World press on Turkish PM's foreign policy (July 24, 2013)

Hürriyet Daily News  published an article by Mustafa Akyol headlined 'Again, a country surrounded by enemies.' "In the past decade, one of the greatest achievements of the successive Justice and Development Party (AKP) governments was to save Turkey from its decades-old fears about the outside world. This fear, rooted not just in the Cold War but also the dull mind in Ankara, used to perceive all our neighbors as threats. Even the education system was teaching kids the famous mantra, “Turkey is a country surrounded by seas on three sides, and by enemies on four sides,” the author writes. 

 

"It was none other than Tayyip Erdoğan who declared in 2009, “We are not a country surrounded by enemies anymore.” His foreign minister, Ahmet Davuoğlu, had restructured Turkish foreign policy according to the “zero problems with neighbors” vision, turning old enemies into friends. Turkey’s age-old phobias about “Western imperialism” were also brushed aside by the AKP, which had initiated a promising accession process to the European Union. That is why Turkey’s paranoid nationalists condemned Erdoğan and his team as Western agents, American puppets, and even crypto-Jews serving the Elders of Zion," the article reads. 

 

"Things have changed a lot, however, in the past two years, and even in the past two months. Turkey, again, has become a country surrounded by enemies. In the Middle East, we are very tense with Iran, and at the brink of military conflict with the Syrian regime. Yet Syrian Kurds, which are separate from that regime, are a big source of concern, too. With regards to Israel, PM Benjamin Netanyahu’s apology for the Mavi Marmara has helped a bit, but there is still no working relationship. With Egypt, we refuse to talk to the coup-induced government. We are also at odds with Saudis and the rest of the Gulf for their support for Egypt’s coup. With Russia, Moscow’s support for the Syrian regime is a big problem. At least the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq remains a friend, for which the AKP must be congratulated, but that is still too little to match with the “zero problems” ideal," Akyol writes.

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