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From:
Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent:
Thur 4/3/2014 1:01:37 PM
Subject: April 3 update
3 April, 2014
Arii,l, I
Bloomberg
John Kerry, Thwarted by the Middle East
Jeffrey Goldberg
Article 2.
Asia Times
US 'peace process' charade plays on
Ramzy Baroud
The Council on Foreign Relations
Is the White House Pulling the Plus on Kerry's
Peace Mission?
Robert M. Danin
Article 4.
The Daily Star
Israel is facing a backlash in America
Rami G. Khouri
Bloomberg
Don't Punish Abbas. Support Him.
Editorial
Article 6.
Al Jazeera
Turkish local elections: One victor, many losers
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Yuksel Sezgin
• i, -
The National Interest
Why the Saudis Are Panicking
Trita Parsi
ArNI, I
Bloomberg
John Kerry, Thwarted by the Middle
East
Jeffrey Goldberg
Apr 3, 2014 -- Well, God bless John Kerry for trying.
It appears as if the latest attempt by the U.S. to make the
Palestinians and Israelis embrace reason is failing. It is true
American negotiators have misstepped and miscalculated at
different moments in the peace negotiations led by U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry. There will be plenty of time for
autopsies. But two points are worth remembering right now.
One, the missteps and miscalculations (and myopia) of the
Israelis and Palestinians are what matter most. Two, U.S.
President Barack Obama's administration, and specifically its
secretary of state, deserve credit for maintaining the belief -- in a
very American, very solutionist sort of way -- that the
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application of logic and good sense and creative thinking could
bring about, over time, a two-state solution to the 100-year Arab-
Jewish war.
A third, additional, point: Maybe it's not actually over. Maybe
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, lately praised
by Obama as the most moderate Palestinian leader we may ever
see, will come to realize that his decision to seek international
recognition of an imaginary state of Palestine is not the cleverest
way to bring about the creation of an actual Palestinian state,
assuming a Palestinian state in part of his people's homeland is
what he actually wants. Maybe Abbas will realize that
recognizing, in some form or another, that the Jewish people
have a legitimate claim to a state on at least a portion of their
ancestral homeland could motivate the vast Israeli political
center to embrace the sort of concessions Abbas says he wants
Israel to make.
Maybe Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will come to
see that his country's addiction to West Bank settlements,
particularly those that loom over Palestinian cities, is not only
ruinous to Israel's international reputation, but also is leading
Israel toward a de facto binational future, ending the dream of a
Jewish-majority haven in a world that has abused Jews for 2,000
years.
Meaningful gestures from Abbas and Netanyahu -- not Nelson
Mandela-sized gestures, that would be too much to ask for, but
some tentative display of large-heartedness -- would help
overcome the mutual suspicion that seems to be sinking this
latest attempt at peacemaking. Kerry is a talented man, but he
cannot change the nature of these two leaders. Netanyahu is, as
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Obama has noted, an intelligent and gifted political leader. But
Netanyahu does not seem capable of understanding how
moderate Palestinians might view his government's continued
efforts to colonize the West Bank, the core of a future
Palestinian homeland. Abbas, too, emerges from this process
looking smaller than usual.
It's been my hope for a very long time that a Palestinian leader
would view David Ben-Gurion, Israel's founder, as a role
model. Ben-Gurion built the apparatus and economy of a state
before the state existed, and he said yes to the grant of a state
that seemed neither viable nor defensible -- but he made
something of it anyway.
Abbas (unlike the deposed prime minister of Palestine, Salam
Fayyad) wants the international community to hand him a
perfect, ready-made Palestine. Hence his decision to seek
membership in 15 international conventions, the proximate
cause of the coming collapse of negotiations. Abbas is under the
illusion that membership in various international conventions
means he rules a country. But the moral support of Bolivia and
Thailand and Norway and Malawi will not bring about the
creation of a state. Only Israel can conjure a Palestinian state
into existence.
Kerry is arguing it is "completely premature" to issue a death
certificate for the peace process, but no breakthroughs seem
remotely imminent. This version of the peace process started last
year with a grand promise by the Obama administration to
conclude a peace deal within months. When that seemed
impossible to achieve, the administration downshifted, trying to
convince both parties simply to sign onto a framework
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agreement, one that would define the issues to be negotiated
later. That didn't work either.
