Judy Asks: Will Assad deliver for Putin?

Will Assad deliver for Putin?

Judy Asks: Will Assad deliver for Putin?

Written by Rem Korteweg, 18 September 2013
From Carnegie Europe

External Author(s)
Judy Dempsey

Division and indecision over Syria

Division and indecision over Syria

Division and indecision over Syria

Written by Rem Korteweg, 18 September 2013


The deal on chemical weapons reached by Russia and the United States marks the latest chapter in the West’s effort to stay out of Syria’s civil war. After Russia’s diplomatic initiative, a military strike has been avoided. The White House says that diplomacy backed by a credible military threat has succeeded, and European leaders claim that their appeal for a UN process was heard. Obama’s wish to avoid military solutions may have created new momentum for negotiations with Iran. But this moment of jubilation could be short-lived: a daunting task at the UN awaits; military action may still be needed; and transatlantic cohesion has been damaged.

For more than two years, US and European governments have successfully navigated developments that could otherwise have formed a casus belli and led to Western entanglement in Syria. In the summer of 2012, the Syrian military shot down a Turkish air force jet, and was accused by Ankara of lobbing mortars over the Turkish-Syrian border and staging car bombings in southern Turkish towns. The attack on a NATO member-state could have triggered military action against Syria, but instead the alliance showed restraint and sent German, Dutch and US air defence batteries to southern Turkey.

In November 2012, France and the UK – followed a month later by the US  –  stated that President Assad no longer represented the Syrian people, but no action was taken to force a change of regime. The US and Europe have also long resisted arming the rebel groups. When it became clear in early 2013 that Assad was winning, the European Union – under French and British leadership – and the United States lifted the arms embargo. But the subsequent flow of arms to rebels has been limited, reflecting concerns that the weapons might end up with Al Qaeda affiliates. The US, UK and France have been providing jeeps and communications technology, and possibly small arms, but most heavier material, mortars and anti-tank weapons, are sent by Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

The aftermath of the chemical weapons attack on August 21st is the closest the US and its allies have come to military intervention in Syria. If it were not for the use of poison gas, the US and others would have remained on the side-lines, but moral imperatives and presidential credibility required action, however reluctant. European division and US foot-dragging followed.

What makes the current crisis so uncomfortable and damaging for the West is that it is largely self-inflicted; Obama’s red lines on the use of chemical weapons, when crossed, forced his hand. European divisions have made matters worse, particularly when Britain’s prime minister David Cameron – initially in favour of a strike – deferred to the House of Commons and lost, while the French president remained committed to military action. Without a united Franco-British front, Germany, the Netherlands and others continued to prevaricate and say they had not been asked to support a military strike, or – like Poland – did not have relevant military capabilities. Other European states, including Italy, Spain and Belgium, believed the UN should act. Only Denmark backed the French.

Meanwhile, more than two weeks of intense diplomacy passed before the EU’s High Representative Catherine Ashton was able to forge a common European position. A carefully-worded statement agreed on September 7th said that “a clear and strong response is crucial” to the poison gas attack, but it fell short of calling for military action. Instead it urged the Security Council to push for a political solution.

A divided West was inching towards a military intervention for which there was little political appetite and even less public support. President Putin’s initiative to get rid of Syria’s chemical weapons could be the ‘deus ex machina’ to avoid an unwanted military campaign.

While it is impossible to know for sure, Putin’s diplomacy may be informed by the fear that any US military involvement could decisively turn the tables on Assad. A shift in the military balance would cause Moscow to lose an ally in the region and perhaps its Mediterranean naval base, but Putin’s support for Assad is fuelled by the concern that Al Qaeda-linked groups might take over in Syria and could eventually spread to Russia.

In spite of comments by President Obama that a strike would be limited – or in Secretary Kerry’s words “unbelievably small” – any military action has unpredictable consequences. A strike was meant to ‘deter and degrade’ Assad’s capability to use chemical weapons. The US was aiming for a ‘Goldilocks’ intervention; too soft, and it would only be a symbolic punishment; too hard, and it might topple Assad, strengthening jihadist rebel groups. But reality is never so straightforward, and the adversary always has a vote in a conflict. Assad could make life difficult for any US-led coalition, for instance by using chemical weapons again; placing human shields around potential targets; or using Syrian-sponsored Hezbollah to strike Western assets or Israel. US credibility would then demand further escalation. By regaining diplomatic momentum, Putin was able to protect his interests, and his client in Damascus. Whatever the outcome, Moscow will have bought time for Assad, and Russia will step up its arms shipments to Syria, hoping to tilt the military balance in favour of Assad. The US, UK and France should consider balancing this by increasing their efforts to arm moderate rebels.

