person:recep erdogan

  • Turkey’s Policy in the Balkans: More than Neo-Ottomanism

    There is a fundamental misperception with regard to Turkey’s relationship with the Balkans. Turkey is not external to the region, the way Russia is for instance. Its history and geographic location make it a part of southeast Europe. Millions of Turks have their family roots in what was once known as ‘Turkey-in-Europe.’ This includes the founder of the republic, the Salonika-born Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. Ties run deep at the political, economic, and societal levels.

    All those connections have drawn Turkey to the Balkans, especially after the end of the Cold War. The notion that Turks are now coming back does not hold. Closer engagement in the region started under President Turgut Özal in the early 1990s. But back then, Turkey balanced between bilateralism and multilateralism. It invested in economic and security ties with friendly countries such as Albania, Macedonia, Romania and Bulgaria while adhering to NATO as its response to the wars in ex-Yugoslavia. What changed under the Justice and Development (AK) Party, notably over the past decade, is the switch to bilateralism. That is understandable given the cracks in relations between Ankara and the West. All the same, it is concerning since it is coinciding with the push against the EU and NATO by Russia, which leverages history, religious identity and anti-Western rhetoric to legitimize its actions.

    Pundits and politicians often use ‘Neo-Ottomanism’ to describe Turkey’s forays. The label can be often misleading. Yes, Turkish President Recep Erdogan praises the Ottoman Empire and its legacy, domestically and beyond Turkey’s borders. But so did his predecessors in office. Within the country, liberals and Islamist conservatives alike all rediscovered the Ottomans from the 1980s onwards in questioning the Kemalist political order. The government has been reaching out to Balkan Muslims through TIKA, the Turkish developmental agency, and the Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet) for decades.

    Neo-Ottomanism is therefore the packaging, not the substance. Turkey’s objective is not to recreate the Ottoman Empire in the Balkans. That is far beyond the country’s resources and capacity. The region is gravitating in economic, social, institutional and political terms to the West. What we have instead is Erdogan using the Balkans to make a case that he is the leader of the wider (Sunni) Muslim community in Europe and the Middle East. The main audience is his electorate in Turkey and only secondly Muslims abroad. The pre-election rally he held in Sarajevo in the run-up to last year’s presidential and parliamentary elections is a case in point.

    But Turkish policy in the Balkans cannot be reduced to the promotion of Islamic solidarity. Erdogan’s main achievement is the fact that he has built relations with leaders from countries that are majority non-Muslim. In October 2017, for instance, he was welcomed in Serbia by President Aleksandar Vucic. The visit gave some credence to complaints by Bosniaks (Slavic Muslims) that Turkey loves to talk brotherhood in Bosnia but when it comes to investing money it goes for Serbia. Similarly, Erdogan has strong links to Bulgaria’s Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, who hosted the EU-Turkey summit a year ago. Bulgaria and Serbia are interested in hosting an extension of the TurkStream gas pipeline, a joint Russo-Turkish venture. Greece’s Alexis Tsipras also received the red carpet treatment during his latest visit to Turkey where he discussed ideas on decreasing tensions in the Aegean.

    Despite its quest for strategic autonomy, Turkey is still partnering with Western institutions. In addition, Ankara has been supportive of the Prespa Agreement and newly renamed North Macedonia’s accession to NATO, its quarrels with the U.S. and other key members of the Alliance notwithstanding. Collectively, EU members Romania, Bulgaria and Greece account for the bulk of Turkish trade with southeast Europe, with the Western Balkans trailing far behind. Greece and Bulgaria see Turkey as key to stemming the flow of asylum seekers from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and further afield. They are highly supportive of the EU-Turkey deal on migration from March 2016, renewed last year.

    Does the authoritarian system built by Erdogan pose an ideological challenge in the Balkans? Perhaps yes. For instance, pressure on governments to close educational institutions and surrender, without due process, members of the Fethullah Gülen community, which is implicated in the coup attempt in July 2016, undermine the rule of law. At the same time, the authoritarian drift observed in the Balkans is an indigenous product. It is not imported from Vladimir Putin’s Russia nor from Turkey under its new ‘sultan’.

    https://www.ispionline.it/it/pubblicazione/turkeys-policy-balkans-more-neo-ottomanism-22835

    #néo-ottomanisme #Turquie #Balkans

  • « Mon gros lourd soutient les Palestiniens » : Erdogan contraint une jeune palestinienne à faire le signe de ralliement des Frères musulmans "Rabia"
    https://www.tunisienumerique.com/video-erdogan-contraint-jeune-palestinienne-a-faire-signe-de-ralli

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDUWniwUFuk

    A la fin d’une cérémonie de récompense à Ankara d’un prix du président Recep Erdogan, une jeune palestinienne ayant entre les mains une coupe a fait le signe du V de la victoire très prisé par les Palestiniens pour montrer leur esprit de résistance et l’espoir dans la victoire contre leurs ennemis les Israéliens.