This week, we saw the administration float the idea of releasing
Jonathan Pollard, the ex-U.S. Navy intelligence analyst
convicted of spying for Israel, in exchange for some Israeli
movement on the peace process. As I wrote on Monday, this was
both a dubious idea generally and extremely unlikely to bring
about advances in negotiations. If anything, it was a sign of
desperation. As Andrew Exum and others have noted, why
would the mediator in a dispute make concessions to one of the
parties seeking mediation? It's up to the parties to make
concessions to each other. Obama has argued that the U.S. can't
want a peaceful compromise between Israelis and Palestinians
more than the parties want it themselves. The Pollard balloon
(now punctured, presumably) suggests Kerry wants a negotiated
settlement just a bit too much.
Then again, when this latest iteration of the peace process began,
I, like many others, had some fun at Kerry's expense (noting a
presumed desire on his part to win the Nobel Peace Prize), but
now I regret that. Yes, there were plenty of missteps along the
way, but, really, how can we blame a man for seeking peace?
Jeffrey Goldberg is a columnist for Bloomberg View writing
about the Middle East, U.S. foreign policy and national affairs.
He is the author of "Prisoners: A Story of Friendship and
Terror" and a winner of the National Magazine Award for
reporting.
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Article 2
Asia Times
US 'peace process' charade plays on
Ramzy Baroud
Apr 2, '14 -- As the US-imposed April 29 deadline for a
"framework" agreement between the Israeli government and the
Palestinian Authority looms, time is also running out for the
American administration on the issue. The Barack Obama
administration needs to conjure up an escape route to avoid
embarrassment if the talks are to fail. The Americans were likely
aware when this latest process launched that peace under the
current circumstances is unattainable. Israel's ruling coalition is
adamantly anti-Arab, anti-peace and against any kind of
agreement that falls short of endorsing the Israel's apartheid-like
occupation of Palestine. Israel Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and his allies on the right, including the far-right and
ultra-nationalists, would like to see Palestinians crammed in
disjointed communities, separated from each other by walls,
settlements, Jewish-only bypass roads and a military presence
including permanent Israeli control of the Jordan Valley.
Politicians tirelessly speak of peace, but Israelis have had only
one vision in mind since the 1967 war that signaled a final
conquest of all of historic Palestine. This vision is based on
Ze'ev Jabotinsky's 1923 concept of an "Iron Wall" separating
Jews from native Palestinians.
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"Zionist colonization must either stop, or else proceed regardless
of the native population. Which means that it can proceed and
develop only under the protection of a power that is independent
of the native population - behind an iron wall, which the native
population cannot breach, " wrote Jabotinsky. This concept was
coupled with the Allon plan, named after Yigal Allon. He was a
former general and minister in the Israeli government who took
on the task of drawing an Israeli design for the newly conquered
Palestinian territories in 1967.
It makes no sense for a leader like Netanyahu - backed by one of
the most right-wing governments in Israeli history - to bargain
with Palestinians on what he considers to be Eretz Yisrael - the
Whole Land of Israel. He has shown no desire to reach an
agreement that would provide Palestinians with any of their
demands, never mind true sovereignty. It is implausible that the
Americans would be unaware of Israel's lack of interest in the
new peace talks. For one, Israeli extremists like Naftali Bennett -
Israel's minister of economy and the head of the right-wing
political party the Jewish Home - were constantly reminding the
US through unconstrained insults that Israel is simply not
interested. The Americans persist, however, for reasons that are
hardly related to peace or justice. Previous administrations
suffered unmitigated failures in the past as they invested time,
effort, resources, and their reputation - to a greater extent than
Obama's - on a Middle East peace agreement. There are the
familiar explanations of why they failed, including the objection
to any US pressure on Israel by the "pro-Israel lobby" in
Washington, which remains very strong despite setbacks. The
lobby maintains a stronghold on the US Congress in all matters
related to Israel and Israeli interests.
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Preparing for the foreseeable failure, US Secretary of State John
Kerry has remained secretive about his plans, leaving analysts in
suspense over what is being discussed between Mahmoud
Abbas's negotiators and the Israeli government. From the very
start, Kerry has downgraded expectations. But the secrecy didn't
last for long. According to Palestinian sources cited in al-Quds
newspaper, the most widely read Palestinian daily, Palestinian
Authority President Abbas pulled out of a meeting with Kerry in
Paris in late February because Kerry's proposal didn't meet the
minimum of Palestinian expectations. According to the report, it
turned out that Kerry's ambitious peace agenda was no more
than a rehash of everything which Israel had previously tried to
impose by force or diplomacy, and which Palestinians had
consistently rejected. These include reducing the Palestinian
aspiration of a Jerusalem capital into a tiny East Jerusalem
neighborhood (Beit Hanina), and allowing Israel to keep 10
large settlement blocks built illegally on Palestinian land, aside
from a land swap meant to accommodate Israel's security needs.
