{"id":15716,"date":"2009-10-23T14:25:32","date_gmt":"2009-10-23T12:25:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.turkishforum.com.tr\/en\/content\/?p=15716"},"modified":"2014-01-05T17:32:44","modified_gmt":"2014-01-05T15:32:44","slug":"improbable-embrace-turkey-and-armenia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/2009\/10\/23\/improbable-embrace-turkey-and-armenia\/","title":{"rendered":"Improbable Embrace &#8211; Turkey and Armenia"},"content":{"rendered":"<table border=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">\n<div><span style=\"font-size: medium;\"><span style=\"color: #999999;\"><span>Hubble-Bubble<\/span><br \/>\n<\/span><\/span><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/images.forbes.com\/media\/authorbox\/melikkaylan.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"pic\" \/><br \/>\n<span><span style=\"color: #003399;\">Melik Kaylan, <\/span><\/span><span><span style=\"color: #666666;\">10.23.09, 12:01 AM  ET<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<p>Turkey and Armenia are about to restore diplomatic relations. At the  very least, they signed a landmark agreement to do so on Oct. 10 in  Switzerland&#8211;after some tense last-minute wrangling in a Zurich hotel room with  Hillary Clinton mediating. An astonishing development. A marvel to see in one&#8217;s  lifetime, not unlike the fall of the Soviet Union. Two ancient peoples in  eternal enmity. Sounds utterly implausible. Ancient hatreds never go away.<\/p>\n<div>That, at any rate, is the narrative&#8211;an arguably fraudulent one&#8211;that we&#8217;ve  been fed for several generations. In fact, depending on how you calculate it,  Turks and Armenians lived peaceably together for almost 600 years&#8211;or almost 900  years&#8211;until the 20th century. The calculation depends on whether you date their  time together from the Seljuks or the later Ottomans&#8211;and where you end the  timeline. Either way, it was an epoch or two, possibly an unprecedented  achievement. Then, according to the prevailing interpretation, the Turks turned  suddenly on their cheek-by-jowl neighbors, unprovoked, and wished to obliterate  them from the Earth entirely as a people. It&#8217;s possible. Strange things have  happened in the annals of genocide, though not after that long a duration of  mutual tolerance. If so, why then? What changed?<\/div>\n<div>Here you enter into difficult terrain. Because you can easily slip into an  alternate viewpoint, one that goes something like this: Turks and Armenians  lived in peace until Czarist Russia began to move southward down the Caucasus,  purging Muslims downward into Turkish territory&#8211;throughout the 19th century.  All those fiery Daghestanis, Chechens, Abkhaz, Kurds. Many ended up in Ottoman  lands, some say half a million. At one point, Russia actually occupied a whole  swath of Turkey, including the provincial capital of Kars, for several decades  until World War I ended. The Russians did their conquering explicitly as a  Christian Crusade, claiming the complicity of all Eastern Christians (including  Armenians) in that part of Turkey, an area seething with displaced Caucasus  Muslims and Muslim Kurds. In short, if you are curious about a proximate cause  for catastrophic bloodshed, look no further than Russkie provocation&#8211;a  plausible scenario considering their conduct right up to the present in  Georgia&#8211;of stirring one ethnicity against another for imperial ends.<\/div>\n<div>Discretion being the better part of valor, let us leave the historical  dispute delicately hanging there for professional historians to sort out. The  present is complicated enough. What happens if Turkey and Armenia bury the  hatchet? Azerbaijan gets upset, for sure, and Azeris are close kin to the Turks.  Why does that matter to America and the West? The Armenians carved out a slice  of Azerbaijan in a secessionist war with Russian help during the post-Soviet  chaos in the Caucasus. Azeris want it back. Armenians wish to keep it. Azeris  don&#8217;t want Turkey to make peace with Armenia. Azerbaijan is a critical source of  non-Middle Eastern oil to the West via pipeline through Turkey. Azeri oil will  help liberate Europe from Moscow&#8217;s oil. No wonder foreign minister Sergei Lavrov  attended the signing ceremony in Switzerland: Russia would benefit from driving  a wedge between Turkey and Azerbaijan. The Azeris are already threatening to  re-route their oil through Russia. So why is Turkey ready to alienate  Azerbaijan?