http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2012/1102/re3.htm
14 - 20 June 2012
Issue No. 1102
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
Turkey's second thoughts on Syria
Opponents of the Turkish government are blaming the US and Turkey for the 
crisis in Syria, writes Sayed Abdel-Maguid in Ankara 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has many friends in Istanbul, a city that 
she has visited both as first lady during the Clinton administration and more 
lately as a senior member of the Obama administration. However, as she looked 
out of her hotel window over the Bosphorus this week, discontent was brewing in 
the streets below.

In Istanbul's famous Taksim Square, secularist protesters had organised a rally 
to question the government's support for US policy on Syria, with some 
protesters going as far as to claim that the turmoil in Syria was a ploy by the 
US to throw the region into chaos.

The Anatolian Youth Association, a sworn opponent of the ruling Turkish Justice 
and Development Party (JDP), maintains that the mayhem currently taking place 
in Syria has been at least in part fuelled by the misguided policies of the 
Turkish government.

Protesters rallying next to the Monument of the Republic in Istanbul warned the 
Arab countries against inaction over Syria, saying that the continuing 
bloodshed in the country was the result of US policies. 

Some protesters accused the CIA of backing the Free Syria Army, now locked in 
deadly conflict with army units loyal to Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad.

Most of the demonstrators in Istanbul were secularists concerned about the 
future of the region. Many are known to oppose the policies of Turkish Prime 
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose model of government Washington thinks best 
for the region.

It is curious to see Al-Assad being supported by Turkish secularists, who 
generally disagree with his heavy-handed tactics. But this is not the only 
anomaly seen these days, since the Israelis, who also have no reason to love 
al-Assad, also dread seeing his rule come to an abrupt end.

As a result, Washington's policies on Syria are not getting the kind of 
regionwide support Clinton had hoped for, with the Turks having second thoughts 
and the Israelis being apprehensive.

According to former Turkish foreign minister Yasar Yakis, Israel is alarmed by 
the events in Syria. With the Muslim Brotherhood now in control of the Egyptian 
parliament, Israel is not eager to see the Islamists succeeding in Syria as 
well. 

The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood has been making noises about Israel's influence 
in Sinai, and an Islamist-leaning government in Syria could also start raising 
the issue of the Golan Heights, Yakis said.

A section of the Turkish elite has similar concerns, since sectarian strife in 
Syria pitting Sunnis against Shiites could easily spill over into Turkey, 
perhaps even fuelling the Kurdish secessionist movement. 

Already many Turks fear that the Syrian crisis, if it is allowed to continue, 
could throw the whole region into chaos. 

For the time being, Turkish diplomats seem unable to formulate, or defend, a 
clear policy on Syria. Ankara, which has backed the Syrian uprising, may not be 
able to maintain its current policies, and Turkish parliamentarians recently 
challenged the policies of foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu and demanded his 
removal.

The Kurdish question is also a source of concern, since ever since the 
beginning of the Syrian crisis, the influence of the Kurdistan Workers' Party 
(PKK) has been on the rise in Turkey. 

The PKK, with friends in northern Iraq and potential allies in Syria, could now 
pose more of a threat to Turkish stability.

News that officials from the ruling Syrian Baath Party had been conferring with 
PKK leaders in the Qandil Mountains have been greeted with alarm by Turkish 
politicians, many of whom remember the days, not long ago, when Ankara and 
Damascus formed a united front against PKK separatists.

Now, instead of Syria and Turkey pushing the PKK to do their will, the PKK is 
doing the pushing. PKK officials are meeting regularly with Iraqi Kurdistan 
President Massoud Barzani, who has said that the two million Syrian Kurds may 
rise up against the Al-Assad regime in Syria. 

Barzani is also believed to be training Syrian Kurds in guerrilla warfare.

The Syrian regime, alarmed by the prospects of a Kurdish uprising, has promised 
the Kurds self-rule if they desist from stirring up trouble in their areas. 
These promises have been relayed to the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Syria, 
known to be close to the PKK. 

With the Saudis now offering support to Syrian Sunnis, and Iran promising the 
same to Syrian Shias, Syria may be hurtling down the road to sectarian strife, 
which is not at all the outcome Turkish politicians have been hoping for.

Another complication concerns the Alevis, a sizeable minority group in Turkey 
estimated at upwards of 10 per cent or more of the country's population.

The Alevis, though not Alawites like the ruling group in Syria, are often 
confused with the latter, as both swear allegiance to Ali, the top figure in 
Shia Islam, and both share a distrust of the Sunnis. 

Should the Syrian Alawites come to blows with the country's Sunnis, many say 
that the Turkish Alevis may take their side, which is another reason for Ankara 
to tread softly in Syria.


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