The agreement between Russia and the US will have to be enshrined in a UN Security Council resolution. France, the US and UK prefer a resolution under chapter 7 of the UN charter, which could allow the use of force in the event of non-compliance. But Russia has said an explicit reference to military action is unacceptable.

If the Russians stand firm, Obama will face a choice between a resolution without ‘teeth’, or circumventing the gridlocked Security Council. In the first case, the Russians and the Syrian regime will claim that UN-backed military enforcement is off the table; and Obama will be criticised by US hawks in Congress for weakness. But the outcome could be more ambiguous. During the Iraq crisis ten years ago, the UN Security Council adopted resolution 1441, pushing Iraq to fulfil its disarmament obligations. It was adopted under chapter 7, but did not explicitly mention the use of force. The Security Council could pass a similar resolution now.

Washington and Moscow have an interest in agreeing a resolution because the alternatives are less palatable. But given the distance between the Russian and US positions, a face-saving compromise would leave the enforcement mechanism deliberately vague. In 2003, as Saddam Hussein continued to defy the UN weapons inspectors, this clause – and its lack of specificity – became the focus of a dispute in the Security Council. Unfortunately, a similar resolution on Syria will sow the seeds for future US-Russian disagreement. The technical obstacles associated with a verification mechanism in a war zone are plentiful, and if Syria breached the resolution, a fractured West could still end up being drawn into the conflict.

Nevertheless, if a resolution is adopted and the Syrians carry out their side of the bargain, this may do more than just prevent Syria’s future use of chemical weapons. Iran’s new moderate president, Hassan Rouhani – strengthened by a policy of US restraint in Syria – has signalled a willingness to talk to Obama. This positive momentum offers the best hope for some time to move diplomacy on Iran’s nuclear programme forward, and should be embraced by the US and Europe.

Progress on chemical weapons could also create some momentum for a general ceasefire and the start of a peace process. The EU ought to be able to unite around this goal, at least. It should now start working with Russia, the US, Iran as well as the groups in Syria to get the Geneva 2 negotiations underway in the hope of moving towards a political solution.

A stalemate at the UN would be damaging; Putin could say he produced an olive branch that the US was unwilling to accept, and paint Obama as a warmonger; while members of Obama’s own party and isolationist Republicans will accuse him of risking US entanglement in another war. The EU would find itself in an uncomfortable position. Fundamental to the EU’s foreign policy is support for international norms, of which the prohibition on chemical weapons is one (the 2003 EU security strategy describes the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction as “potentially the greatest threat to our security”) and support for the United Nations is another. These conflicting norms would ensure that Europe remained divided.

The worst option for US credibility is if a resolution is not agreed and the United States shies away from military action. Credibility is an important currency in international relations. It would be seen as a victory in Damascus, Tehran and Moscow, it would sap the morale of Syria’s rebels and it would send a message that the use of chemical weapons may go unpunished. It would make Israel and Saudi Arabia uncertain about US assistance on Iran’s nuclear programme. Pyongyang’s hand would be strengthened, and among allies in the Asia-Pacific – where US security guarantees are considered crucial to check the rise of China – signs of US weakness would make leaders nervous. Western impotence in Syria will reduce America’s – and by extension the West’s – international standing, strengthening those that believe Western decline creates opportunities to expand their influence.

Deal or no deal, the crisis has negatively affected transatlantic relations. In 2011, then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates complained publicly that Europe was not equitably sharing the burden of military risks and expenses. Not much has improved since then. In Libya, eight out of twenty-eight NATO allies participated in the bombing phase of the air campaign. Now an even smaller number of Europeans would stand by the US. Washington has not drawn upon NATO’s command headquarters or common surveillance assets (as happened in Libya) or even mentioned NATO. The US probably wanted to avoid bringing Europe’s division into the North Atlantic Council, where unanimous support would be needed. While much has been made of the US rebalance towards Asia and the consequent need for Europe to bear a greater burden for security in its neighbourhood, most of Europe is still passing the buck to Washington. Once again, the US and Russia get to sort out a security issue in Europe’s neighbourhood without Europe being at the table.

Rem Korteweg is a senior research fellow at the Centre for European Reform.