Moreover, the Jordan Valley would not be part of any future
Palestinian state, nor would international forces be allowed
there. In other words, Israel would maintain the occupation
under any other name, except that the PA would be allowed a
level of autonomy over Palestinian population centers. It is hard
to understand how Kerry's proposal is any different from the
current reality on the ground.
Most commentary dealing with the latest US push for a
negotiated agreement goes as far back as George W Bush's
roadmap of 2002, the Arab peace initiative earlier the same year,
or even the Oslo accords of 1993. What is often ignored is the
fact that the "peace process" was a political invention by US
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hardliner Henry Kissinger, who served as a national security
advisor and later secretary of state in the Nixon administration.
The idea was to co-opt the Arabs following the Israeli military
victory of 1967, and allow the sudden expansion of Israel's
borders into various Arab borders with full US support and
reinforcement. It was Kissinger himself who lobbied for the
massive US military aid to Israel that changed the course of the
1973 war, and he was the man who worked to secure Israeli
gains through diplomacy. While many are quick to conclude that
the "peace process" has been a historical failure, the bleak
estimate ignores that whole point of the "peace process" was
never to secure a lasting peace, but rather to forward Israeli
military gains. In that sense, it has been a great success. Over the
years, however, the "peace process" became an American
investment in the Middle East, a status quo in itself, and a
reason for political relevance. During the administration of both
Bushes, father and son, the "peace process" went hand in hand
with plans for an Iraq invasion. George W Bush's roadmap,
which was drafted with the help of pro-Israel neoconservative
elements in his administration was this "war" president's "peace"
overture. Naturally, the roadmap failed, but it helped maintain
the peace process charade for a few more years. At least until
Bill Clinton arrived on the scene to kick-start the process once
more.
In the last four decades, the "peace process" became an
American diplomatic staple in the region. It is an investment that
goes hand in hand with their support of Israel and interest in
energy supplies. It is an end in itself, and is infused regularly for
reasons other than genuine peace.
Now that Kerry's deadline of a "framework agreement" is
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quickly approaching, all parties must be preparing for all
possibilities. Ultimately, the Americans are keen on maintaining
the peace process charade; the Palestinian Authority is desperate
to survive; and Israel needs to expand settlements unhindered by
a Palestinian uprising or unnecessary international attention. But
will they succeed?
Ramzy Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a
media consultant, an author and the editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a
Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
The Council on Foreign Relations
Is the White House Pulling the Plug on
Kerry's Peace Mission?
Robert M. Danin
Posted on April 2, 2014 -- Secretary of State John Kerry
abruptly cancelled his Middle East shuttle diplomacy yesterday
less than a month before his self-imposed deadline for
concluding an Israeli-Palestinian peace treaty. The New York
Times leads today with a quote from a senior Obama
administration official saying, "Mr. Kerry's decision not to
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return to the region immediately reflected a growing impatience
in the White House, which believes that his mediating efforts
have reached their limit and that the two sides need to work their
way out of the current impasse."
If true, it would mean that the White House had cut the legs out
from its lead diplomat just as he was trying to avert a complete
meltdown of the U.S.-initiated high-stakes diplomatic process. It
followed a dramatic day in which Kerry had thrown a diplomatic
`Hail Mary' designed to keep the fledgling negotiations from
collapsing entirely.
While the details of Kerry's most recent proposal remain
sketchy, it seems to entail a package of measures that would
include an agreement by both parties to remain in negotiations,
Israel to proceed with its overdue release of a batch of
Palestinian prisoners promised at the onset of this recent Kerry
diplomatic chapter, an additional Israeli release of Palestinian
prisoners, some limit to settlement activity, a Palestinian
suspension of their threat to activate their membership in the
United Nations, and as the news-grabbing sweetener, the U.S.
release of Jonathan Pollard, imprisoned for spying on the United
States for Israel. The situation became even more complicated
when Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas last night
announced he was taking concrete steps to join fifteen
international agencies, though U.S. officials suggested that this
move was a negotiating ploy and not an effort to undermine the
secretary of state's efforts.
