Columbia International Affairs Online: Policy Briefs

CIAO DATE: 07/2011

The Turkish Internal Reform and Foreign Policy Shift: Implications for the Cyprus Talks

Chrysostomos Pericleous

June 2011

Global Political Trends Center

Abstract

Internal social change in Turkey, inaugurated by the liberalization of the economy in the 1980s and given a new impetus by Turkey’s EU accession path during the AKP governments, has engineered a momentous reform process, which marks the beginning of a new post-­‐Kemalist era in the country. Steady economic growth, along with democratization, brings new social forces to the forefront of the political arena and makes them stakeholders in the policymaking processes. As a result, one can observe a substantive shift in Turkey’s foreign policy, from the “hard power” model of the Kemalist era governed by the siege syndrome, to the “soft power” approach of Ahmet Davutoğlu’s doctrine of “nil problems with neighbors”, governed by a feeling of confidence that liberates the country from past obsessions. This foreign policy shift removes the Cyprus problem from the sphere of the untouchable grand national issues as well as from its historical context, and leads to a rationalization that allows for a compromise win-­‐win settlement. Within this framework, Turkish Prime Minister Erdoğan, having won a new mandate with a larger ever-­‐popular support, has a free hand to take the initiative for a lasting settlement of the protracted Cyprus conflict. The practical recommendations made in this regard constitute substantive political actions, which, if materialized, would decisively contribute towards an early settlement.