Europe's struggle for influence in Egypt

Europe's struggle for influence in Egypt

Europe's struggle for influence in Egypt

Written by Rem Korteweg, 23 August 2013

Egypt tests Europe’s ability to influence events in its southern neighbourhood. In January 2011, the protestors in Tahrir Square brought down President Mubarak, despite lukewarm support from Western countries. After Mubarak’s removal from power, the EU adopted a new policy based on the ‘more for more’ principle; the more a country enacts democratic reforms, the more EU aid it can expect. In November 2012, after the elections that led to Mohamed Morsi’s brief presidency, the European Union announced a package of grants and loans totalling nearly €4.2 billion. The following week President Morsi announced his autocratic grab for Egypt’s constitutional powers. When European officials complained about the violation of religious or women’s rights in Egypt, Muslim Brotherhood officials would retort by pointing at rising Islamophobia in Europe. Now, in spite of intense American and European diplomatic pressure, the interim government has used disproportionate force to disperse the pro-Morsi sit-ins, killing more than 800. A cycle of violence has ensued as dozens of policemen and security officers have been killed in response. Egypt now balances on the precipice of further violent conflict.

Europe’s diplomatic relations with Morsi’s government were troubled, but things are no easier now. The liberals and the moderates in the current government  those that the EU and Washington considered allies  ‒  have either been co-opted or outflanked by the hardliners. Prime minister Hazem el-Beblawi, a liberal economist, supported the crackdown against the sit-ins and has suggested the Muslim Brotherhood’s licence to operate as a political party could be revoked. Another moderate and key interlocutor of the West, Mohamed ElBaradei, is no longer influential after he resigned in protest at the violence and even faces legal charges over that decision. Meanwhile, Tamarod, a grass roots protest movement which appeared to share Western values, is becoming more nationalist and has called for tearing up Egypt’s peace treaty with Israel and an end to American military aid.

Following last week’s violence, the EU has decided to stop the sale of all ‘arms that can be used internally’. In practice the EU measure is likely to halt the export of small arms, munitions and possibly armoured personnel carriers. The army and police are too powerful for the EU’s decision to influence the internal balance of power. And if the Egyptian military run out of guns and bullets, there are many more suppliers able to replenish its stocks. Given the proliferation of arms from places like Libya, the same also holds true for the Islamists. And so, the EU’s decision will do little to bring the parties back to the table. It seems calculated to make clear that Europe disapproves of the violence, but not of the new regime.

If it had wanted to make a stronger point, the EU could have suspended aid, withdrawn its ambassadors, made a common demarche on the Egyptian ministry of foreign affairs or slapped economic sanctions on the assets and movements of senior government or military officials. Of course, the EU could still do all these things, but it seems unwilling to antagonise the Egyptian government. Egypt is too important for several European interests; a secure Suez Canal, enduring Arab peace with Israel and the fight against militant Islam.

Behind closed doors US and European security and intelligence communities will have welcomed Morsi’s replacement by General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Morsi’s government looked the other way while lawlessness flourished in the Sinai peninsula. Militants have bombed the natural gas pipeline to Israel and Jordan thirteen times in the past two years. The peninsula has become a conduit for Libyan arms to Hamas and Syria’s rebel groups (intelligence agencies have been particularly concerned about the spread of shoulder-fired missiles that can shoot down helicopters and planes). In the Sinai, there are nearly daily attacks against the police and army (in mid-August 24 police officers were killed in an ambush). Despite their restrictions on arms exports, most European governments probably hope that Egyptian security forces have enough weapons to reimpose order in Sinai.

But the overthrow of Morsi is unlikely to bring peace. Al Qaeda’s chief, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has called on his followers to resist the interim government in Cairo. The Egyptian economy is on life support. Sectarian attacks on Coptic Christians and their churches have increased. The Suez Canal – a maritime chokepoint that carries roughly 8 per cent of global seaborne trade  ‒  is at risk. This puts Europe in the uncomfortable position of giving preference to its security interests over its liberal values, without being sure that it can protect either.

The larger story of Europe’s pursuit of influence in Egypt relates to the changing balance of power in its southern neighbourhood. With America unwilling to get involved, European countries have tried, with mixed success, to take the lead on issues in Libya, Mali and Syria. In Egypt the EU now finds itself competing with the Gulf countries for influence. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE – primarily concerned with domestic support for the Muslim Brotherhood – have welcomed the assault on the Brotherhood and have given the interim government a cheque worth $12 billion, almost €9 billion.  Reasoning that Cairo, if it wanted, could simply ignore Europe and rely on the Gulf states, the EU has decided to keep its aid and trade relationship intact. It is betting that by denouncing the violence, stopping arms sales but maintaining other ties, Brussels will be able to keep doors in Cairo open.

