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      Turkey-Libya:  
	  Defusing Another UN Time Bomb  
	  By Eric Walberg  
	  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 4, 2011 
	     Turkey continues its struggle to rein in the trigger-happy 
	  Franco-Anglo-American coalition intent on invading Libya. From the start, 
	  Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan dismissed the idea of a 
	  no-fly-zone as “such nonsense. What does NATO have to do with Libya?” But 
	  his NATO colleagues pushed ahead and achieved UN Security Council 
	  Resolution 1973 on 17 March, authorising “all necessary measures” against 
	  Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and the establishment of a no-fly zone.   
	  While Turkey did not condemn the resolution outright, it has sharply 
	  condemned French airstrikes on Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s forces, initially 
	  vetoing the proposal that NATO take over the no-fly-zone operation. On 
	  Thursday, 24 March, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu met with 
	  NATO’s top military commander US Admiral James Stavridis in Ankara and 
	  finally acceded to US pressure to support the NATO no-fly-zone on the 
	  condition that “the rules of engagement in Libya must be restricted to 
	  protecting civilians, enforcing the arms embargo and no-fly zone, and the 
	  provision of humanitarian aid,” excluding any further air strikes against 
	  Gaddafi’s ground forces.    Erdogan has an unlikely ally in United 
	  States President Barack Obama. More cautious than gung-ho Franco-Anglo 
	  leaders, Obama does not want a repeat of the US invasions of Afghanistan 
	  and Iraq, preferring to share the blame for the future fallout with its 
	  NATO colleagues. After Davutoglu’s meeting with Stavridis last week, US 
	  Ambassador to Turkey Francis Ricciardone said the US and Turkey share 
	  almost the same views on military action in Libya, agreeing that the most 
	  important thing was to protect the people of Libya, and that Turkey had a 
	  unique role in the region and a special expertise because of historical 
	  and cultural reasons.    But NATO Secretary General Anders Rasmussen 
	  insisted the day after Davutoglu met Stavridis that there will still be a 
	  “coalition operation and a NATO operation”, and air strikes targetting 
	  Gaddafi forces continued over angry Turkish protests, showing the disarray 
	  among the NATO members. The death toll from the air strikes is already 
	  over 100. “Davut” is fighting Goliath, so to speak, and the world is now 
	  routing for the plucky NATO David.   In an interview with the 
	  Guardian Sunday, Erdogan fought back against his nemesis French President 
	  Nicolas Sarkozy, saying Turkey was ready to act as a mediator to broker an 
	  early ceasefire in Libya within the framework of NATO, the Arab League and 
	  African Union. He warned that a drawn-out conflict risked turning the 
	  country into a “second Iraq” or “another Afghanistan” with devastating 
	  repercussions both for Libya and the NATO states leading the intervention. 
	    He was clearly referring to both 9/11 and the invasions of Iraq and 
	  Afghanistan. Iraq was “still paying a price” 20 years after the Gulf war 
	  of 1991. “When western forces entered Afghanistan nearly 10 years ago, 
	  people were talking of it being over in days, and people said the same in 
	  Iraq. But a million have died and a civilisation has as good as collapsed. 
	  We don’t want to see a similar picture in Libya. There is a civil war in 
	  Libya and we have to bring that to an end.”   Turkey is the only 
	  NATO member that still has both an embassy in the Libyan capital Tripoli 
	  and a consul functioning in Benghazi. Erdogan is in personal contact with 
	  Gaddafi, and has now publicly called on him to step down and allow for 
	  meaningful negotiations with the Benghazi-based opposition Transitional 
	  National Council. Turkey is about to take over the running of the Benghazi 
	  harbour and airport to facilitate humanitarian aid, in agreement with 
	  NATO, pre-empting any Franco-Anglo-American plan to use it as a base to 
	  launch a ground-force invasion. Erdogan said in reference to the emerging 
	  “no-drive zone” policy: “Turkey’s role will be to withdraw from Libya as 
	  soon as possible” and “restore the unity and integrity of the country 
	  based on the democratic demands of the people.” Mincing no words, Erdogan 
	  said that “this deployment should not be carried out for Libya’s oil.” 
	    Turkey’s remarkable ability to resist the Western drive to invade 
	  Libya is the fruit of the past decade of growing Turkish assertiveness 
	  both in the Middle East, in relations with the US, and further afield. 
	  Throughout the Cold War, Turkey was a close ally of the US and Western 
	  Europe. When the Soviet Union collapsed, Russia quickly became its largest 
	  trading partner and Turkey lost its faux strategic importance as a NATO 
	  outpost. But this was in fact a plus – it was now able to forge its own 
	  rational relations with its neighbours and the world at large, “the 
	  renewal of the natural flow of history” as Davutoglu explained at the 
	  Leaders of Change Summit earlier this month in Istanbul.   After the 
	  Justice and Development (AK) Party came to power in 2002, Turkey’s foreign 
	  policies became more self-assertive, more sympathetic to the Muslim world. 