    Le défunt président Yasser Arfat symbole de la résistance palestinienne faisait toujours ce geste pour saluer les foules, rappelle-t-on.

    Mais visiblement cela n’était pas du goût du président Erdogan qui a fait le signe de Rabia, un geste de la main, signe de ralliement des Frères musulmans, consistant à ouvrir la main en pliant le pouce à l’intérieur de la paume pour signifier “quatrième” en arabe. C’est à l’origine une référence à la répression sanglante de la place Rabia al Adawiyya au Caire après le coup d’état militaire de l’ex-général Abdelfatah Al Sissi contre le président Mohamed Morsi.

    La jeune palestinienne qui était à côté du président Erdogan n’ayant visiblement pas compris à imité son illustre hôte en ouvrant la main tout en laissant tous les doigt levés.

    (Signalé par Ariane Bozon sur Twitter.)

  • La #TURQUIE de Recep Erdogan fera-t-elle tomber l’Union européenne ?
    http://vilistia.org/archives/12801

    La Turquie de Recep Erdogan fera-t-elle tomber l’Union européenne ? 25 nov. 2016 Umit Bektas Source : Reuters Recep Erdogan, président de la Turquie Recep Erdogan voit clairement qu’il n’y a que Washington et Moscou qui comptent, et il peut marquer … Lire la suite →

    #TURQUIE_RUSSIE_IRAN_OCS

  • Guerre #PKK - #Turquie : les reporters ont le pistolet sur la tempe

    Le président turc Recep Erdogan ne veut pas que le monde voie ces images. Alors que les affrontements entre le PKK (le Parti des travailleurs du Kurdistan) et l’armée turque s’intensifient à #Diyarbakir et plusieurs villes kurdes du sud-est de la Turquie, les médias sont harcelés sur le terrain par les autorités - parfois littéralement avec le pistolet sur la tempe. Un reportage de notre partenaire Spicee.com, le nouveau média 100% vidéo

    http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/videos/l5pzqr.DGT/guerre-pkk-turquie-les-reporters-ont-le-pistolet-sur-la-tempe.h
    #médias #journalisme #couvre-feu #guerre #guerre_civile #Kurdistan
    cc @albertocampiphoto

  • Putin Issues Ultimatum, Threatens War Over Erdogan’s Support of ISIS | Veterans Today
    http://www.veteranstoday.com/2015/08/04/putin-issues-ultimatum-threatens-war-over-erdogans-support-of-isis

    Russian President Vladimir Putin in a meeting with the Turkish Ambassador issued a verbal ultimatum calling for an immediate end to Turkey’s support for ISIS and violations of Syria’s sovereignty. In doing to, Putin has drawn a red line over Syria, after weeks of escalating NATO moves against that beleaguered nation.

    In a startling move, Russian President Vladimir Putin castigated Turkish President Recep Erdogan, calling him a “dictator” and threatening to sever diplomatic ties with Turkey over what Putin claims is Erdogan’s continued support of the ISIS terror organization.

    It is believed that this is in response to Erdogan’s claim, pasted across the western press yesterday, that Putin had told him Russia was no longer going to support Syria in their war against al Qaeda, ISIS and their western backed sister organizations.

  • NATO slouches toward Syria, Iran draws red line - Indian Punchline
    By M K Bhadrakumar – October 9, 2014
    http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar/2014/10/09/nato-slouches-toward-syria-iran-draws-red-line

