THU 25 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Aug 9, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Turkish-Syrian relations near breaking point ahead of key diplomatic visit

By Simon Cameron-Moore

REUTERS
ISTANBUL: Turkey’s friendship with Syrian President Bashar Assad stood near breaking point as Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu prepared to visit Damascus Tuesday in a last-ditch effort to persuade Assad to stop his security forces attacking civilians.


One of Assad’s advisers Sunday, warned Davutoglu would be given short shrift after Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his minister would deliver a “decisive message,” having seen past entreaties to halt the violence ignored.
A Turkish official said Davutoglu would repeat the earlier calls. But the official did not want to venture into what Turkey will do if its words continue to fall on deaf ears in Syria.


Still, if Davutoglu returns empty-handed, Erdogan faces the prospect of ditching a friendship he has carefully nurtured over the past decade, leaving Assad more isolated and dependent on Iranian support than ever.
Bahadir Dincer, Middle East expert at the International Strategic Research Organization in Ankara, said he expected no change from the Syrian government given the comments from Damascus ahead of Davutoglu’s visit.


“Turkey will have to seriously consider its ties with Syria,” Dincer said. “It has been a white page for a decade now, The recent tension turned it grey, and we’ll see tomorrow if the relations are entering a red-page era.”
Having almost gone to war in the late 1990s over Syria harboring Kurdish militants, the friendship became a poster-child for Erdogan’s foreign policy of “zero problems with neighbors.”


Erdogan has holidayed with Assad, their Cabinets have held joint meetings, Turkey has become Syria’s biggest trading partner, the neighbors have visa-free travel between them, and Turkey tried to broker a peace deal between Syria and Israel.
The relationship with Syria has withered as Erdogan tried to encourage Assad to make democratic reforms.


Events in the Arab Spring, according to Sinan Ulgen in a paper published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, have shown Ankara now wants to be on the right side of history and is ready to stand up for issues like human rights even where it imperils ties with incumbent leaders.
The patience Erdogan has shown so far with Assad stands in contrast to the speed with which he advised Hosni Mubarak to quit as president of Egypt when street protests erupted there early this year, but that patience appears to have run out.


There is genuine outrage in Turkey, a largely secular Muslim country like Syria but also a multi-party democracy, over the brutal repression unleashed since pro-democracy demonstrations erupted in the neighboring Arab state last March.
In June, after more than 10,000 Syrians fled to Turkey to escape attacks by security forces, Erdogan described the killing of Syrian civilians as murderous acts of savagery.


Yet, his government – like Syria’s Arab neighbors, however upset they have become about Assad’s recent behavior, underlined by the recall of several Gulf ambassadors Monday – is unlikely to take any unilateral action against Damascus, according to analysts of Turkish foreign policy in the Middle East.


With the international community divided over what to do about Syria, Turkey is unlikely to go out on a limb, either through economic sanctions or military action.
“Turkey will not go to the lengths of unilateral economic sanctions. It has always argued that sanctions hurt people, not regimes,” said Semih Idiz, a columnist focused on foreign policy at Milliyet newspaper.


One big investment that could be vulnerable to a freeze in bilateral relations is a joint multi-billion-dollar dam project dubbed “Friendship Dam,” whose groundbreaking was attended by leaders of the two countries in February.
Turkey is also likely to resist any pressure to create a buffer zone inside Syrian territory, though it is reportedly a scenario that the Turkish military has made contingencies for.


“Turkey will not do anything unilateral militarily unless there is a massive humanitarian spillover effect from what’s happening in Syria or a threat to national security,” Idiz said.
Other analysts said Turkey should avoid being drawn into any military intervention in Syria just to please Western powers, as it would backfire on efforts to end ethnic Kurds’ long-running insurgency in southeast Turkey.


“Turkey may limit its trade and diplomatic ties with Syria. But, even if Turkey doesn’t take such steps, its clear message and attitude towards the Syrian administration will be a boost of morale to protesters,” Dincer said.
Syrians living in exile have recently flocked to Turkey, to unite opposition against Assad without any encouragement from the Turkish government.
Any move by Turkish officials to engage the Syrian opposition would further alienate Damascus from Ankara.



 
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