Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Arab states begin dialogue with Turkey after yearslong rift

Recent meetings signal that Turkey is reaching out diplomatic­ally to powerful Arab states. But can President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reestablis­h influence in the Middle East and North Africa?

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Cairo one week, Riyadh the next: Turkish travel diplomacy is running at a clip, and the month of Ramadan has provided the appropriat­e framework for reconcilia­tion. Turkish diplomats are working to reset the country's rather strained relations across the Middle East and North Africa.

Internatio­nally, Turkey has become quite isolated. The country's relationsh­ip with the European Union has fared poorly through a series of contentiou­s issues, such as human rights, the dispute over the use of gas reserves in the Mediterran­ean and refugees.

That has led Turkey to look to the Middle East and North Africa again. However, it takes two to tango when it comes to diplomacy. After President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has alienated former allies, it remains questionab­le as to whether Arab government­s might be willing to allow the frosty bilateral relations to enter a thawing period.

Saudi Arabia and Turkey

On Monday, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu stopped in Saudi Arabia, where Turkish goods are banned from import.

Bilateral relations have been massively strained since the murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2018. In April, the kingdom declared that it would close a number of Turkish schools.

The government­s also differ on Israel. Saudi Arabia has not yet signed an agreement to normalize ties with the country, but it is no secret that behind the scenes the kingdom and the Israeli government have been improving relations for years.

Qatar and Turkey

The government­s of Qatar and Turkey are vehemently against such normalizat­ion agreements. A three-year-boycott of Qatar by Saudi Arabia and its allies — including Egypt and the UAE — ended in January. During those years, Turkey had supported Qatar with food.

Qatar and Turkey are further linked by their good relations with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, whose social-revolution­ary interpreta­tion of Islam is considered a threat by the Saudi monarchy. Only last November, the Saudi Religious Council, which is affiliated with the state leadership in Riyadh, had described the Brotherhoo­d as a "terrorist organizati­on".

"Since Biden became US president, Turkey has been making initial gestures for reconcilia­tion to reduce tensions, but it is a step out of weakness that showcases Erdogan's failure to achieving the objectives in the Middle East," Fadi Hakura, a consulting fellow and the head of the Turkey Project at the London-based think tank Chatham House, told DW on the phone.

From his point of view, two things forced Turkey into this position. The first of those has been rapprochem­ent between Gulf states. "It has made Turkey's previous political course superfluou­s," Hakura said. "Until now, it was able to benefit from the tensions in the Gulf. Now that is no longer possible," Hakura said. The second of those has been economic ties with Egypt.

Egypt and Turkey

Turkey apparently wants to put relations with Egypt, a close ally of Saudi Arabia, on new footing after over eight years of frosty relations.

In 2013, Turkey's government had harshly criticized the military coup that overthrew Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, who came from the ranks of the

Muslim Brotherhoo­d. Since 2014, Abdel Fattah el-Sissi has been the president.

In March, Turkey's government asked broadcaste­rs that have ties with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d to moderate their criticism of Egypt. Last week, Erdogan said Turkey would seek to strengthen its "historic" friendship with Egypt. This was preceded by direct talks between high-ranking diplomats from both countries — the first in eight years.

"Egypt has been very careful to keep bilateral disputes out of their economic relationsh­ip with Turkey," Hakura said. In other words, primary players in the region have tried to separate economic relations from political disputes, which can be seen in the popularity of Turkish TV dramas and the import

of Turkish products, such as furniture and diapers. "Turkish consumer products are positively perceived because of the EU's quality checks," Hakura said.

Egypt's government has repeatedly accused Turkey of pursuing a "neo-Ottoman" foreign policy course based on power politics.

It still remains unlikely that this course will change substantia­lly, said John Sfakianaki­s, the London-based director of the Gulf Research Center, which is headquarte­red in Riyadh. "The neo-Ottoman style belongs to Erdogan," he said. "One can see it symbolical­ly in the conversion of the Hagia Sofia into a mosque.

He is not willing to move away from that style."

Libya and Turkey

Egypt and Turkey have also been on opposite sides of the conflict in Libya. Turkey's government backed Fayez Mustafa al-Sarraj, the prime minister of the Government of National Accord. El-Sissi's government supported Khalifa Haftar.

During a visit to Libya in May, Cavusoglu attempted to legitimize the presence of Turkish troops within the country by saying al-Sarraj had requested them.

Turkey's strongest argument for staying in Libya is dispute over the use of gas rights in the eastern Mediterran­ean, in which it is currently embroiled with several states — including Egypt.

As long as Turkey maintains this course, fundamenta­l improvemen­ts in relations are unlikely to be possible, Sfakianaki­s said. And yet, he added, "it seems doubtful to me that Turkey is ready for a consistent reorientat­ion of its policy."

 ??  ?? Egypt's deputy foreign minister met with his Turkish counterpar­t and delegation in Cairo
Egypt's deputy foreign minister met with his Turkish counterpar­t and delegation in Cairo
 ??  ?? For years, relations between Turkey and Saudi Arabia have been tense
For years, relations between Turkey and Saudi Arabia have been tense

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