One positive for the EU in the Egyptian crisis is that member-states are allowing Catherine Ashton to coordinate EU policy. She was the first European leader to visit Egypt after the fall of Mubarak, and the only senior foreign official to have visited Morsi after his detention. This gives her credibility in Europe and in the region. European governments should mandate Ashton, and the EU’s Special Representative for the region, Bernardino Leon, to coordinate efforts with the Gulf states and the US and reach out to the interim government to help establish a national political dialogue.

Europe’s influence also relies on the power of its markets. Europe’s aid package is less than half of the Gulf states’ financial commitment, but Egypt needs foreign investment and deeper trade relations, rather than a line of credit. Once stability has been restored, the EU should be prepared to help the country deal with its vicious cycle of unemployment, inflation, capital flight, rising debts, falling currency reserves and increasing budget deficit (running at roughly 12 per cent of GDP) by further opening its markets to Egyptian goods. In time, the Egyptian government will have to reduce its subsidies on fuel and bread – actions that could spark popular unrest. The EU has also made macro-financial assistance to Egypt – worth €500 million – conditional on the successful negotiation of an IMF loan. European leaders should continue to push the interim government to strike a deal even though the political environment is not ready for this yet.

While the Brotherhood is suppressed, the military is the most organised political institution in the country. Under current conditions, a rush to the ballot box would almost certainly mean victory for the military’s candidate, perhaps al-Sisi himself, and enrage the Brotherhood’s supporters. At a conference in Cairo in March, one of the speakers, since elevated to a very senior position in government, said that if Morsi’s government failed, it would mean the bankruptcy of political Islam in Egypt. His words now read like a policy prescription. The interim government has detained 75 senior members of the Muslim Brotherhood, including Morsi himself. Under the existing electoral law, given their criminal indictments, many of the Brotherhood’s leadership would not be eligible to participate in the elections. By purging the Brotherhood, General al-Sisi hopes to stop his opponents from playing a meaningful role in Egypt’s politics.

The EU has an interest in a pluralist democracy, not in military rule sanctioned through quick elections. However difficult it may be, to give the opposition parties a fair chance it would be sensible to gather all parties (including the Brotherhood) in a process that lets them determine the timing of the elections. The recently created European Endowment for Democracy could also use its admittedly limited funds to support some of Egypt’s nascent political parties.

If the military insist on pushing the Brotherhood underground, however, this is likely to create security problems of its own. As avenues for democratic participation are closed to the Brotherhood, the likelihood increases that its supporters will resort to violence (as happened in Algeria in 1991 when the military intervened to deprive Islamists of their election victory, sparking civil war). The Brotherhood’s hardliners will gain influence, condemning the US and Europe as anti-Islamic and hypocritical for condoning the overthrow of a democratically elected government. The Brotherhood could also reverse its earlier renunciation of violence. Political Islam in Egypt would become more anti-Western and less amenable to democratic ideas, opening the way for a rise in violent extremism, including against Western interests, in a region that is rife with conflict. Tragically, Europe’s access to Cairo’s powerbrokers would then become even more important, even as its policy choices become more unpalatable.

Rem Korteweg is a senior research fellow at the Centre for European Reform.

CER wins Prospect UK International Think Tank of the Year award 2013

Prospect Think Tank Awards 2013

CER wins Prospect UK International Think Tank of the Year award 2013

25 June 2013

The CER won UK International Affairs Think Tank of the Year at the Prospect Think Tank Awards for 2013 on 25 June. Presenting the award, Bill Emmott (former editor of The Economist) said that a pro-European think tank had not been an obvious choice at a time when the EU was in crisis and when it had never been less popular in Britain.

Location info

London

Further information: http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/blog/think-tank-awards-2013-winners/#.UcrywPmG06z

Event Gallery

EU betrays cultural blind spot in handling Turkey

EU betrays cultural blind spot in handling Turkey spotlight image

EU betrays cultural blind spot in handling Turkey

21 June 2013

Turkey’s Twitter generation is its European future

Gezi park protest

Turkey’s Twitter generation is its European future

Written by Heather Grabbe, 19 June 2013

The protests that started in Istanbul’s Gezi Park two weeks ago have spread across Turkey and show little sign of dying down. They signify a clash between a modernising Turkish society and a still rigid and old-fashioned political system. The protests have resulted in the tragic loss of several lives and are endangering Turkey’s hard-won economic stability as investors take fright. But they also have a silver lining. They might force the government to reconsider its rejection of pluralism. And they might even help to revive Turkey's moribund accession process to the EU.

