and
inert.” As for the modern reference collection “we are talking about stuff that
was collected 25 to 50 years ago and is not going to be able to germinate.”
“I don’t
know of any case where someone has taken a gene out of an extinct or ancient
variety of seeds and put into a modern variety. Mummy seeds is all nonsense.
It’s all a marketing ploy,” he said.
Fuller
added, “The obvious research purpose is that [the seeds] would tell us about
lost variation in some of those species.”
“In that
genetic diversity,” Fuller explained, one might find “genes for different forms
of drought tolerance, disease tolerance or all sorts of things and that could
be useful for future crop breeding.”
“But in
order to get genomic information you only need one or two grains, not the whole
collection. What [Turkish authorities] have done is they’ve removed this
research resource from the wider Turkish and international community of
researchers. It was a nice, small research facility, open to anyone who wanted
to use it. Now it’s all gone,” he concluded.
https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2020/10/turkey-seed-bank-british-archaeobotanical-erdogan-ata-tohum.html
------
How Europe Has Misunderstood Turkey
By Sami Hamdi
October 08,
2020
There is
little doubt that relations between the European Union and Turkey have
deteriorated over the past year, with tensions rising on a number of mutually
important issues, such as the Eastern Mediterranean, Libya, Syria and the
general framework of cooperation between the two.
However,
the reality of the matter is more complex than the simplistic narratives that
dominate the general discourse, and a more levelled approach shows that the
current tensions are more rooted in misunderstandings than in an inherent
ambition to engage in an increasingly high-stakes wrestling match.
The reality
is that Turkey’s long-term strategy was originally built on dialogue and closer
political and economic integration with Europe. When the incumbent ruling
Justice and Development Party (AK Party) won the elections in 2002, it set its
sights on EU accession, embarking on an expansive economic development program
within a framework of greater alignment with EU protocol.
However, at
a time when Turkey believed it was inching closer to accession, negotiations
became more protracted. This caused frustration in Ankara, which soon grew
dismayed that the EU had begun to drag its feet on the accession process. While
the EU may well have had sincere and genuine concerns over the extent of
Turkey’s development, the view from Ankara was that the real reason lay in more
ideological considerations, which were seemingly confirmed when then-French
President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2008 declared that "Turkey is not part of
Europe. It belongs to Asia Minor."
In other
words, Sarkozy seemed to confirm the long-held fears of Turkish policymakers
that while the EU ostensibly offered accession, it would never seriously
consider allowing a Muslim-majority country to join, especially so long as
France continued to hold significant sway over its administration. Whether this
was the opinion of the EU or just France was irrelevant, as Brussels insisted
Turkey continue to pursue accession without allaying these underlying concerns
or demonstrating consideration for the sensitivities or misgivings that Turkish
policymakers might have had as a result of the statements coming out of Paris.
Disillusioned
and alienated, Turkey began to consider other alternatives for economic and
political integration.
Chosen Alternatives
Turkey thus
turned to the Middle East. As the economy improved in the late 2000s, Gulf
investment began to flow in, yet Arab states nonetheless came to view Turkey
with suspicion. From Saudi Arabia’s perspective, Turkey returning to the Muslim
world under the leadership of a democratically successful party with Islamic
leanings could potentially challenge its leadership of the Muslim World – won
following the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the fledgling Republic of Turkey's
founder Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’s subsequent decision to withdraw the country and
insulate it from the ensuing regional chaos. While Saudi (and wider Gulf)
investment flowed, relations remained cordial without any indication that a
wider framework of cooperation might be established.
Having
received a cold reception from Europe and the Middle East, Turkey turned to its
immediate neighbours, cementing political and economic ties with Syria, Iran
and Iraq's Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), while focusing on its own
internal issues.
The Arab
Spring, however, threw the entire region into flux, and it was in the ensuing
chaos that it became clear the extent to which Turkey’s foreign policy has been
reactionary, scrambling to adapt to rapidly unfolding events that Ankara never
had any intention of becoming embroiled in.
