| At the pinnacle of its power during the 16th and  early 17th centuries, the Turkish Empire  seemed invincible. It controlled huge swathes of Europe and Africa while its  Asian reach encompassed northern Iraq, Jordan, Palestine, Oman and Yemen  together with parts of Lebanon and Saudi Arabia.  Ottoman EmpireUnder the respective rules of Sultan Selim and his successor  Suleiman the Magnificent, the empire expanded over land and sea but in the  centuries that followed, it suffered stagnation due to a series of ineffective  rulers as well as European challenges to its military machine which had failed  to keep up with technological advances.
 By the end of the 19th century, the Ottoman Empire was in serious debt to European banks and  was in its last throes following the Young Turk Revolution of 1908 caused by  discontent in the army. The 1916 Arab Revolt was to drive a further nail in its  coffin. Its defeat in World War I resulted in the Treaty of Sevres; a peace  treaty signed in the famous Sevres porcelain factory that was instrumental in  partitioning the Empire and creating new independent countries from its former  territories.  The Turkish National Movement led by the military commander  Mustafa Kemal Pasha waged a war of independence to annul the Treaty of Sevres  and to oust the Allied Forces. Successful on both counts, the Treaty of Sevres  was superseded by the Treaty of Lausanne whereby the Anatolian and East  Thracian parts of the Ottoman Empire were returned to Turkey. As a result of the new  treaty, the Republic of Turkey was officially recognized as the successor to  the Ottoman Empire on October 29, 1923.  Mustafa KemalThe Ottomans bequeathed an enduring legacy throughout the  lands they occupied in terms of architecture, music, cuisine, science,  technology and learning. But it was Mustafa Kemal ‘Ataturk’ who thrust Turkey kicking  and screaming into the 20th century. Mustafa Kemal was born outside  the city of Salonika  to a Turkish family according to most reports, although, according to Time Magazine his father was Albanian  and his mother Macedonian. His father, an officer in a militia, was called Ali  Reza Effendi but the boy adopted the honorary surname Kemal given to him by his  mathematics teacher, meaning “Perfection”. Following graduation from the War Academy  in 1905, he played a role in the Young Turk Revolution that overthrew the last  Ottoman Sultan.
 As President of the new Republic  of Turkey, Kemal analyzed the  constitutions and institutions of thriving modern European states, which he  selected and adapted according to Turkey’s needs. He began by  designating Ankara  as the country’s capital and rejecting totalitarian rule in favor of ‘direct  government by the Assembly”.  Others of his reforms involved the separation of religion  from government, taking education away from the religious madrassahs and  introducing compulsory primary education for all children. In 1928, he tried to  tackle the widespread problem of illiteracy by introducing a new and simple  Turkish alphabet to replace Arabic script that was also taught to grown-ups in  centers of learning and culture called People’s Houses.  Out of a desire to Europeanize his country, he banned the  traditional fez in favor of Derby  hats and prohibited the wearing of turbans and women’s veils. He also  established Turkey’s  first central bank, railway network and domestically-manufactured airplane the  MMV-1. Although a military man, he based his foreign policy on the peaceful  resolution of disputes and refrained from entering into military conflicts  throughout his leadership.  It goes without saying that his reforms encountered  opposition from those nostalgic for empire as well as conservatives but overall  he was beloved by the people – and still is today. Every November 10 at 09.05  am, people pause for one minute to commemorate his death and any insult to his  name is deemed illegal.  During World War II,   Turkey remained  neutral for the most part but it joined the Allies in 1945 to show good faith  before joining the United Nations as a founder member. In 1947, its security  was guaranteed by the United States  in order to keep Soviet Union ambitions at  bay. For the same reason, Turkey  became a member of NATO in 1952 to help prevent the Soviets from setting-up  military bases around the Mediterranean.  Turbulent decadesThe 1960s, 70s and 80s were turbulent times for Turkey  due to a number of military coups d'états as well as a Kurdish insurgency that robbed more than 40,000 of their lives. In  1974, Turkey capitalized on political divisions in Cyprus - which led to the  overthrow of the President Archbishop Makarios by the Greek military - by  invading the island and occupying 37 percent of its territory with the backing  of the US and NATO. The United Nations objected to the subsequent establishment  of the Turkish Republic  of Northern Cyprus  that splits the island in two and which is officially recognized by no other  nation.
 In 1980, the government was toppled by a military coup that  extended Martial Law to 20 of Turkey’s  67 provinces. Within two years, the army handed over power to a civilian  government led by Turgut Ozal which set about re-energizing the flagging  economy. Subsequent to a long period of political instability and economic woes  following Ozal’s departure, in 1997, the Turkish military forced the then Prime  Minister Necmettin Erbakan to resign. His government was superseded by a  coalition formed between the Virtue Party and the Democratic Left Party, which  worked to bring Turkey  into the European Economic Union (EU).   EU bidTurkey’s  application to join the EU was made on April 14, 1987 but Ankara had to wait until December 1999 before  it was officially accepted. Negotiations began in 2005 but the earliest date  for membership is 2013 provided it is found to be compliant with all 35  chapters of the body of EU law.