As Kerry worked feverishly to salvage the process he initiated
last summer, why would the White House turn it off lest it end
in a blaze of recriminations, an absence of a back-up plan, and a
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distinctly possible resort to violence on the ground? One reason
may be that as the day progressed, and the voices opposed to the
Pollard-for-more-peace-process grew louder (both the
Republican and Democratic heads of the Senate Intelligence
Committee came out against it), the White House decided that
the Kerry proposal was too costly to support. Had Kerry not
coordinated his ideas with the White House before floating them
with the parties?
The White House suspension of Kerry's efforts may simply be a
tactical move designed to force Israelis and Palestinians to stew
a bit and ponder the cost of a failed peace process. Such a
calculation, that the two sides need to work their way out of the
current impasse, is conceptually flawed. Israelis and Palestinians
have repeatedly demonstrated that they cannot find a way to
"work their way out" by themselves. Indeed, the whole logic of
Kerry's involvement was based on this assessment and of the
need for a third-party facilitator.
However justified the criticisms of Secretary of State Kerry's
approach, the Obama administration, having launched this high
profile effort at comprehensive peace, cannot simply disown its
own initiative just as it appears to be on the verge of collapse. In
the past month, the president himself hosted Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinian president Mahmoud
Abbas, and other Middle East officials at the White House,
signaling that this peace effort was the administration's and not
simply John Kerry's. As its patron, the United States has a
responsibility, at a minimum, to find a soft landing for its
fledgling effort.
A free fall now would be self-imposed, and would jeopardize the
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serious and constructive Israeli-Palestinian cooperative efforts
underway on the ground. It could rapidly lead to major
diplomatic fighting in international bodies, such as the United
Nations and at the International Criminal Court. The center of
gravity within Palestinian circles could quickly shift towards
radicals and renewed violent efforts at "resistance." Israel would
surely take punitive measures against the Palestinian Authority,
withholding tax revenues that help pay salaries, limiting access
and movement of Palestinians, and stepping up its military
footprint in the West Bank.
Having repeatedly made the argument since last summer that
such moves would be catastrophic, the United States owes it to
the people of the Middle East not to be the party that helps bring
about this disastrous outcome.
Robert M Danin - Eni Enrico Mattei Senior Fellow for Middle
East and Africa Studies.
Article 4.
The Daily Star
Israel is facing a backlash in America
Rami G. Khouri
April 02, 2014 -- Consider two incidents that occurred in the
past few days in the United States and you should start to grasp
the elements of a slow, subtle but steady and important shift that
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is taking place in the country.
It is happening in that arena where pro-Israeli and pro-
Palestinian sentiments are being expressed in public and seek to
influence American government policy, media and even the
decisions of churches and non-government organizations such as
student and professional groups.
In Las Vegas, three likely Republican presidential candidates
addressed the Republican Jewish Coalition, basically a bank
account for wildly pro-Israel candidates run by the casino
magnate Sheldon Adelson. They leaped, howled and virtually
stripped naked in proclaiming their endless love for Israel and
Zionism, hoping to get hundreds of millions of dollars that
Adelson will offer Republicans who are sufficiently pro-Israeli
and might have a chance at winning the presidency.
Among these candidates are Governor John Kasich of Ohio,
Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Governor Chris
Christie of New Jersey. Christie apparently went for the Buffoon
of the Year Award. After he had accurately referred to the
Palestinian West Bank as the "occupied territories," he
apologized in person to Adelson the next day for using this
expression. Rabid Zionists prefer to call the West Bank part of
the historic land of Israel, or, at best, a "disputed" territory.
This is a routine spectacle in the United States, and it has been
going on for decades. It spikes to new levels of shameful
political pandering when national elections approach. Yet
powerful pro-Zionist groups and individuals that have
traditionally shaped much of the discussion and official
American policy on Palestine and Israel are suddenly finding
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themselves increasingly challenged in public. Consequently,
their influence is slowly being reduced to a shrinking body of
Americans that is primarily composed of politicians in
Washington, who are most susceptible to the pressures that
extremist Zionists can exert, and who are also most in need of
funds to run their campaigns.
At the same time as this was going on, a group called Students
for Justice in Palestine followed the established procedures and
received permission to hang a banner at the entrance to
Columbia University's Barnard College in New York City,
calling for justice in Palestine. The next day, after protests by
pro-Israel groups, the university president ordered the banner
taken down. In the past, the story would have ended there. This
time, however, it did not, because Students for Justice in
Palestine activists followed up with a campaign of articles in the
local media, and they continue using social media to challenge
what they saw as the pro-Israel bias of the administration.