The Syrian
conflict created a mass refugee influx and an emboldened PKK terrorist group
with long-term ambitions of establishing any de facto autonomous region that
might emerge from the Syrian chaos. Ironically, the Syrian civil war came at
the exact time President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was pursuing a landmark peace
process with the PKK and its Syrian offshoots, seeking to end the conflict and
capitalize on the goodwill accumulated over the years as the Kurdish population
continued to vote overwhelmingly for the AK Party.
Abdullah
Öcalan, the PKK's imprisoned leader, personally sanctioned the negotiations in
the initial stages. However, as Syria descended into chaos, the PKK began to
stall on the peace process as the war offered a new prospect for the group to
launch a renewed bid for an independent, or at least autonomous, state.
Turkish
policymakers lamented the extraordinary circumstances that had scuppered the
prospect of a historic peace agreement with the PKK and began to fret over
Washington’s facilitating of logistics and weapons to the terrorist groups that
enabled them to rapidly expand and entrench themselves on the border with
Turkey.
Washington
argued, and with some reason, that the terrorist groups were the only viable
leverage they could use against a Bashar Assad regime backed by Russia and
roaming militias backed by Iran. U.S. policymakers argued that an Iraqi model
whereby the Kurds were denied independence but granted enough autonomy to be
able to pressure Iran’s allies would be the most suitable outcome given the
circumstances.
However,
Washington failed to display sympathy for Turkey’s legitimate concerns that the
empowerment of the PKK-linked terrorist groups would inevitably come at the
expense of Turkey’s own security as an autonomous entity would provide a haven
for the groups operating on Turkish soil. Washington had no answer to this
concern except to insist that U.S. foreign policy on the matter was
non-negotiable and to resort to political and economic pressure to force Ankara
to concede.
Turkey
turned to Europe, calling for support to establish a safe zone and provide
financial support to temper the economic impact of housing more than 3 million
refugees. However, Turkey found a reluctant EU embroiled in its own internal
strife as it sought to combat the rise of the far-right who had capitalized on
discontent toward the issue of refugees and wider migration.
The U.K.
voted to withdraw from the EU, with immigration dominating the dynamics
surrounding the vote, while Italy’s former Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini
swept into power on an anti-migration mandate. German Chancellor Angela Merkel
was similarly punished in local elections. In other words, the view from Ankara
was that the reluctant support for Europe was rooted in political expediency.
European leaders did not want to pay a political price and therefore sought to
ensure refugees stayed in Turkey.
Meanwhile,
Assad’s forces were beginning to close in on Idlib with Russian support. Faced
with the prospect of a new influx of refugees, and the increased expansion of
armed separatists, and in the midst of relative apathy from Europe and the
U.S., Turkey lashed out in defense of its interests and launched military
operations to curb the expansion of terrorist groups and rescue Idlib so as to
establish a de facto safe zone that might contain the flow of refugees and act
as leverage against an assertive Moscow.
In other
words, Turkey was not keen to involve itself militarily in Syria. Yet, among
Turkish policymakers, the debate is not as to "if" Turkey should have
intervened, as is the case in many European capitals, but over why it took so
long to intervene as the threat became ever more imminent. The debate is over
why Ankara relied so heavily on the prospect of dialogue at the expense of its
own interests.
As Turkey
asserted itself militarily, Washington’s reaction was to withdraw U.S. troops,
dispatch CIA Chief Gina Haspel, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and even
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence to Ankara in October 2019, to engage in serious
dialogue over U.S. support for the armed PKK-affiliated terrorists and Turkey’s
wider concerns over Russia and the Syria conflict. Turkish policymakers
naturally began to believe that they were now being taken seriously only
because they had used force.
Refugee Factor
On the
refugee issue, Turkey decided to open the border, allowing refugees to cross
into Europe. Greece responded violently, but Germany immediately dispatched
diplomats and began to engage with Turkey in a manner that made Ankara feel it
was being heard. Once again, Turkish policymakers had found further evidence
that without force, they would continue to be ignored.