	  Despite well-grounded fears of a military coup, the new Prime Minister 
	  Erdogan refused to allow the US to launch its invasion of Iraq from NATO 
	  bases in Turkey, to the fury of the Pentagon. Turkey had unwillingly 
	  hosted the Iraqi no-fly-zone after the 1991 Gulf War which in fact aided 
	  Turkey’s Kurdish separatists, making the arrival of the AK and a new role 
	  for Turkey within NATO inevitable.   In Afghanistan, while Turkey 
	  never recognised the Taliban as the official government in the late 1990s, 
	  it did not participate in the US invasion in 2001, and afterwards 
	  positioned itself as a low-key but vital ally in the “war against 
	  terrorism” there, providing 1800 troops in strictly noncombat roles, such 
	  as providing security around Kabul and training troops, “not with 
	  paternalism or the imperial arrogance of an occupying power,” according to 
	  Aydemir Erman, Turkey’s coordinator for Afghanistan from 1991-2003, 
	  writing in the Christian Science Monitor last year.   In 2007 it 
	  began a trilateral programme of cooperation with Afghan and Pakistan 
	  political, military and intelligence organisations, and has just finished 
	  a training programme this week with Afghan and Pakistani soldiers in urban 
	  warfare. According to Turkish Parliamentary Deputy Burhan Kayatürk, 
	  Turkey, which has the goodwill of the Afghani people, “can help win the 
	  hearts and minds of the Afghani people, who like the Turkish soldiers” and 
	  can “steer them away from militancy by strengthening the infrastructure in 
	  education, health and industry”.   “As a historically trusted friend 
	  of the Afghan people, Turkey, alone among members of the NATO alliance, 
	  has a ‘soft power’ ingredient in its arsenal that is key to winning the 
	  hearts and minds of the population. No Afghan was ever killed by a Turkish 
	  bullet” and “no Afghan trained by Turks has ever betrayed his country,” 
	  claims Erman.   Just as Turkey is pulling its weight in Afghanistan 
	  in its own way, it is not standing on the sidelines in the Libya crisis 
	  today, providing the NATO operation with five ships and one submarine to 
	  enforce an arms embargo and a squadron of fighter jets to enforce a 
	  narrowly defined no-fly-zone, the most significant contribution of all 
	  NATO members, but on the condition that no Libyans are killed, whoever 
	  they support.   A holier-than-thou approach at this point would 
	  merely compound the disaster that imperial bungling is heading for, 
	  leaving the West in control when the inevitable end comes, and Turkey out 
	  in the political (and economic) cold. Much more sensible to shoulder some 
	  of the responsibility, come to some kind of agreement – however flawed – 
	  with the US, Britain and France, and make sure that the Turkish position 
	  is at least taken into account in the conduct of the operation and the 
	  aftermath.   The latest Turkish move is a gamble, but politics is 
	  not for the faint-of-heart. “The enemies of the Arabs are banking on 
	  always being a step or two ahead of Arabs in their plans and operations,” 
	  writes Libyan American writer Husayn Al-Kurdi. Turkey’s move to position 
	  itself as a mediator in the current Western onslaught against Libya is a 
	  valiant attempt to keep one step ahead of the “enemies of the Arabs”.   
	  When the dust finally settles on Gaddafi’s quixotic socialist Jumhuriya, 
	  it is the Turks who are the only conceivable power to help usher in a 
	  legitimate post-Gaddafi regime. As in the invasions of Afghanistan and 
	  Iraq, the West has groomed its chosen successor to Gaddafi, 
	  self-proclaimed Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril, already issuing directives 
	  from Benghazi. Assuming the Western invasion succeeds and he is declared 
	  the new Libyan leader, he and his cohorts will still have to gain 
	  credibility among Libyans.    This will not be any easy strategy to 
	  pull off. French faux pas abound. Sarkozy’s interior minister, Claude 
	  Guéant, praised the French president for “leading a Crusade” against 
	  Gaddafi. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin correctly damned the 
	  invasion using the very same “C” word, compounding the roi’s nakedness.  
	  Jibril is the darling of the French potentate, but considering Sarkozy’s 
	  own abysmal standing in France (the far right National Front Party’s 
	  Marine Le Pen outpolls him) Jibril would be wise to make Ankara his first 
	  stop if he prevails.    So what is the fate of UNSC Resolution 1973? 
	  Will Turkey prevail, bring an end to the violent Western-backed attempt to 
	  overthrow Gaddafi and mediate a peaceful transition to democracy, or will 
	  the NATO big guns prevail and bring the unending horrors unleashed by Bush 
	  junior in Afghanistan and Iraq? NATO schemers drunk on military power are 
	  creating a new source of terror. Erdogan and Davutoglu are trying to pull 
	  their irons out of the fire. 
	  *** Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly
	  http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/ You 
	  can reach him at http://ericwalberg.com/ 
       
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