Similar situations are taking place routinely across many
American universities, or in professional and academic societies,
mainstream churches and other groups that are no longer
remaining silent in the face of Israel's continued colonization,
subjugation and mistreatment of the Palestinian people and their
land. Another example is the call this week by mainstream
American civil liberties groups to oppose a proposed law by a
pro-Israel Illinois state lawmaker calling on all university
administrators to condemn the use of all academic boycotts —
presumably because some American academics have called for
boycotting Israeli universities.
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This new tendency to stand up to pro-Israel fanatics in the U.S.
reflects expanding global moves by governments, labor unions
and others to boycott Israeli government or private institutions
colonizing and exploiting Palestinian lands and communities.
For the first time on a large scale, it is now more acceptable in
mainstream American society to discuss Israeli behavior in
public, assess whether Israel is acting justly or criminally and
propose measures to force Israeli compliance with the rule of
law and ethical international norms of behavior.
The simple but historic message I read in this trend is that
traditional Zionist intimidation tactics are losing some of their
effectiveness — other than against American presidential
candidates, who will remain fully compliant with Zionist
demands. Pro-Zionist fanatics (both Jews and Christians) are
concerned because grass-roots activists are openly challenging
them and, more importantly, organizing activities that include
boycotts, advocacy for divestments and sanctions and public
gestures as simple as planting posters or hanging banners that
counter the Zionist extremists.
The activists for Palestinian justice and against Zionist
criminality include a sprinkling of Palestinian-Americans and
other Arab-Americans. But more importantly, they also include
people from other ethnic backgrounds, such as white Anglo-
Saxons as well progressive Jewish-Americans.
All of them feel they should stop being silent in the face of
Israeli excesses and unethical behavior and take action to
promote genuine peace and justice among Israelis and
Palestinians.
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Bloomberg
Don't Punish Abbas. Support Him.
Editorial
Apr 2, 2014 -- By suddenly turning to the United Nations for
support, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has rebuffed the
U.S.'s terms for brokering peace talks with Israel. But Secretary
of State John Kerry is right to be cautious in his response: It isn't
in anyone's interest to respond with punitive actions that would
further upend the negotiations. Let's hope Israel and the U.S.
Congress agree.
Israel, backed by the U.S., argues that by pursuing membership
in 15 UN and international conventions, Abbas has violated the
notion that the two sides should negotiate a settlement directly,
rather than each taking unilateral steps to predetermine the
outcome. The U.S. and Israel raised the same objection in 2012
when Abbas successfully pushed the UN to admit Palestine as a
nonmember observer state.
This position is unfortunate. After all, Israel, even while
negotiating with the Palestinians, regularly expands its civilian
settlements in the West Bank, thereby affecting the size and
shape of a future Palestinian state. This is the equivalent of
dividing a pie while taking a few bites along the way.
What's more, Palestinian membership in a dozen or so
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international conventions won't change anything substantial.
Sure, the Palestinians will use their position to annoy Israel
diplomatically; they've already done so through their
membership in the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization.
But it isn't realistic to think this is enough to pressure Israel to
make otherwise unlikely concessions. Israeli governments have
become inured to opprobrium emanating from the UN. "UM
shmum" goes a popular rhyme, playing on the Hebrew
pronunciation of "UN" and a prefix signifying dismissal.
Abbas was careful not to apply for admission to the one body
that would make a difference: the International Criminal Court.
If Palestine joins the ICC or seeks its jurisdiction, the Israeli
officials responsible for expanding settlements would be
vulnerable to prosecution for war crimes. The ICC's statute
prohibits the "transfer, directly or indirectly, by the occupying
power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it
occupies."
Israel will be tempted to punish Abbas anyway. Its most obvious
method would be to withhold customs revenues it collects on
behalf of the Palestinian Authority. In the U.S., there will be
pressure in Congress to cut the 5440 million in aid budgeted for
the authority this year.
Weakening Abbas and his relatively moderate Fatah party would
only strengthen the opposition, the militant Hamas, which
supports the destruction of Israel. And for what? To send a
message that the Palestinians shouldn't get in line with
international accords such as the Geneva Conventions and the
United Nations Convention Against Corruption?
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The Israelis have everything the Palestinians don't -- a real state,
a powerful military, a powerful ally (the U.S.), a strong economy --
as well as control over Palestinian land, airspace, borders and
resources.