As in the
case regarding Syria and its refugees, Turkey’s involvement in Libya is the
result of years of grievances that Ankara feels have been roundly ignored by
Europe. As new gas finds have been made in the East Mediterranean, negotiations
have taken place between Israel, Egypt, Greece, Italy and the Greek Cypriot
administration. In other words, negotiations have taken place that exclude
Turkey.
Moreover,
as the tensions and sensitivities have inevitably arisen as a result of the
misunderstandings over Turkey’s foreign policy, there has been a general sense
that the exclusion of Turkey from these negotiations is intended and part of a
wider policy by these nations to isolate what they perceive to be an
"expansionist" and "aggressive" country.
Turkey’s
assertion has been that it should be given access to resources in the Eastern
Mediterranean and be part of a framework of cooperation with the other nations.
However, it has steadily watched what it perceives to be a blockade whereby
Libya is considered the "final piece." Gen. Khalifa Haftar, who is
backed by Turkey antagonist the United Arab Emirates (UAE), would naturally
have aligned with the other Mediterranean nations who have demonstrated a
tendency to ignore or be generally averse to Turkey.
This is why
Ankara felt it was absolutely essential that Haftar should not be allowed to
seize Tripoli militarily and that there should be a Libyan government agreed
upon by the Libyans. Its intervention and use of force propelled Turkey to a
position whereby it is now being engaged by Berlin and Washington over
prospective political processes, and now being engaged by Greece and NATO in a
dialogue that Ankara has welcomed and demonstrated its commitment to by
withdrawing the exploration ships that Athens felt were the cause of
antagonism.
While there
are assertions that Turkey’s involvement in Syria and Libya is primarily for
self-interest, this does not by default suggest that this adversely affects the
promotion of stability in the region. Turkey may well have preferred to support
and side with the Islam-rooted nations in the region, and may well have
believed with good reason that they would become the prime beneficiaries
politically and economically from the success of conservative groups.
However,
Turkey supported these parties within the democratic framework in which they
came to power. At no point has Turkey sought to superimpose its will outside
the democratic framework.
By
contrast, other regional powers have directly superimposed their will by
facilitating military coups and arming ultra vires entities in a bid to restore
authoritarianism. In other words, whereas some regional powers benefit from
authoritarianism, Turkey is quite possibly the prime regional beneficiary
politically and economically from the promotion of democratic trends in Libya,
Syria, Tunisia and Egypt, and therefore has a vested interest in seeing a
democratically elected government in Libya.
While these
examples are not exhaustive, they serve to demonstrate that while Turkey’s
foreign policy is currently touted as "expansionist" and
"aggressive," it is in reality "reactionary" and a response
to an ever-growing sense of alienation brought about by a perceived lack of
serious engagement by the EU over Turkish sensitivities and concerns.
While
Turkey’s foreign policy is touted as "neo-Ottoman," it is – in
reality – a natural phenomenon brought about by the urgent needs of a nation to
insulate itself from the extraordinary events of a region that is quite simply
ablaze. While Turkey’s foreign policy is touted as "irresponsible,"
the reality is that it has rescued the political process in Libya and Syria
from military solutions that would have completely eliminated any discussion
over the diplomatic initiatives being presented today.
It is these
very realities that suggest that conditions remain conducive for constructive
and engaged dialogue between Turkey and the EU. Turkey’s rapid escalation that
is followed by sudden de-escalation is a sign that Ankara still prefers
dialogue over force. If offered the platform to engage, Turkey has demonstrated
a tendency to accept.
The real
question lies in what framework the EU envisages cooperation with Turkey. Is it
still via an accession process or through increased bilateral ties? How does
the EU navigate French sensitivities over Turkey’s economic push into
Francophone West Africa? More importantly, to what extent can the EU operate as
an effective partner in foreign policy given Rome, Paris, Berlin and Athens all
have different priorities and goals when it comes to the volatile regional
issues?
However the
EU chooses to answer these pertinent questions, the regional dynamics as they
stand suggest that it is in the EU and Turkey’s interests to find common ground
as they wrestle with Russia and navigate a U.S. foreign policy that has
undermined the traditional international institutions and global order.
https://www.dailysabah.com/opinion/op-ed/how-europe-has-misunderstood-turkey
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