Turkey's government has spent millions of euros over the last decade on European advertising campaigns to update its image and lessen public opposition to its EU membership bid. The Gezi Park protestors have had a more profound impact on Turkey’s international image in just a few weeks. European news bulletins and social media have been showing a new generation of Turks who, in articulate English, explain how much they value democracy, personal freedoms and tolerance between people with different lifestyles. The colourful banners of Taksim Square have replaced the stock images of mosques, Anatolian peasants or monumental Bosphorus bridges. The huge change that has taken place in Turkish society over the past two decades is suddenly evident to European voters, many of whom previously equated Turkey with Islamism, Kurdish terrorists and mass migration. The images from Gezi Park resonate particularly with younger Europeans who see it as Turkey’s version of the Occupy movements, the Spanish ‘Indignados’ and German ‘Wutbürger’. It is these younger Europeans who will vote on Turkish EU accession if and when the accession negotiations are finished.

The Twitter effect is a new element in the Turkey-EU relationship. The laughable failure of Turkey’s mainstream press to cover the protests accurately has driven people to rely on Twitter and Facebook as their main source of news. Twitter could not have asked for a better marketing campaign than Erdogan’s ranting against “lies on social media”. Turkey is also a trending topic in social media conversations within the EU: here, comments are at the same time becoming more in favour of Turkish accession (because of its people) and more sceptical of it (because of its government).

The EU’s dilemma is how to encourage Turkish society without rewarding the government. The conditionality of the accession talks is a blunt weapon. Germany or another member-state might be tempted to block the opening of the next chapter in the negotiations (on regional policy) to express disdain about government’s brutal reaction to the protests. But such sanctions would only feed the paranoia that Erdogan’s party is spreading about alleged international plots against Turkey. They would reduce the EU’s leverage still further.

Instead, the EU should hug Turkey closer at this great moment in Turkey’s democratic journey. The EU is right to criticise police violence and repression of the media in unequivocal terms – and it should also engage in an intense dialogue with the Turkish government about how to increase pluralism and personal freedoms. There are chapters in the negotiations that could help to guide Turkey through this major transition – such as Chapters 23 and 24 on fundamental rights, justice and home affairs – which Cyprus and other EU countries should unblock.

In a way, the Gezi Park protests are a victory of the accession process so far. Erdogan rose to power by reassuring Turkey’s more liberal, secular classes that he was serious about EU accession and the democratic and economic opening this entailed. Especially during his early years in power, Erdogan significantly strengthened the freedoms of assembly, association and expression. Today’s protests are the result of this enormous opening of the Turkish political space.

Walking around Taksim Square before it was cleared by the police, I saw the vast variety of political opinions and causes represented there: pictures of imprisoned Kurdish leader Abdullah Öcalan were held up next to a banner for the Muslim Anti-Capitalist League; environmentalists sat in their tents alongside self-declared Communists; youngsters played music while headscarved mothers pushed prams round the park. The atmosphere was festive and friendly, a remarkable display of tolerance and mutual respect. Most of the protesters eschewed violence even in the face of police brutality. The dozens of causes gathered there have conflicting ideologies and visions for Turkey. What unites them is a desire for more pluralism and space for dissent. The fact that these small, diverse organisations immediately sprouted when a breath of oxygen came into the public space is testament to the vibrancy of Turkish civil society.

The problem is that Erdogan’s old-fashioned leadership is more and more at odds with this more pluralist and modern society. The battles between police and protestors are part of a much bigger battle between ‘leader knows best’ politics and modern social participation. Many, if not most, Turks still favour strong leadership and the education system promotes a reverence for Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as the father of the nation.

But Erdogan’s reaction to the protests has made the paternalistic style look like Victorian parenting techniques in a modern family. Erdogan initially refused to enter a dialogue with the rebellious children until they stopped disobeying him. Turkey’s citizens, however, are no longer content to be infantilised. They do not want the prime minister to tell them to drink yoghurt, bear three children and stop drinking alcohol after 10 pm. Erdogan’s ministers, who blamed banks, speculators, a global conspiracy – anyone but themselves – for the protests only showed how out of touch they are with important parts of their own society. Erdogan would have done better to copy Spain’s Mariano Rajoy in his dialogue with the Indignados than Vladimir Putin lambasting Pussy Riot.

