Marc Pierini: Turkey’s Dwindling International Role

This month marks the first year of Turkey’s current five-year legislature. When Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was elected for his third presidential mandate with 52 percent of the votes on May 28, 2023, his victory was seen as an illustration of his personal command over domestic politics, despite a deep economic crisis. His international role seemed to be enduring.
Today, sharp divergences with Western partners over the rule of law, the future of Cyprus, Israel and Hamas, and over Russia and Ukraine have ended in near-deadlock. Overcoming this impasse calls for a fresh reading of European perceptions of Ankara’s positioning over the past year.
On the economic front, progress has been made after the misguided economic policy—especially on interest rates—was drastically reversed mid-2023. By now, Western financial circles are praising Turkey’s economic policy, hard currency reserves are increasing, and the political commitment to master inflation seems to hold. Yet, Western financial circles and Turkish analysts continue to raise the issue of a sharply degraded rule-of-law architecture, a domain which falls outside the purview of the Economy and Finance Ministry. Investors, fund managers, and bankers need a reliable and predictable judiciary to restore full confidence in Turkey.
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Domestically, the enthusiasm of May 2023 has largely dissipated and in March 2024, local elections saw the presidential coalition severely backtrack. The president’s societal project has not been successful: his motto “raising a pious generation” has not been accepted, the urban population—77 percent of the total—wants to be the master of its own lifestyle, while the lack of a free media and unfair court judgments are deeply resented.
Turkey’s diplomatic goals are crippled by contradictions and ambivalence: an expanding relationship with Russia is at odds with NATO membership; a drive to restore relations with Israel coexists with strong support for Hamas; a nominal aspiration to be an EU member is contradicted by an openly authoritarian governance system.
Third, the Turkish president’s proclivity toward headline-grabbing actions led to estrangement from his Western partners and hampered his capacity to mediate major conflicts. These include a state-level welcome of the Hamas leadership team on April 20; a persistent hostility toward Osman Kavala—who was denied a retrial on May 15—based on spurious evidence and in contradiction with judgments by the European Court of Human Rights; a tirade against Israel’s purported intention to target Anatolia on May 15; and massive condemnations of Kurdish leaders on May 17.
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