Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

Turkey’s recent bold positions seem to have jolted many Westerners. There is an open talk of Turkey perhaps looking for revival of Ottoman Empire. There are some who are furious at it, and then there are some who are at awe.

I hope Turkey best wishes, but it looks like there is no fundamental change in Turkey’s position.

I found following article. It has some interesting facts about Turkey. The writer seem to be awed by the country.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/06/14/opinion/main6579448.shtml
(Turkey) possesses the 17th top economy in the world and, according to Goldman Sachs, has a good shot at breaking into the top 10 by 2050. Its economic muscle is also well defended: after decades of NATO assistance, the Turkish military is now a regional powerhouse.

Perhaps most importantly, Turkey occupies a vital crossroads between Europe, the Middle East, and Central Asia. A predominantly Muslim democracy atop the ruins of Byzantium, it bridges the Islamic and Judeo-Christian traditions, even as it sits perched at the nexus of energy politics. All roads once led to Rome; today all pipelines seem to lead to Turkey. If superpower status followed the rules of real estate – location, location, location – then Turkey would already be near the top of the heap.

These are all signs that Turkey has indeed begun to wake from its centuries-long slumber.** And when Turkey wakes, as Napoleon said of China, the world will shake.
**

A friend to all sides, Turkey is offering its services as a diplomatic middleman, even in places where it was persona non grata not long ago. “Not many people would imagine that the Serbians would ask for the mediation of Turkey between different Bosniak groups in the Sandjak region of Serbia,” observes Sule Kut, a Balkans expert at Bilge University in Istanbul. “Turks were the bad guys in Serbian history. So what is happening?** Turkey has established itself as a credible and powerful player in the region**.”
It’s not just the Balkans. The new Turkey is establishing itself as Mediation Central. Teaming up with Brazil, Turkey fashioned a surprise compromise meant to head off confrontation with Iran over its nuclear program (which the Obama administration managed to shoot down).

With Israel increasingly isolated and American mediation efforts seriously compromised, only Turkey is emerging stronger from what can now only be seen as the beginning of a regional realignment of power. Once viewed with suspicion throughout the area where the Ottomans ruled, Turkey may now be the only power that has even a remote chance of one day brokering peace in the Middle East.

Return to Ottomanism?

Neo-Ottomanism is not exactly a popular phrase in Turkey today. The leadership in Ankara wants to be clear: they have no intention of projecting imperial power or reestablishing the modern equivalent of the Ottoman caliphate. However, if you look at the friendships that Turkey has cultivated and the trade relations it has emphasized – Syria, Armenia, Greece, Palestine, Iraq, Libya, the Balkans – you can see a map of the old Ottoman empire reassembling itself.

Turkey is also a builder. Of the top 225 international contractors, 35 are Turkish, second only to China. Like China, Turkey asks no difficult questions about the political environment in other countries, and so Turkish construction companies are building airports in Kurdistan and shopping malls in Libya. Despite political tensions, in 2009 they were even involved in nine projects worth more than $60 million in Israel.

Finally, there is culture. Like the Confucian institutes China is establishing all over the world to spread its language, culture, and values, Turkey established the Yunus Emre Foundation in May 2009 to administer cultural centers in Germany, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Egypt, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, and Israel. Turkish schools have sprung up in more than 80 countries. Turkish culture has also infiltrated Middle Eastern life through television, as Turkish soap operas spread the liberal cultural values of moderate Islam.

In 1999, Bill Clinton suggested that if Ankara launched a reformist movement,** the twenty-first century could be “Turkey’s century**.” Turkey has indeed heeded Clinton’s advice. Now, Europe and the United States face a choice. If Washington works with Turkey as a partner, it has a far greater chance of resolving outstanding conflicts with Iran, inside Iraq, and between the Palestinians and Israelis, not to mention simmering disputes elsewhere in the Islamic world. If the European Union accepts Turkey as a member, its economic dynamism and new credibility in the Muslim world could help jolt Europe out of its current sclerosis. Spurned by one or both, Turkey’s global influence will still grow.

By all means, get that Lenovo computer, buy stock in Haier, and encourage your child to study Mandarin. China can’t help but be a twenty-first-century superpower. But if you want to really be ahead of the curve, pay close attention to that vital crossroads between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean.

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

Turkey is a fascinating country in many respects.

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

Turkish Secular Model is a way for all the so-called Muslim countries to gather their pieces from gutter and starting to move on..

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

LMAO! Secular model. Its always fun to see people claim the Turkish Secular Model :hehe:

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

^^ People will do anything to prove that Islam is the only cause of the FALL

actually its the other way around... Turky tried to adopt their so called secular model to appease them and thought this will make europe happy and they will welcome Turky, but failed. Because secularism in any muslim country or a country which once enjoyed islamic rule, is meant to fail... Turky may have now realised that it has to slowly and gradually get out of this secular crap and return to its esteemed and celebrated past.