<\/div>\n<div>As many have observed, Turkey is pushing a neo-Ottoman strategic vision  under Prime Minister Erdogan and his busybody foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu.  Until their collapse in the 20th century, the Ottomans pursued a centuries-long  game of diplomatic promiscuity with other world powers, allowing Venetians and  Genoese trading rights early on, giving Sephardic Jews a new home after their  expulsion from Spain, letting the British help them against the Czars and  against Napoleon, inviting the Russians and Hapsburgs to compete over privileges  in Ottoman lands.<\/div>\n<div>As the Ottomans declined militarily they used the country&#8217;s strategic  position diplomatically to stay afloat. Under the more insular nationalist  republic of Ataturk, Turkey allied exclusively with NATO and stayed out of  regional engagement. Now Ankara is making friends with all its neighbors.  Suddenly, the minefields along the Syrian border are being lifted and Syrians  may enter Turkey with minimal red tape. Georgians have similar status. Baghdad  and Ankara have just signed a slew of deals involving water, oil and trade.  Greece and Turkey are friendlier than they&#8217;ve been in, say, 200 years with  Greece actually backing Turkey&#8217;s candidacy to the E.U. Natural gas comes in from  Russia while Turkish construction companies are doing more than anyone to build  infrastructure across the Russian Federation. In short, a neo-Ottoman approach  means that Ankara is allowing all the neighbor countries to gain so much benefit  from Turkey&#8217;s evenhandedness that all are invested in keeping the country stable  and prosperous.<\/div>\n<div>There are side benefits too. A Syria dependent on Turkey may become less  dependent on Iran economically. Ankara&#8217;s deals with Baghdad show Iraq&#8217;s Kurds  that hostility to Turkey will only leave them out of the loop economically. In  the past, almost all neighboring capitals had a hand in aiding the Kurdish  insurrection within Turkey&#8211;Moscow, Athens, Damascus, Baghdad and all the Iron  Curtain belt nearby played that game. These days only the E.U. and the U.S. are  pushing the issue of Kurdish rights. Prime Minister Erdogan calculates that as  Turkey gains increasing leverage through befriending one and all  indiscriminately while shifting an inch this way or that (such as publicly  snubbing Israel), even the U.S. and E.U. will have to ease pressures or risk  pushing Ankara further into the arms of rivals. The Erdogan government may  calculate that Azerbaijan, too, will come around and realize that it will only  lose from a rift with the Turks as the Azeris can, in reaction to the Armenia  demarche, only befriend the Russian bear&#8211;and only for a while before it  swallows them whole.<\/div>\n<div>Meantime, Ankara is going about eradicating the leverage of outside powers  over Turkey over such matters as ethnic rights. The Kurds now have broadcasts in  Kurdish. Armenia may finally have a partner other than Russia to trade  with&#8211;that&#8217;s a lot of incentive. It&#8217;s a lot of incentive for the U.S. to climb  on board too. Turkish-Armenian amity in the region will soon de-fang the various  genocide bills so beloved of the Armenian diaspora.<\/div>\n<div>All this comes under the rubric of &#8220;neo-Ottoman&#8221; for another reason. The  Ottomans held Islam&#8217;s Caliphate for five centuries, and it was under Islamic  laws that they extended rights to religious minorities while ostensibly treating  all Muslims as equals with no preference to ethnicity. Erdogan&#8217;s slide toward  Islamist inclusiveness ironically stirs a beneficent echo in the hearts of  Armenians in the region. They have flourished relatively unhindered in the  Middle East under countries hostile to the West, such as Syria and Iran. They&#8217;ve  had no problem living under anti-Western regimes such as the Soviet Union. Their  historical sense of identity is anchored in ambivalence toward the West going  way back to their doomed alliance with the Persians against Roman power.  Throughout the Middle Ages they identified with Eastern Christianity against the  Vatican. The Armenian patriarch showed no friendship toward proselytizing  Protestant missionaries in the Ottoman era. In short, Armenians of the region  feel no discomfort with Mid-eastern traditions or Islamization, and certainly  not Erdogan&#8217;s apparently moderate version of it.