    ehran has come out openly today warning Turkey against making “any move which will further exacerbate and complicate the conditions in the region and have irreparable consequences.” The foreign ministry spokesperson disclosed that Tehran has made a demarche with Ankara to act with great circumspection. This is the first Iranian reaction to the resolution passed by the Turkish parliament last Thursday authorising the government to despatch troops to Syria.
    The Iranian reaction is sharp and amounts to a warning that if Turkish troops cross the border into Turkey, there will be “irreparable consequences.” Hmm. Things are getting to be rather explosive. Why such a sharp Iranian reaction?
    Evidently, Tehran has seen through Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan’s game plan, which is playing out on three templates. Erdogan visualizes that the US-led air campaign against the Islamic State won’t suffice to curb the extremist challenge and there is going to be need for “boots on the ground”. He knows Turkey is the only country which is in a position to deploy ground troops to strengthen the US’ strategy against IS.
    So, Erdogan has put forward a pre-condition — he will play ball provided the US reworks its anti-IS strategy in Syria to include ‘regime change’. But Washington prevaricated. Thereupon, Erdogan played his second card — reviving the ancient Turkish proposal to create a “buffer zone” inside Syria. And, then, he made the buffer zone a precondition for Ankara’s intervention to defend the northern Syrian town of Kobane on the Turkish border which had come under IS attack.
    Again, Washington dithered. Kobane has now fallen to the IS. Meanwhile, Erdogan has anyway scored a goal — Kobane is a Kurdish town and its capture by the IS weakens the effectiveness of the Kurdish separatist organization PKK fighting the Turkish army.
    Simply put, Erdogan is allowing the IS (which Turkey supports secretly) to crush the Kurds in northern Syria, while at the same time offering help to President Barack Obama to fight the IS — provided, of course, the US went along with the Turkish territorial ambitions (under the garb of buffer and ‘no-fly-zone’) in Syria, which will be the first shot in a ‘Balkanization’ of that Country.
    Clearly, Erdogan’s agenda focuses on the “regime change” in Syria and, secondly, on the weakening and eventual decimation of the Kurdish separatist groups, while his attitude to the IS as such has always remained ambivalent.
    (...)
    But Tehran seems to have understood what is afoot. The Foreign Ministry spokesperson announced today that Iran is willing to (militarily) intervene to liberate Kobane from the IS, if the Syrian government of President Bashar Al-Assad makes such a request to Tehran. In real terms, Tehran has pre-empted the pretext for a NATO intervention in Syria.
    Erdogan may have overreached. Within Turkey, too, opposition is building up against the despatch of Turkish troops to Syria, including even within the Islamist camp.
    Indeed, if the Kurds get Kobane liberated with Iranian help, that will expose Erdogan completely. The repercussions can be very serious for Turkey, because Kurds won’t accept Erdogan’s perceived betrayal. Anti-government violence has erupted on a big scale in the Kurdish regions in eastern Turkey.

  • #Turquie : les timides avancées démocratiques d’#Erdogan
    http://fr.myeurop.info/2013/10/02/turquie-les-timides-avanc-es-d-mocratiques-d-erdogan-12335

    Camille Guillot

    Le Premier ministre turc, Recep Erdogan, a annoncé une série de réformes pour démocratiser le pays. Très attendu sur les droits des #minorités, #Kurdes notamment, il se limite à des mesures symboliques.

    Le paquet surprise, baptisé « paquet démocratique » a été déballé par Recep Tayyip Erdoğan en début de (...)

    #Politique #démocratie #orthodoxes #Taksim

  • Taksim : triste fin d’euphorie

    http://www.marianne.net/Taksim-triste-fin-d-euphorie_a229711.html

    Le premier ministre turc Recep Erdogan a (provisoirement ?) gagné. La place Taksim, à Istanbul, a été « nettoyée », selon l’expression qu’il a choisie et, soudain, se sont tus en France deux discours sur la Turquie : d’une part celui qui nous avait vanté les bienfaits d’Erdogan, mais qui s’était déjà tari il y a quelques semaines, démenti par la crise d’autoritarisme de ce dernier ; d’autre part celui qui annonçait avec euphorie la fin prochaine d’un dictateur…

    Deux illusions ruinées par la réalité d’une Turquie compliquée avec laquelle elles avaient pris trop de libertés. Silence, donc, des Bernard Guetta, Alexandre Adler et Michel Rocard qui nous expliquaient depuis des années que la Turquie était sur la voie de la modernité, l’AKP étant l’équivalent, pour l’islam, de la démocrate-chrétienne, son chef Erdogan étant le Lecanuet ou le Bayrou turc. Ces projections aussi hasardeuses qu’optimistes s’employaient à tenir pour détails sans significations la restriction progressive de la liberté d’expression, la répression du blasphème, la remise en cause des sciences à l’école et l’emprisonnement de journalistes ne faisant que leur métier.