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Turkish Leader Begins 'Arab Spring' Tour

Turkish  Prime Minister Recep Tayyep Erdogan, shown here in Ankara on Sept. 8, began a tour of the "Arab Spring" countries on Monday. He's visiting Egypt, Libya and Tunisia, where authoritarian rulers have been ousted this year.
Burhan Ozbilici
/
AP
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyep Erdogan, shown here in Ankara on Sept. 8, began a tour of the "Arab Spring" countries on Monday. He's visiting Egypt, Libya and Tunisia, where authoritarian rulers have been ousted this year.

Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyep Erdogan, began a trip to North Africa on Monday as part of an effort to build strong relations with new leaders following the ouster of long-time authoritarian rulers in those countries.

Erdogan made his first stop on his "Arab Spring" tour in Cairo, where President Hosni Mubarak quit back in February. The Turkish leader is also visiting Libya, where Moammar Gadhafi was driven from office last month, and Tunisia, where President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fled in January.

In addition, Erdogan is moving quickly to take advantage of surging anti-Israel sentiment in a number of countries, including Turkey.

Turkey recently expelled the Israeli ambassador, and in Egypt, a mob in Cairo descended on the Israeli Embassy, forcing the evacuation of Israel's diplomatic staff.

And next week, the Palestinians take their bid for statehood recognition to the United Nations, a move that is likely to increase the pressure on Israel.

Turkey's dispute with Israel is linked to the Israeli commando raid on a convoy of aid ships last year while they were in the Mediterranean Sea, headed toward the Gaza Strip.

Sharply Critical Of Israel

In one interview last week, Erdogan called Israel's attack on a aid ships a "cause for war." In another interview, he was scornful of Israel's actions on the world stage.

"Up until now Israel has played the role of a spoiled child in the face of all of the decisions taken against it by the United Nations, and no doubt they thought this behavior could continue," he said.

In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's has been rather subdued in responding to the Egyptian crisis, a sign that Israel does not want to ratchet up the rhetoric.

By contrast, Erdogan seems intent on underscoring Israel's unpopularity at the start of his North Africa tour, says Barcin Yinanc, a columnist with Turkey's Hurriyet Daily News.

"The fact that there will be thousands of Arabs in the streets will boost the confidence of the Turkish prime minister," according to Yinanc. "It will also serve as a message to Israel that it is being further isolated."

Turkish analysts say Israel and its largely right-wing government have been slow to respond to the volatile and fast-moving changes brought by the Arab Spring.

Bulent Kenes, editor-in-chief of Today's Zaman, Turkey's largest English-language daily, says it took the Muslim world a long time to launch the kind of political awakening that spread across Eastern Europe two decades ago. But he claims that now, Israel has been even slower to recognize that change.

"Today, Israel is giving the impression that it is resisting against the flow of history," he said.

There are, however, signs that Israel is preparing to respond to the recent upheavals in the region. Israel's liberal Haaretz newspaper reported that Israeli military, intelligence and foreign affairs officials have all circulated documents recently recommending a return to negotiations with the Palestinians. Some are calling the current climate "an opportunity for progress."

Meanwhile, Yinanc, the Turkish columnist, says Turkey will continue to cement ties with the emerging regimes in North Africa, spreading its example of a governing party inspired by Islam that tolerates other religious beliefs and a secular population.

She cautions, however, that this is a political invesmtent that will likely take years to show a return. In the meantime, Erdogan will also be looking to build economic and trade ties with the new leaderships in North Africa which could begin paying dividends sooner.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Peter Kenyon is NPR's international correspondent based in Istanbul, Turkey.