Which is why the UN venture is something of a sideshow. If the
Palestinians ever want an independent homeland, they will have
to win over the Israelis by making realistic demands and meeting
Israel's reasonable security requirements. The UN can't make
Palestine real. Fortunately, a solid majority of Israelis also want
to see the creation of a Palestinian state through negotiations, as
does the U.S. The responses to Abbas's UN move should
preserve the promise of such talks.
Article fi
Al Jazcera
Turkish local elections: One victor,
many losers
Yuksel Sezgin
2 Apr 2014 -- Turkish local elections are now over. The ruling
party, Justice and Development Party (AKP), won about 45
percent of the votes cast, while the rest was divided across three
major parties in the parliament. The results are hardly a surprise.
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As I said on these pages about two months ago, no one really
expected that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's party
would lose or suffer a major blow.
These were mayoral elections. They had no direct impact on the
allocation of seats in parliament, but they will shape in a number
of ways the future of Turkish democracy in the coming months
and weeks. Let's analyse what the results mean, and what their
potential impact may be on Turkish politics.
Passing the test
First, and perhaps one of the most interesting outcomes of the
elections, is that despite the recent corruption allegations, leaks
and increasing authoritarianism of the prime minister, AKP's
voters did not penalise the party. On the contrary, they seem to
have rewarded the prime minister by giving him the ticket he
needed to run in the presidential elections in August. According
to a recent poll, about 77 percent of Turks indicated that they
believed the corruption allegations implicating the prime
minister and his close circle.
Given that AKP enjoys the support of about 45 percent of the
electorate, we may safely assume that there must be many AKP
supporters among those who believe in the corruption charges -
of course, that's besides those who dismiss the charges as a
"foreign conspiracy".
Then the question we need to understand is why so many people
continued to support a government which they considered
"corrupt"? The mostly likely answer is, if I may speculate, that
they did not consider the opposition parties any more
trustworthy than the ruling party.
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Also, many AKP supporters seem to subscribe to the prime
minister's increasingly polarising identity politics of "us vs
them" discourse, and continue to support the AKP regardless of
corruption charges and increasing authoritarianism with the fear
that if the "other" comes to power, they would lose political,
economic and ideological advantages they've come to enjoy
under AKP rule since 2002.
The opposition parties (eg, the Republican People's Party -
CHP, and the Nationalist Action Party - MHP) have lost against
AKP in six local and national elections as well as two referenda
since 2002. It has now become crystal clear that unless
opposition parties undergo major political transformations, they
will most likely continue to suffer many more electoral defeats
against AKP. One way to interpret the results of recent elections
is that the Turks do not seem to trust the opposition parties or
believe that they could rule the country any better than AKP.
With that insight, both CHP and MHP leaderships must reflect
on and draw lessons from their continuous failure if they ever
want to become a viable government alternative. Perhaps people
do not want to vote for opposition parties whose only function is
to bash the government and cry foul without putting forth a
credible plan or project addressing the country's socio-economic
and political ailments.
Election results have once more reminded us that Turkey
continues to remain as a deeply divided and polarised society
along two main axes: secularists vs Islamists, Turkish
nationalists vs Kurdish nationalists. In this respect, the results
coming from the east and southeast Anatolian regions are
particularly important. The Peace and Democracy Party (BDP),
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the political wing of PKK (armed Kurdish separatist movement),
has reinforced its regional dominance by winning mayoralties in
10 provinces and further laid the groundwork for possible future
autonomy in the Kurdish-populated areas.
Erdogan as president?
The elections have produced only one winner and that is the
prime minister himself, not even his party. Since last year's Gezi
demonstrations, he has increasingly personalised politics in
Turkey. Even though these elections were local elections in
which normally names and personalities of mayoral candidates
play a greater role than any other consideration (eg, party
identification or ideology), these elections were not about who
would collect the garbage in the city, but a referendum on the
prime minister staying in power.
Erdogan's success came at the expense of his own party. Even in
the eyes of AKP supporters, the party has now been increasingly
associated with his name and personality. AKP is no longer
viewed as a legitimate political party but an association or a cult
of those who "worship" Erdogan even when he sins. This raises
serious questions about the future of AKP, and its survival as a
political power after Erdogan retires to Cankaya Palace as
president this summer.