Erdogan’s AKP is not alone in having missed or misinterpreted Turkey’s social opening. The other big parties that have dominated Turkish politics for decades fared no better. The secularist centre-left CHP party – which Erdogan has accused of organising the protests – was nowhere to be seen in Gezi Park. Therefore, Gezi Park is also an expression of frustration about the AKP’s (or more precisely Erdogan’s) dominance of Turkish politics, not only over the last 15 years but also for the foreseeable future. It is an outcry of the many social groups who feel disenfranchised by the AKP’s ‘tyranny of the majority’.

The underlying problem is that the AKP fears pluralism. It equates criticism of the government with treachery to the Turkish state that needs to be punished. There is a chance that these protests will help Turkey to start accepting its diversity. If the protests keep spreading, Erdogan and his party will be forced to accept that the expression of opinions and beliefs that they dislike is part of any modern democracy. Europeans should help this process along, not reject Turkey at this critical moment.

Heather Grabbe is director of the Open Society European Policy Institute in Brussels. She was senior advisor to Olli Rehn when he was Commissioner for enlargement. She previously wrote on EU-Turkey relations while deputy director of the Centre for European Reform.

Comments

Added on 28 Jun 2013 at 12:48 by Anonymous

While Heather Grabbe's article is a nearly accurate assesment of the social developments in one portion (perhaps 50%) of the Turkish society it fails to diagnose the chronic disease (i.e the "sickman of Europe") in the other half, specifically Islam's claim to dominate the worldly affairs of governence. Whereas the secularist members of the Turkish society demand that sovereignty belongs to humans (i.e the people) Erdogan and his crew claim that it belongs to God, and that his gang are God’s representatives at least here in Turkey, not unlike the claims of Iranian mullahs. Unfortunately the West has been either missing this point or regarding this archaic notion as just another valid political opinion! This is very dangerous. We have witnessed this danger in the case of the so called “Arab Springs”. The West extended so much undeserved credit to such movements that nearly all of the Middle East is now turning into religious monarchies under the disguise of “democracies”. The West’s obession with democracy and its imposition of it on societies not ready for democracy has led to “elected tyrants” at the expense of accidentally well educated contemporary intellectuals in such societies. Dominance of ignorance and its rule in underdeveloped dictatorships are perhaps beneficial to the West for obvious reasons, but up to a point. At that point the principle of “diminishing returns” goes into effect. That is, the more the West supports the ignorant tyrants in these underdeveloped countries the less it will get back. Consider the tyrants in South America, the Carrebean, Iraq, Iran, The Arabian peninsula, the far East (Indonesia, Philippines), and finally North Africa, the Middle East and Turkey. It was a mistake on the part of EU to give the opportunity to a religious fascist government in Turkey the chance to make the propaganda to its people that EU will allow Turkey enter the EU. How could this be when hundreds of the most precious innocent people of Turkish citizens are decaying in dungeons throughout the country? Would some economic success justify such inhuman practices? Would not Europe degrade its own values if it admitted Turkey to the EU?
Heather Grabbe suggest at some point in this article that Europe should reward the Turkish society without rewarding Erdogan’s government. I do not know how this will be possible. If the EU opens further chapters of accession this will so much please Erdogan’s government (especially the arrogant Egement Bagis) that they will interpret this as EU’s falling on its knees to keep good relations with Turkey. On the other hand punishment is also a part of the training process isn’t it?

Added on 28 Jun 2013 at 12:45 by Anonymous

While Heather Grabbe's article is a nearly accurate assesment of the social developments in one portion (perhaps 50%) of the Turkish society it fails to diagnose the chronic disease (i.e the "sickman of Europe") in the other half, specifically Islam's claim to dominate the worldly affairs of governence. Whereas the secularist members of the Turkish society demand that sovereignty belongs to humans (i.e the people) Erdogan and his crew claim that it belongs to God, and that his gang are God’s representatives at least here in Turkey, not unlike the claims of Iranian mullahs. Unfortunately the West has been either missing this point or regarding this archaic notion as just another valid political opinion! This is very dangerous. We have witnessed this danger in the case of the so called “Arab Springs”. The West extended so much undeserved credit to such movements that nearly all of the Middle East is now turning into religious monarchies under the disguise of “democracies”. The West’s obession with democracy and its imposition of it on societies not ready for democracy has led to “elected tyrants” at the expense of accidentally well educated contemporary intellectuals in such societies. Dominance of ignorance and its rule in underdeveloped dictatorships are perhaps beneficial to the West for obvious reasons, but up to a point. At that point the principle of “diminishing returns” goes into effect. That is, the more the West supports the ignorant tyrants in these underdeveloped countries the less it will get back. Consider the tyrants in South America, the Carrebean, Iraq, Iran, The Arabian peninsula, the far East (Indonesia, Philippines), and finally North Africa, the Middle East and Turkey. It was a mistake on the part of EU to give the opportunity to a religious fascist government in Turkey the chance to make the propaganda to its people that EU will allow Turkey enter the EU. How could this be when hundreds of the most precious innocent people of Turkish citizens are decaying in dungeons throughout the country? Would some economic success justify such inhuman practices? Would not Europe degrade its own values if it admitted Turkey to the EU?
Heather Grabbe suggest at some point in this article that Europe should reward the Turkish society without rewarding Erdogan’s government. I do not know how this will be possible. If the EU opens further chapters of accession this will so much please Erdogan’s government (especially the arrogant Egement Bagis) that they will interpret this as EU’s falling on its knees to keep good relations with Turkey. On the other hand punishment is also a part of the training process isn’t it?