 Those championing Turkey’s  accession highlight Turkey’s  strategic location, its flourishing economy and its military force. Others,  such as Austria and France  are hold-outs. France’s  President Nicolas Sarkozy has said Turkey  has no place in Europe while Austria  wants to keep Europe ‘a Christian club’.  Although Turkey  has endeavored to comply with the EU’s entry conditions and is economically  viable, its chances are dim. The result is Turks are now divided on whether to  pursue membership while, according to a 2009 poll, 32 percent of Turkey’  citizens hold negative views of the EU. It is likely that ‘Old Europe’s’ seeming reluctance to open  the EU’s doors to Turkey  has persuaded it to seek new powerful friends. This dramatic change of course  began on March 14, 2003 when Recep Tayyip Erdogan Chairman of the Justice and  Development Party was sworn-in as Prime Minister.  Prime Minister Erdogan The son of an observant Muslim coast guard, Erdogan once  sold lemonade and sesame buns on the streets of a rough area of Istanbul to make ends  meet. He later graduated in business administration and became a  semi-professional football player before being elected Mayor of Istanbul.  During his premiership, he has walked a tightrope between his pro-Islamic  sentiments and the military that has sworn to maintain Turkey’s secular nature.
 Foreign policy  On the foreign policy front he has cemented ties with the US while voicing strong objections to the  invasion of Iraq when Washington was barred  from using Turkish airspace to attack that country. The US strongly supports Turkey’s  EU bid and lobbies European countries on Ankara’s  behalf.
 The Armenian issue – which the White House refers to as  ‘genocide’ - remains a point of contention between the two countries while within  the US there are influential  voices criticizing Erdogan for reorienting Turkey’s foreign policy on an  Islamic axis.  Turkey’s  growing relationship with Iran  is a cause for concern in Washington  too. Last year, witnessed several high profile exchanges between Iran and Turkey when opportunities to  increase cooperation were discussed. Turkey’s  recent role in cementing a uranium-swap agreement between Iran and Brazil, designed to thwart a new  round of US-led UNSC sanctions will be seen as a slap in Uncle Sam’s face.  Erdogan has been successful in normalizing ties with Turkey’s traditional foe Greece and has reconciled his country’s  relations with Armenia.  In 2004, he hosted the Syrian President Bashar Al Assad representing the first  official visit to Turkey by a Syrian leader in 57 years, while in March last  year, he became the first Turkish head-of-state to visit Iraq in 33 years.  Turkey’s  once fragile relationship with Russia  is also on an unprecedented high. May 2010 saw a mutual lifting of visa requirements  and the signing of a multi-billion dollar nuclear power plant deal. Waning relations with IsraelHowever, Turkish-Israel relations have suffered a turn for  the worse. Turkey was the first predominantly Muslim state to recognize the  Jewish state and both countries enjoyed cordial relations until comparatively  recently when Israel attacked a Turkish aid ship on the high seas killing eight  Turkish peace activists and one American of Turkish origin. They were  particularly strained by Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in Gaza which Erdogan  called “a crime against humanity” while at the 2009 Davos Forum, Erdogan  publicly clashed and wagged his finger at the Israeli President Shimon Peres  for defending Israel’s crimes.
 The diplomatic atmosphere was subsequently worsened by a  series on Turkish state television depicting Israelis mistreating Palestinians  and a 2010 Turkish soap opera on the kidnapping of Turkish babies by the Mossad  that triggered the Turkish Ambassador to Israel  being humiliated by Israel’s  Deputy Foreign Minister while television cameras were rolling.  Flourishing economyIf Europe doesn’t act swiftly to bring Turkey into the EU fold, the day may come when Ankara says ‘no thanks’  and means it. While European economies have been contracting, Turkey’s has expanded by reaching  out to new markets. With an economy enjoying a 5.1 percent annual growth -  according to a report by Price Waterhouse - Turkey is set to triple its  national income by 2050 when its economy will match Italy’s and its GDP will  exceed Germany’s.
 ConclusionThere are fears in European and Arab capitals that  Erdogan feels more at home in Damascus, Tehran and Moscow than he  does in New York, London  or Cairo. If  that’s so, then Europe and the Arab world have  only themselves to blame. While Brussels was  sleeping Turkey  has emerged as a major economic, diplomatic and military power in its own  right. It’s time the Europeans quit snoozing long enough to accept Ankara into their embrace  while they still can.
 
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