With the support he garnered in these elections, he may soon
declare his long-expected candidacy in the presidential elections
scheduled for August. Even though he is widely expected to be
elected as president, there is still a slight chance that another
candidate may disrupt his presidential plans. If opposition
parties repeat the collaboration they exhibited in Ankara's
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electoral race (CHP fielded a former MHP mayoral candidate) in
the presidential elections by fielding a strong candidate who can
transcend traditional political cleavages and draw support from
both AKP, and CHP/MHP constituents, the opposition may
have a real chance of disrupting Erdogan's presidential plans.
As said, elections produced only one victor and that was
Erdogan. But there were many losers including opposition
parties, the Gulenists (followers of the charismatic Muslim cleric
Fethullah Gulen), civil society organisations, etc. But the biggest
loser of all was Turkish democracy. It is widely argued by many
analysts of Turkish politics that in the past (especially between
2002-2010) AKP has served as an agent of democratisation.
However, as these same analysts point out, AKP, and
particularly the PM, have become increasingly authoritarian in
recent years.
For instance, fundamental principles of democracy such as
freedom of speech, rule of law, separation of powers, judicial
independence, and democratic accountability have been
repeatedly and systematically violated by Erdogan and his
government, especially since Gezi demonstrations in May and
June 2013. Against this background, by giving Erdogan the
approval ratings he desired, these elections may have well put
the last nail in the coffin of nascent Turkish democracy.
Unfortunately, the prime minister's vindictive victory speech on
election night has only fuelled the fears that the downward spiral
of Turkish democracy would only deepen with new bans on
freedom of speech, witch-hunts against "internal" enemies of the
regime, and a possible invasion of Syria against which Erdogan
declared a war during his victory speech.
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Local elections were the first round of the long electoral season
in Turkey. The second round is the presidential elections in
August. Erdogan would not miss the opportunity to be the first
popularly-elected president of Turkey - even though he has so
far failed to turn Turkey's parliamentary regime into a US-style
presidential system by rewriting the constitution.
However, it is highly likely that Erdogan - if elected - would
concentrate all executive powers in his hands (under the current
constitution the president has limited and mostly ceremonial
powers) by appointing a Medvedev-like puppet prime minister
in his place and rule Turkey with an iron fist in the next five or
10 years.
If Erdogan becomes president, it is also very likely that AKP
would call for early parliamentary elections in Fall 2014 - the
third and last round of 2014 electoral season. As noted above,
the future of AKP after Erdogan is not certain. Therefore, we
have every reason to expect that the party leaders may want to
capitalise on the gains of local and presidential elections and
harness pro-Erdogan sympathies while his legacy is fresh by
moving forward the parliamentary elections set for June 2015.
Yuksel Sezgin is Assistant Professor of Political Science,
Maxwell School of Public Affairs, Syracuse University.
Ankle 7.
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The National Interest
Why the Saudis Are Panicking
Trita Pars i
April 3, 2014 -- As President Barack Obama must have noticed
during his visit, there is a panicky tone to almost everything the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia does these days, whether it's
campaigning for two years to win a coveted seat on the UN
Security Council only to give it up immediately after the vote, or
its public pronouncements of going it alone in the chaos of
Syria, or its break with its fellow Arab state Oatar, or the closing
of the Al Jazeera office in Riyadh, or the banning of the books
of renowned Palestinian poet Mahmud Darwish. Or, of course,
its opposition to diplomacy over Iran's nuclear program and the
prospects of a US-Iranian thaw.
Riyadh's opposition to the Iran nuclear talks has largely been
understood in the context of the larger Saudi-Iranian and Sunni-
Shia rivalry. Consequently, Saudi's negative reaction was
predictable, the argument goes. The Saudi royal house would
undoubtedly not sit idly by as its regional rival negotiated its
way out of harsh sanctions and into a potential US-Iranian
rapprochement that could pave the way for an American tilt
towards Tehran—all at the expense of Saudi interests.
But the intensity of Riyadh's reaction cannot be explained solely
through the kingdom's displeasure at Tehran's diplomatic
advances. In fact, the unprecedented opening between the US
and Iran is arguably only the tip of the iceberg of Saudi Arabia's
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growing list of concerns. Numerous geopolitical trends in the
last decade have evolved in opposition to Saudi interests. Much
indicates that it is the combination of these factors, rather than
just Saudi displeasure with US-Iranian diplomacy, that best
explain the erratic behavior of the House of Saud.
Consider the following developments. First, the United States
has significantly increased its own oil production and reduced
its dependence on Saudi oil. Driven by a boom in shale oil
production, America's crude output has surged at record speeds
in recent years. Last year, production rose a stunning 15
percent—the fastest absolute annual growth in any country in
twenty years. According to the International Energy Agency, the
United States will overtake Saudi Arabia as the world's top oil
producer as early as 2015.