Added on 27 Jun 2013 at 13:16 by Anonymous

Thanks for a neat recap and analysis of the Gezi Park protests. I would like to add some information regarding CHPs position.
The movement started independent from CHP as people unilaterally joined crowds at the evening of 31 May and on 1 June because they believed it was the right thing to do in order to show their dissatisfaction with the government and its definition of democracy.
On first of June, as the crowds have gotten bigger and bigger, CHP decided to have a rally in Kadikoy (at the asian side of Istanbul, far away from Gezi Park). This plan was not welcome at all by the protesters at Gezi Park because many believed that this was an attempt to hijack and take political advantage of the movement which did not start with the leadership of CHP or any other political party. People at Gezi Park expressed their disappointment with CHPs plan to rally at Kadikoy and instead asked everyone (including CHP) to continue gathering at Gezi Park. CHP was fast to reevaluate its position and decided to cancel the rally in Kadikoy and gather at Gezi Park.
I personally think that this was a good move as otherwise people participating independently in the resistance would see CHPs move as an opportunistic one and this would lessen their popularity within the demonstrators. At Gezi Park there were many people holding signs along the lines "This is not the demonstration of a political party, this is an independent civil resistance".
In the days that followed, while CHP suporters and leadership personally supported the movement, they have been careful not to involve CHP institutionaly due to reasons above. This was important as in the end (or as a next step) the demands of the demonstrators will have to be expressed in a political form at which point a CHP in a warmer relationship with Gezi Park may prove more valuable.

S.Y., PhD

Added on 25 Jun 2013 at 08:10 by Isik O

You claim this is the time for the EU to bring Turkey into the European fold even more. But surely you realize this would only be interpreted as a political success by the AKP? After years of stalled negotiations, what kind of message do you think it would send to Turkey's true democrats that in the midst of such protests, the EU chooses now, of all times, to open new accession chapters? It amounts to nothing more than rewarding a spoiled child!

Erdogan's biggest claim for victory is that his party has provided economic growth and political stability. We need to demonstrate that that is not the case: suspend trade agreements with Turkey and condemn his authoritarian clampdown. Let's see how long he lasts once Turkey's business community withdraws their support as they see the hole Erdogan is dragging the country into widen.

Added on 23 Jun 2013 at 19:09 by Anonymous

Turkey deserved the right to join EU long ago.Should EU block her now , new generation modern Turks will be lost forever since Turkish politicians do well to make them believe EU is unreliable and will never let Turkey be a member of the union.

Added on 23 Jun 2013 at 17:06 by Anonymous

To my dear European friend,

As a Turkish national, I can understand if you don't want Turkey in the EU. However, what can be the ratinale behind blocking negotiations with Turkey, especially the topics about the individual freedom, democracy and human rights(such as Chapters 23 and 24 on fundamental rights, justice and home affairs)?

No matter what is the result of Turkey's EU process, Turkey will always be your neighbor. Isn't it also in your best interest to have a more democratic neighbor? I'm not even bringing how the EU's sincerity about praising values such as democracy and human rights will be questioned by the Turkish youth, which by the way, will only help people who are against the European values.

I will see you my European friend, in Berlin, in Istanbul, in New York, in Shanghai or in Dubai and I'm hoping that I will be able to believe you as we talk about democracy and human rights as universal values.

Mehmet

Added on 23 Jun 2013 at 17:04 by Anonymous

To my dear European friend,

As a Turkish national, I can understand if you don't want Turkey in the EU. However, what can be the ratinale behind blocking negotiations with Turkey, especially the topics about the individual freedom, democracy and human rights(such as Chapters 23 and 24 on fundamental rights, justice and home affairs)?

