About us | Advertising | Contact | Get Home Delivery | Archive
Mar 22, 2010 Homepage
News
Business
Interviews
Columnists
Op-Ed
Arts & Culture
Expat Zone
Features
Travel
Leisure
Life
Cartoons
Women
Health Briefs
Weird But True
Sports
Turkish Press Review
Today's think tanks
Turkey in Foreign Press

Columnists
KERİM BALCI k.balci@todayszaman.com Columnists

Two elections and one speech


Ten days from today we will have two elections and one speech to write about. Lebanon is voting for a new parliament and indirectly for a new government this Sunday. Next Sunday it will be Iran's turn.

Today's interactive toolbox
Bookmark and Share
Video Photo Audio
Send to print Send to my friend
Post your comments
Read comments
The speech, scheduled for Thursday, June 4, will precede both. On that day the US president will give his long-awaited speech to appeal to the Muslim world. This speech and the following two elections have the potential to change the face of the Middle East in particular and East-West relations in general forever.

The Muslim world is already fed up with talk. President Barack Obama has a promising tone, but he has to deliver, too, in order to convince the Muslim street. The fact that Obama is speaking in Egypt and not in Pakistan suggests that the American administration is switching its foreign policy priority from Afghanistan back to the Arab Middle East. The president's meetings with Israeli and Palestinian leaders and his clear cut messages to the Israeli government about a halt to any settlement activity is evidence to the fact that Obama is already infected with the “Presidents' Disease.”

Presidents' Disease is an incurable obsession with the Israeli-Palestinian struggle. President Jimmy Carter was the first to become infected and his success in achieving the Camp David Accords of 1979 made it a benchmark of being a “successful US president.” From then on, the Israeli and Palestinian peace lover has awaited the next president to come and breathe new life into an already dead peace process.

President Obama has yet to work his magic. On Thursday he will probably disclose a new initiative to bring Israeli and Palestinian leaders together. The harsh measures the Fatah-led Palestinian security forces took against the Hamas militia in the West Bank last week suggest that President Mahmoud Abbas is clearing his way for this new initiative. A few settlement activities were stopped on the part of Israel. This one was interpreted as yet another Israeli maneuver aiming to soften the language President Obama may have intended to use.

Obama's intention to find a solution to the five-decade-old occupation problem is admirable, indeed, but previous experience shows that switching the priority of policies from the periphery to the center does have a similar effect on the language used. In Afghanistan and Iraq the US rhetoric revolves around “building a democratic, modern and developed nation” whereas any speech that refers to the State of Israel and its right to exist as an equal and respected member of the family of nations pulls the paradigm to that of “fighting with terrorism.” If in his Thursday speech President Obama asks for the cooperation of Muslim and Arab regimes in order to fight terrorism, the administration will stick itself into the same stalemate earlier US administrations were stuck in. If, on the other hand, the president manages to maintain his tone and ask the Muslim nations to cooperate in establishing strong, stable and open democracies in the region and leave a wonderful future to our children, be they Afghan, Pakistani, Indian, Persian or Palestinian, his call will find receptive ears in the Muslim world.

Whether the US president can resist the pull of the Israeli-Palestinian struggle will be defined by the assessments of the US and Israeli scholars of the forthcoming Lebanese and Iranian elections.

The Lebanese election is going to bring the opposition to power. The opposition is a coalition that is mentally ruled by Hezbullah, although it is not the largest party in this coalition. If on June 7 the Lebanese electorate votes for the opposition and drags Hezbullah into a position to challenge the Western world, it is possible that we will see the earlier “unfortunate fate of Hamas” movie once again. Hezbullah is doing its best in order to prevent a “Hamasization” after the elections. But the decision on whether the world should isolate a Hezbullah-dominated coalition government in Lebanon or not is that of Israel and the US. The results of the elections will not only influence the fate of Lebanon and Palestine, they will most probably have a dramatic impact on the Iranian elections of June 12.

Obama will be speaking in Egypt, but his super-addressee will be Hezbullah in Lebanon and the people of Iran. I hope he won't forget to speak about Pakistan altogether and I hope that his words about Pakistan, if they ever come to pass, won't dwell on the security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal and its security, but on the peace and security of human beings.

02 June 2009, Tuesday
KERİM BALCI
   
Articles of Today
The ‘Armenian problem,’ intellectuals and politicians in Turkey
ŞAHİN ALPAY
Process (mis) management
YAVUZ BAYDAR
It’s good to know you’re in good hands
CHARLOTTE MCPHERSON
Can the AK Party change the Constitution?
İHSAN DAĞI
How to go for growth in Turkey
ASIM ERDİLEK
From zero problems to zero progress
ÖMER TAŞPINAR
Fraudulent activity regarding deeds -- Bodrum and other cities (1)
BERK ÇEKTİR
Reasons behind Erdoğan’s controversial statement
FATMA DİŞLİ ZIBAK

Other Articles of the Columnist

  Two elections and one speech
  Sidelines of the Potsdam Conference
  Gülen conferences as venues for dialogue
  Orchestrated attacks on the president
  Youth and Sports Day
  The first station of the solution to the Kurdish problem
  Saved from a grave sin
  The eighth day of Turkish foreign policy
  Workers’ Day celebrations and Taksim Square
  Turkey is not a country to pat and deceive
  Dalan was also an angel of education
  Ankara court slams criticism of Ergenekon prosecutors
  Unaccredited and uninvited
  End of the clash of civilizations
  Turkish national plan for the alliance
  Great dialogue in the forum of the alliance
  The new Israeli cabinet and Turkey
  I got the message of the ballot box, too
  Pre-emptive gestures in Turkish-American-Armenian triangle
  Water summit and religion
Columnists
ABDULHAMİT BİLİCİ
ABDULLAH BOZKURT
ALİ BULAÇ
ALİ H. ASLAN
AMANDA PAUL
ANDREW FINKEL
ASIM ERDİLEK
AYŞE KARABAT
BEJAN MATUR
BERİL DEDEOĞLU
BERK ÇEKTİR
BÜLENT KENEŞ
BÜLENT KORUCU
CHARLOTTE MCPHERSON
DOĞU ERGİL
EKREM DUMANLI
EMRE USLU
ETYEN MAHÇUPYAN
FATMA DİŞLİ ZIBAK
FİKRET ERTAN
GÜRKAN ZENGİN
HASAN KANBOLAT
HÜSEYİN GÜLERCE
İBRAHİM KALIN
İBRAHİM ÖZTÜRK
İHSAN DAĞI
İHSAN YILMAZ
KATHY HAMILTON
KERİM BALCI
KLAUS JURGENS
LALE KEMAL
MEHMET KAMIŞ
MICHAEL KUSER
MUHAMMED ÇETİN
MÜMTAZER TÜRKÖNE
NICOLE POPE
ÖMER TAŞPINAR
ORHAN KEMAL CENGİZ
PAT YALE
ŞAHİN ALPAY
SELÇUK GÜLTAŞLI
SUAT KINIKLIOĞLU
YAVUZ BAYDAR