The official Saudi line reads that OPEC had survived past
increases in production from countries outside OPEC, and that
Saudi does not worry about the America's growing output. But
some important voices in Saudi Arabia publicly disagree,
charactering the US's declining dependence on Saudi crude as
"an inevitable threat."
Indeed, being a dominant producer on the oil market has
provided the kingdom with vital political influence. The US's
growing output is a direct strategic threat to that influence,
according to some in Saudi.
Secondly, the Arab uprisings—and the Obama administration's
reaction to those—have further added distance between Riyadh
and Washington. Saudi Arabia was vehemently against the anti-
Mubarak rallies in Egypt and viewed Obama's shift to the side
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of the Tahrir square protesters as a betrayal. For decades, an
understanding reigned supreme between the United States and
its regional Arab allies: The Arab autocracies would help ensure
stability in the region and on the oil market, and in return the US
would protect the states and as well as their regimes.
But since the Arab Spring, a common view in the Middle
East—not just in Saudi—is that the US has betrayed this
arrangement and abandoned its allies. From the US perspective,
however, the Obama administration simply saw the writing on
the wall: Most Arab autocracies were quickly reaching their
expiration dates and the demands of the populations for greater
governance, freedom and rights were both justified and
unstoppable.
The new reality is that in spite of Riyadh's massive arms
purchase from the US, Washington will likely not come to its
aid if the Arab spring reaches Saudi. This means that a critical
avenue for Saudi Arabia to ensure regime survival is in
jeopardy—at best—or, at worst, lost.
Thirdly, to make matters worse, a succession crisis looms in the
Kingdom. A successor and a third in line for the throne have
been appointed, but their reigns are not likely to be long due to
their old age. In the next few years, the throne is likely to pass to
the third generation of descendants of the kingdom's founder
Abdulaziz ibn Saud. Even under the best circumstances, such a
generational shift can carry complications. In these sensitive
geopolitical times, the House of Saud cannot afford a protracted
succession crisis while also facing the pressure of the Arab
spring, Sunni-Shia tensions in its Eastern province—and the
uncertainty of American protection.
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Which brings us to the fourth factor: America's pivot to the east.
Whether it is progressing at the pace originally intended or not,
the reality is that the Obama administration has decided to
reduce America's military footprint in the Middle East and
avoid getting dragged into any additional ground wars there. In
the eyes of some in Riyadh (and Tel Aviv), the Obama
administration has relinquished its responsibility to uphold order
in the region and abandoned its allies to meet their fates alone.
From Washington's perspective, the real strategic challenge to
the US will come in Asia, not the Middle East. Further military
entanglement in the Arab world will only undermine the US's
ability to handle future crises in East Asia.
In practical terms, this means that the United States likely will
not intervene in Syria militarily—much to Riyadh's chagrin—or
put military assets at the disposal of its allies to fight their own
regional rivals. The Obama administration is not going to permit
its allies to use the United States as a proxy.
On top of all of this, US-Iranian diplomacy may lead to the
unchaining of Iran. Tehran might break out of its isolation, be
rehabilitated into the region's political and economic structures,
which in turn can enable it to legitimize its geopolitical gains in
the region. A new regional order may emerge, one in which
Washington will quietly accept Iran's advances.
Had US-Iranian diplomacy made headway under former Iranian
president Mohammad Khatami—at a time when Saudi-Iranian
relations were warming—Riyadh would likely still have been
hesitant and anxious. It would have cautiously welcomed the
thaw, while remaining concerned about how US-Iranian
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rapprochement would affect its interest. But there would not
have been any of the current overreactions. The Saudi panic is
more likely rooted in its fears about the broader geopolitical
trends in the region, of which US-Iranian rapprochement is one
of many concerning trends to Riyadh.
Ultimately, finding a new regional equilibrium that enjoys Saudi
buy-in is critical. Saudi Arabia is an important state in the region
for both economic and religious reasons. Just as the containment
of Iran has become a source of instability in the region, any
move that would push Saudi towards greater extremism would
ill serve the region. Just like Iran, Saudi Arabia must be part of
the solution. In particular, Riyadh has the ability and the
responsibility to defuse sectarian strife.
Panic, however, will bring Saudi Arabia no closer to such
objectives.
Trita Parsi is founder and president of the National Iranian
American Council.
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