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Turkey Needs Unified Vision for Middle East

Turkey needs a unified approach for governance at home before it can rebuild its foreign policy.
Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan (C) greets members of parliament from his ruling AK Party (AKP) during a meeting at the Turkish parliament in Ankara  June 25, 2013. Turkish anti-terrorism police detained 20 people in raids in the capital Ankara on Tuesday in connection with weeks of anti-government protests across the country, media reports said. The unrest began at the end of May when police used force against campaigners opposed to plans to redevelop a central Istanbul park. The protest spiralled i

Speaking in Kastamonu on Friday, July 19, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, “Strong Turkey is making its influence felt more in this region every day. Our agenda was determined by others in the past, but there is no longer a Turkey whose agenda is determined by others. There is now a Turkey that determines the agenda. That is to say, there are so many developments taking place in Iraq and Syria. It will be all good at the end. Don’t forget: Whatever happens, happens for some good. What’s important is that Turkey continues its path with its strong economy.”

This was a quite interesting statement. First, there is nothing wrong with being optimistic and in believing that the world will be better tomorrow. But this general trend toward positivism is not free of downfalls, both sharp and soft, and the traditionally troubled Middle East region is without a doubt experiencing some changing and challenging times. It may be comforting to believe that the Iraqis who died since the 2003 US invasion and the Syrians who have perished since the 2011 beginning of the civil war did not die for nothing. The question is, however, how Erdogan thinks Turkey has determined the agenda in this conflict zone, and why the prime minister claims that others — mainly the Western powers — had determined Turkey’s agenda in the past.

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