<\/div>\n<div>One can only dream and hope for the day when Armenians, like Greeks do now,  interact with Turkey in large numbers and perhaps even settle back into their  interrupted history there. But that it happens under an Islamizing umbrella&#8211;and  there&#8217;s the rub. For it&#8217;s not at all clear that once you drift in that  direction, there can be any way back&#8211;that is, short of a Kemalist or, much  worse, a Soviet-style enforced secularism. Erdogan&#8217;s strategy of giving all  comers a stake in the stability of Turkey also anchors them in Turkey&#8217;s renewed  Islamist pull. Israel is unlikely to benefit from this, except perhaps in the  leverage it gives Turkey to negotiate for Israel with Islamic countries. The  Europeans will soon lose all purchase on Turkey&#8217;s cultural and political center  of gravity as the Turks learn that money from non-Western allies outdoes any  expected benefits from the E.U.<\/div>\n<div>Erdogan&#8217;s policies are neo-Ottoman in this way too: in decline, Ottoman  state policy, the Sultan or the Sublime Porte in Western parlance, was open to  the influence of the highest bidder outside or inside the country. Everyone may  benefit in the short term, especially the Turks with their new-found diplomatic  clout. But in the long term, that kind of polity cannot be transparent. It can  be enlightened in all sorts of ways except a fully Westernized one. Erdogan&#8217;s  government is already swallowing up independent news media a la Putin. Backroom  deals fill his party&#8217;s coffers and reward party loyalists at all levels of the  economy. This kind of thing went on aplenty under the secularists too, but you  can manifestly turn back from secularism, whereas Islamism looks like a one-way  street and derives larger financial benefits from Saudi and Gulf investment. As  money flows in&#8211;the IMF ranked Turkey as the world\u2019s 17th-largest economy last  year&#8211;the Turks can easily leave off struggling for their own freedoms.<\/div>\n<div>Republican Turkey has offered the single example, thus far, of a Muslim  country living under Western democratic laws, however clunkily. But Islamic  nostalgia is a powerful and insidious force. What people forget is that, from  the 1400s onward, Turkey was as much based in Europe as in Asia. The Turks do  not harbor a fundamentally eastern identity as many in the West mistakenly  believe. The U.S. and E.U. can still keep the Turks in their camp. But first  they must want to do so. And finally, they must start bidding higher.<\/div>\n<div><em> <\/em><\/div>\n<div><em><span class=\"removed_link\" title=\"http:\/\/www.melikkaylanweb.com\/\">Melik Kaylan<\/span>, a writer based in New  York, writes a weekly column for Forbes. His story &#8220;Georgia In The Time of  Misha&#8221; is featured in <\/em>The  Best American Travel Writing 2008.<\/div>\n<div><strong> <\/strong><\/div>\n<div><strong>Read more Forbes Opinions <\/strong><strong title=\"blocked::http:\/\/www.forbes.com\/opinions\/\">here<\/strong><strong>.<\/strong><\/div>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>__________________________________________________<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Hubble-Bubble Melik Kaylan, 10.23.09, 12:01 AM ET Turkey and Armenia are about to restore diplomatic relations. At the very least, they signed a landmark agreement to do so on Oct. 10 in Switzerland&#8211;after some tense last-minute wrangling in a Zurich hotel room with Hillary Clinton mediating. An astonishing development. A marvel to see in one&#8217;s [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":83,"featured_media":67744,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[145,1571,176,120,204,1153,1018],"class_list":["post-15716","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-armenian-question","tag-barack-obama","tag-ahmet-davutoglu","tag-energy","tag-gulen","tag-nagorno-karabakh","tag-politics","tag-recep-tayyip-erdogan"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15716","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/83"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=15716"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15716\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/67744"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=15716"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=15716"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=15716"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}