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

Turks were the savious of Islam and i am proud to have some of thier blood flow in me my very name is Turkish and i hope that great nation truly rises back to what it once was…

Stealth superpower? More like the original superpower.. how could a bunch of tribes from central asia bordering china sweep across half the world and form a state on the doors to Rome… with Islam!

And Insh Allah the once great giant of a nation will rise again to throttle evil and defend the western borders of Islam from the invaders.

Hucum Marci! Haideri!

so Turkey is not secular anymore..?? :hehe: i will took the word of modern Turkey creators starting from Kamal Ata Turk .. to current Prime Minister !

why every logic of yours have to bring Islam in it? where did i said that in my post?

When you will establish Caliphate or Kingdoms like Moorish Spain & Ottoman Empire - then you will have every right to prove that current Islamic model (pretty much raped by Mullahs from centuries now) is working flawlessly. Given current situation it's not.

I will rather align with Muslim Spain then the lot of Mughal-losers & arab-losers - their was quite a difference in their governing styles & treating other religions !

Thank you for saying this, i thought it's Islamic state duty to attack on their neighbors - lets stay within our domain !

^ Islam is not limited by borders, our domain is the whole world, not just a few thousand square kilometers

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

^correct but theres no point waging war just for the hell of it... Turkey used to represent justice and equality among all peoples for they never mistreadted minorities in the way in which the west did back in those dark days... remember constantinople was target of the 4th crusade... hence it was so easy for the turks t take the city later and make it Istanbul.

Note the turkish seige was nowhere near as bloody and reckless as the Crusaders siege.

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

^ and who said there is a point of waging war just for the hell of it????

and by the way, when you are talking about war and stuff, i assume that you pretty much know about the conditions/ offers/ basis/ reasons before/after the war in Islam, though its not related to the topic, but just felt like saying it because the argument seemed to be heading that way... so yes, there is no point of waging war just for the hell of it but, we should not feel ashamed of it and act all apologist when its really needed

The Turkish leadership are puppets. If they were that bold they would cut off all contact with Israel for what they have did.

Turkey on its way to be a stealth superpower … on the back of Israeli built UAVs :slight_smile:

Turkish army using Israeli-built drones

Istanbul, Turkey (CNN) – Despite an epic rift in Turkish-Israeli relations, Turkey’s top general announced his troops are relying on new unmanned aerial drones recently purchased from Israel to battle Kurdish rebels.

At an international military conference on Monday, the commander of Turkey’s armed forces, Gen. Ilker Basbug, said that within the last 10 days, his troops had begun employing Israeli-made “Heron” drones on surveillance missions over Turkey’s mountainous eastern border with Iraq.

Basbug spoke after a weekend of bloody clashes with Kurdish rebels left at least 12 Turkish soldiers stationed in this border region dead.

The fact that Turkey still depends on Israel for high-tech defense technology could complicate the Turkish government’s threats to punish Israel for a botched Israeli commando raid in which eight Turks and a dual-national Turkish-American were shot dead aboard a Turkish ship carrying aid to Gaza.

After the May 31 incident, Turkey’s prime minister ominously warned “nothing would ever be the same again,” between the two once-close Middle Eastern allies. Recep Tayyip Erdogan has demanded that Israel apologize for what he has repeatedly labeled an act of “state terrorism” and “piracy” in the eastern Mediterranean.

Turkey withdrew its ambassador from Tel Aviv, Israel, in protest and cancelled joint military exercises with Israel. But Ankara has been careful not to sever ties with the Israeli defense industry.

The long-simmering conflict with rebels from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) has flared once again in recent months, making Turkey more dependent on Israeli military technology.

“This is another paradoxical situation … Turkey has been reluctant to freeze defense industry ties with Israel,” said Lale Kemal, a journalist who writes a column on military affairs for the Turkish newspaper Zaman.

“You need equipment to fight against asymmetric warfare. These are attack helicopters, surveillance systems such as UAV’s [Unmanned Aerial Vehicles], intelligence systems and satellites … and Turkey doesn’t produce any of these systems.”

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

Yes. How can Turkey be superpower when all its weaponry is acquired from America.
I think people, like the writer of that article, are only trying to gain attention by creating sensational nonsense topics for their articles.

Reality is that Turkey is not going to change its course.

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

Religion and politics should not mix. I don't care what any book says.

Re: Turkey, a Stealth Superpower?

Turkey ain't no superpower because superpower doesn't obey orders from another power like United States for example.

A superpower can deal with problem on its doorstep i.e syria is Turkey dealing with Syria???

You joking Turkey is no superpower it is satellite of the United States............ but it can be superpower if it become independent of slavery to US orders.

Turkey still has strong military, economic potential strategic locations so again it can be a real power if it wanted to be.