No matter what is the result of Turkey's EU process, Turkey will always be your neighbor. Isn't it also in your best interest to have a more democratic neighbor? I'm not even bringing how the EU's sincerity about praising values such as democracy and human rights will be questioned by the Turkish youth, which by the way, will only help people who are against the European values.

I will see you my European friend, in Berlin, in Istanbul, in New York, in Shanghai or in Dubai and I'm hoping that I will be able to believe you as we talk about democracy and human rights as universal values.

Added on 23 Jun 2013 at 09:11 by Birol Unal

You stated that Erdogan and his party are having difficulty in analysing the root causes of the protests. I fear that they perfectly understand that this is a completely home-grown resistance movement which is a result of year's of power grab by Erdogan. However they want to exploit the events to polarise the society so that they can cement their share of vote within the conservative sections of the society.

Added on 22 Jun 2013 at 23:31 by Anonymous

Turkey's development in last decade under the Erdogan's administration must have disturbed other countries so much that international media and other channels of manipulations saw the Gezi Park protests as a chance to take down the Erdogan Administration. Last 6 months maybe more no PKK attacks were observed. This makes the nationalist party MHP nervious. Because they got nothing else to ask for vote. CHP has already been at Syria's Esed's side because of their Leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu's Alevi/Shii identity. Both parties have lost all their faith in democracy. None asked for early elections as they don't see any chance.

Added on 22 Jun 2013 at 14:28 by Anonymous

I think that countries like the UK should take initiative and develop stronger relations with Turkey, in economy, investments, imigration etc. prior to EU memberships.

Added on 20 Jun 2013 at 19:54 by simon forrester

As usual CER has penned a great snapshot of analysis, but there are a couple of conclusions that are somewhat unfounded:

'Turkey’s citizens, however, are no longer content to be infantilised' - may be a reasonable paraphrasing of certain segments of the population, but there is a large proportion of Turkey's citizens who embrace pursuit of a type of paternalistic sultancy that the Ottomans couldn't deliver. Urban centres such Aksaray, Asian Istanbul, Kayseri, Konya, Rize, Siirt, mostly welcome the marginalising of non-conservative lifestyles.

'The secularist centre-left CHP party – which Erdogan has accused of organising the protests – was nowhere to be seen in Gezi Park.' - on the first weekend of the 'Gezi protests', the CHP leader was planning to lead a gathering of CHP supporters into Taksim, but cancelled the action having judged that it would be interpreted as political opportunism. And since, the CHP, and other opposition parties, have deliberately avoided trying to make political party capital from the unrest. After years of completely failing to offer a strategic alternative to the AKP vision, and thereby distancing themselves from the supposedly 'a-political' silent minority, the CHP has finally begun to understand that it needs to re-shape its relationship with liberals. Thus, its lack of appearance in Gezi is not an oversight, but a long-awaited insight from CHP

Simon Forrester
Eurasia Social Change
Ankara

Added on 20 Jun 2013 at 07:09 by Anonymous

I agree with most of your analysis however I would like to add some information regarding CHPs position.

The movement started independent from CHP as people unilaterally joined crowds at the evening of 31 May and on 1 June because they believed it was the right thing to do in order to show their dissatisfaction with the government and its definition of democracy.

On first of June, as the crowds have gotten bigger and bigger, CHP decided to have a rally in Kadikoy (at the asian side of Istanbul, far away from Gezi Park). This plan was not welcome at all by the protesters at Gezi Park because many believed that this was an attempt to hijack and take political advantage of the movement which did not start with the leadership of CHP or any other political party. People at Gezi Park expressed their disappointment with CHPs plan to rally at Kadikoy and instead asked everyone (including CHP) to continue gathering at Gezi Park. CHP was fast to reevaluate its position and decided to cancel the rally in Kadikoy and gather at Gezi Park.

I personally think that this was a good move as otherwise people participating independently in the resistance would see CHP as opportunistic politics and this would lessen their popularity within the demonstrators. At Gezi Park there were many people holding signs along the lines "This is not the demonstration of a political party, this is an independent civil resistance".

In the days that followed, while CHP supporters and leadership personally supported the movement, they were careful not to involve CHP institutionaly due to reasons mentioned above. This was important as in the end (or as a next step) the demands of the demonstrators will have to be expressed in a political form at which point a CHP in a warmer relationship with Gezi Parkı may be more valuable.

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