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ANDREW FINKEL a.finkel@todayszaman.com Columnists

The journey home


I was working in a Turkish-language newspaper some 20 years ago when the Berlin Wall came down. The event that rocked the world -- and I am not sure how this happened -- somehow didn't rock our newsroom or at least until the final edition when the story finally made its way onto the front page.

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During the years that followed, this lapse became, in my mind, a metaphor for the way in which Turkey struggled to grasp the implications of the ending of the Cold War. The region's political geography was being rewritten, former ideological foes in Central and Eastern Europe were knocking down barriers, brand new nations were popping up in the ashes of the former Soviet Union, and yet somehow Ankara hoped that it would be business as usual. While it is true that Turkish diplomats attempted to reach out to Central Asia and create a new league out of the nations along the Black Sea, psychologically the country's leadership was still fighting the Cold War. It was almost with a sigh of relief that it learned of Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Of course it did not rejoice at the presence of an American invading army and complained bitterly at the cost of the embargo against Iraq, but it gave a satisfied nod that Turkey was again on the war room map and that the ending of the Cold War had not deprived it of its trump card in the world arena -- its strategic importance.

 I was sitting in a courtroom on İmrali Island just over 10 years ago, listening to the judges pass verdict on Abdullah Öcalan, a death sentence that was later commuted to life imprisonment. No newspapers were late with that particular story. Turkey had scored a knockout blow against the nation's most treacherous foe, and there was a sense of celebration. Yet, at the same time it was impossible not to fear that the overwhelming sense of victory of winning a war would get in the way of the equally difficult work ahead of winning the peace. During the course of his trial, Öcalan had attempted to plea bargain by stating that he was the only one who could get the PKK off the mountains. His attitude was “What's done, is done; let's look to the future. You still need my help.” We may one day learn what went on in private, but no government could then deal with public enemy No. 1 in public. More to the point, governments failed to seize the opportunity of making the democratic overture that would have undermined the radical Kurdish nationalist cause.

These two events are, of course, related. Turkey was unable to seize the full peace dividend during the 1990s because it was still fighting a war of attrition in the Kurdish Southeast of the country. Its credibility as an emerging power in a new era was undermined by an inability or unwillingness to resolve its own problem. Many things have changed since then. In 2001 Turkey was forced by an economic crisis to address the question of bank reform and public finance. And lately it has tried to establish itself not as “an island of stability in a region of instability” but as an agent of stability, trying to drain the regional swamp. In his column on Monday for this paper, Bülent Keneş asserted that Turkey has earned the right to be taken at its word as a constructive agent and a force for good in trying to defuse a whole series of troubling conflicts, from the Caucasus to the Middle East.

What keeps the Turko-skeptics alive is Ankara's track record of being late to get the story, of finding excuses not to address its own need for reform. So the importance of this week's events cannot be underestimated. The discussions will continue whether this is a show of strength by Abdullah Öcalan and the PKK, or whether it is an acknowledgement of their weakness. On the surface it is the return of a handful of Kurdish political exiles from camps across the border. At the same time it is a chance for Turkey itself to make the journey home.

22 October 2009, Thursday
ANDREW FINKEL
Comments on this article

ashley perks , Oct 23 2009 14:46, Friday
There is worse. A piece in the Independent by Ramita Navai (27 march 2009), reporting from Batman in Eastern Turkey, add...

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Columnists
ABDULHAMİT BİLİCİ
ABDULLAH BOZKURT
ALİ BULAÇ
ALİ H. ASLAN
AMANDA PAUL
ANDREW FINKEL
ASIM ERDİLEK
AYŞE KARABAT
BEJAN MATUR
BERİL DEDEOĞLU
BERK ÇEKTİR
BÜLENT KENEŞ
BÜLENT KORUCU
CHARLOTTE MCPHERSON
DOĞU ERGİL
EKREM DUMANLI
EMRE USLU
ETYEN MAHÇUPYAN
FATMA DİŞLİ ZIBAK
FİKRET ERTAN
GÜRKAN ZENGİN
HASAN KANBOLAT
HÜSEYİN GÜLERCE
İBRAHİM KALIN
İBRAHİM ÖZTÜRK
İHSAN DAĞI
İHSAN YILMAZ
KATHY HAMILTON
KERİM BALCI
KLAUS JURGENS
LALE KEMAL
MEHMET KAMIŞ
MICHAEL KUSER
MUHAMMED ÇETİN
MÜMTAZER TÜRKÖNE
NICOLE POPE
ÖMER TAŞPINAR
ORHAN KEMAL CENGİZ
PAT YALE
ŞAHİN ALPAY
SELÇUK GÜLTAŞLI
SUAT KINIKLIOĞLU
YAVUZ BAYDAR