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Has Turkey Been Lost To The West?

Has Turkey been lost to the West? Caroline Glick thinks so:

Once the apotheosis of a pro-Western, dependable Muslim democracy, this week Turkey officially left the Western alliance and became a full member of the Iranian axis.

It isn’t that Ankara’s behavior changed fundamentally in recent days. There is nothing new in its massive hostility toward Israel and its effusive solicitousness toward the likes of Syria and Hamas. Since the Islamist AKP party first won control over the Turkish government in the 2002 elections, led by AKP chairman Recip Tayyip Erdogan, the Turks have incrementally and inexorably moved the formerly pro-Western Muslim democracy into the radical Islamist camp populated by the likes of Iran, Syria, Hizbullah, al-Qaida and Hamas.

What made Turkey’s behavior this week different from its behavior in recent months and years is that its attacks were concentrated, unequivocal and undeniable for everyone outside of Israel’s scandalously imbecilic and flagellant media.

Until this week, both Israel and the US were quick to make excuses for Ankara. When in 2003 the AKP-dominated Turkish parliament prohibited US forces from invading Iraq through Kurdistan, the US blamed itself. Rather than get angry at Turkey, the Bush administration argued that its senior officials had played the diplomatic game poorly.

And:

Initially, this week Israel sought to continue its policy of making excuses for Turkish aggression against it. On Sunday, after Turkey disinvited the IAF from the Anatolian Eagle joint air exercise with Turkey and NATO, senior officials like Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon and opposition leader Tzipi Livni tried to make light of the incident, claiming that Turkey remains Israel’s strategic ally.

But Turkey wasted no time in making fools of them. On Monday, 11 Turkish government ministers descended on Syria to sign a pile of cooperation agreements with Iran’s Arab lackey. The Foreign Ministry didn’t even have a chance to write apologetic talking points explaining that brazen move before Syria announced it was entering a military alliance with Turkey and would be holding a joint military exercise with the Turkish military. Speechless in the wake of Turkey’s move to hold military maneuvers with its enemy just two days after it canceled joint training with Israel, Jerusalem could think of no mitigating explanation for the move.

There’s a lot more.

Read in full what is certain to be an article that’ll spark lots of discussion.

  • JSpencer
    I once had hopes that Turkey would prove to be a country in the region that turned out to be an example of the triumph of rational thought and secularism over radical religion, afterall, there was some glimmering of promise in that area at one time. So much for that hope...
  • This should come as no surprise after the west effectively declared war on the entire Muslim world after 911. That may not have been their intent but that was the message that was telegraphed.
  • Don Quijote
    ROTFLMAO!!!

    Every secular government in the Middle East has been undermined and overthrown by the west, since they generally have had the bad taste of being socialist, nationalist and having Oil...

    The other thing to keep in mind is that when bombs start falling the US media show us the bombs being loaded onto the airplane and the bombs being dropped, the Arab media on the other hand shows the bombs landing and the damage done by said bombs...
  • shannonlee
    Not getting invited into the EU wasn't helpful either....
  • Don Quijote
    Not getting invited into the EU wasn't helpful either..


    You do realize that the letters "EU" stand for European Union, and that 95% of Turkey is not in Europe...
    You do also realize that the EU has just absorbed all the former East European Communist countries, and that it is going to take at least 25 more years to bring the standard of living in these countries in line with that of Western Europe.
  • jdledell
    Caroline, the sky is falling, Glick is looking at this strictly through an Israeli perspective. Israel has lost Turkey but I think it's way too premature to say Turkey is lost to the west. Turkey relationship with Israel has been on a downward slope since the 1996 Lebanon war and Gaza was the proverbial last straw. There is no question that Turkey's relationship with the West and US has been under strain since they would not agree to be a transit for Iraq war troops. Turkey has strengthened it's ties with the muslim world and even improving their relationship with the Kurds.

    If you look at the situation from Turkey's eyes, why should they put all their eggs in the West's basket? What have we done to deserve Turkey's support? Most of the EU is dead set against their entrance and their NATO membership currently protects them against whom? NATO made sense when the USSR was on the prowl but not really any longer. I don't think even the secular military can stomach Israel anymore especially since Israel backed out of a deal to sell them 40 UAV's. Turkey's current negative position on Israel is a warning not to start a war with Iran (a disaster to Turkey) and a message of Turkey non-cooperation with such an endeavor.
  • I think your right jdledell - Glick's only concern is Israel and it's all about Israel in that part of the world.
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