Eurasian Politics
and Society
Eurasian Politics
and Society:
Issues and Challenges
Edited by
Özgür Tüfekçi, Hüsrev Tabak
and Erman Akıllı
Eurasian Politics and Society: Issues and Challenges
Edited by Özgür Tüfekçi, Hüsrev Tabak and Erman Akıllı
This book first published 2017
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Copyright © 2017 by Özgür Tüfekçi, Hüsrev Tabak, Erman Akıllı
and contributors
All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without
the prior permission of the copyright owner.
ISBN (10): 1-4438-5511-1
ISBN (13): 978-1-4438-5511-2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter One ................................................................................................. 1
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
Özgür Tüfekçi
Chapter Two .............................................................................................. 36
Moscow’s Sense of Eurasianism: Seeking after Central Asia but not
wanting the Central Asian
Mehmet Arslan
Chapter Three ............................................................................................ 52
The European Union and the Integration of the Balkans and the Caucasus
Didem Ekinci
Chapter Four .............................................................................................. 77
Soft Power Struggle in the South Caucasus: The Case of Azerbaijan
Seymur Huseynli
Chapter Five .............................................................................................. 92
From the ‘Status Quo’ to the ‘Humanitarian’ Discourse: Turkish Foreign
Policy in Flux
Alessia Chiriatti and Federico Donelli
Chapter Six .............................................................................................. 116
The Nature of the Economic Dependence of Kazakhstan on the Russian
Economy after Integration Processes
Spartak Tulegenov
Chapter Seven.......................................................................................... 134
The ‘Yes and No’ to Turkey’s Accession
Lisa Schäfer
vi
Table of Contents
Chapter Eight ........................................................................................... 157
‘Geopolitical Awareness’ as a Cultural Paradigm for Putin’s Russia
Alessio Stilo
Chapter Nine............................................................................................ 177
The Eurasian Economic Union and Turkey: New Aspirations
in a Globalised World
Serdar Yılmaz
Contributors ............................................................................................. 188
CHAPTER ONE
TURKISH EURASIANISM:
ROOTS AND DISCOURSES
ÖZGÜR TÜFEKÇI
Introduction
Turkey has always been a fertile environment and an ideological crucible
for debate about ‘secularism’ and ‘Islam’, ‘Pan-Turkism’ and ‘Pan-/NeoOttomanism’, etc. These debates and confrontations can be traced back to
the Ottoman Empire. In spite of the fact that the newly established Turkish
Republic’s main official direction was toward the West, these debates still
exist today. For instance, while the Democratic Party (1946–1960) to
Justice Party (1961–1980) line and the National Salvation Party (1972–
1980) to Welfare Party (1983–1998) line had pro-Ottomanist and proIslamist approaches respectively, the centre-left Republican People’s Party
(CHP), by and large, embraced a Western-oriented approach after the
establishment of the Republic of Turkey until the early 2000s, even if it
seems that the CHP (the main opposition party) has recently lost its
enthusiasm toward the Western world and has radiated mixed signals on
whether it will continue to support Turkey’s Westernist foreign policy
discourse.
As a consequence of these debates and confrontations, it should be
mentioned that Russian Eurasianism has had some reflections on Turkish
society. In particular, the conditions of the post-Cold War era and the
recent activism in Turkish foreign policy have put the Eurasianism debates
back on the agenda. Various perceptions of this view can be observed in
contemporary Turkish politics. In this context, this chapter provides a
detailed analysis of the discourses of Turkish Eurasianism. Specifically,
the first part of this section focuses on four of the main ideologies which
have been dominant in Turkey in shaping the discourses of Turkish
2
Chapter One
Eurasianism since the late 1980s: Neo-Ottomanism, Islamism, PanTurkism and Pan-Turanianism. It is significant to analyse these ideologies
as they are four of the main determinants of Turkish domestic and foreign
policy directions. Besides, these ideologies have played a vital role during
the attempts of Aleksandr Dugin’s Neo-Eurasianism to penetrate into
Turkey, as his initial Eurasianist thinking was anti-Turkish and it was
these ideologies which moulded and added perspectives to the discourses
of Turkish Eurasianism. In this sense, the latter part of the section will
present an overview of the discourses of Eurasianism in contemporary
Turkish politics.
Roots of Diversity of Eurasianism in Turkey
Neo-Ottomanism: Endless Passion
The Ottoman Empire (1299–1922) was one of the largest and longestlasting empires in history. Soon after its establishment, it emerged as the
major power in the Eastern Mediterranean. The Empire reached its height
under Suleiman the Magnificent (1520–1566). During this era, 15 million
people were living in the Empire: from Algeria in the west to Azerbaijan
in the east; from Ukraine in the north to Yemen in the south. However, the
Ottomans gradually started to lose their strength with the Karlowitz Treaty
(1699).1 This event marked the beginning of the long decline of the
Ottoman Empire. It took more than two hundred years to replace the
Ottoman Empire with the Republic of Turkey.
During these two hundred years, Ottoman politicians and intellectuals
relentlessly endeavoured to save the Empire by coming up with potential
solutions. Many argued that one of the reasons why the Empire was in
decline was the failure to adopt the technical developments of the West.
Therefore, adopting new military technologies, and reforming Ottoman
diplomacy and the education and judicial systems, would get the Empire
back in the race. As a result, during the reigns of Selim III (1761–1808)
and Mahmut II (1785–1839), many legal, military and educational reforms
were implemented in order to catch up with Western powers. Nevertheless,
1
The Karlowitz Treaty was signed on 26 January 1699 in order to conclude the
Austro-Ottoman War (1683–1697), in which the Ottoman side had been defeated
at the Battle of Zenta.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
3
these reforms did not halt the decline of the Empire and they ‘destroyed
the traditional order, but never replaced it with a new and workable one’.2
Another reason for the decline was the idea of nationalism that the French
revolution spread. As the Ottoman Empire was a multicultural empire, all
communities needed to live in harmony. To sustain this, the Ottoman
Empire developed a unique system called millet. The main feature of this
system was the division of communities ‘according to their religion and a
system based on the relationship between members within such
communities, as well as other religious groups and with the state’.3 In this
sense, local religious leaders were responsible for the civil behaviour of
their own communities.4 The millet system had given a great deal of power
to communities, such as the power to set their own laws and collect and
distribute their own taxes. While this system was one of the reasons for
almost five centuries of Ottoman reign, it also paved the way for its
decline.
The effects of nationalist ideas easily permeated throughout the Empire with
the help of the millet system. The first effect of the French Revolution on the
Ottoman Empire was the 1821 Greek rebellion. Also, Balkan nationalism,
which was fostered in the churches, led to further fragmentation. Among
other ‘national’ churches a Bulgarian exarchate (1864) emerged, distinct
from the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate.5
Under these conditions, Ottoman intelligentsia produced several ideologies
to save the Empire and to help shape its political orientation. Ottomanism
was one of those ideologies. It first appeared during the First
Constitutional Era of the Ottoman Empire in the first half of the 1800s.
According to the Ottoman elite, the Empire needed a panacea in order to
counter the nationalist feelings awakening within its own borders. Through
Ottomanism, they aimed to give an overall identity to the communities
which formed the Ottoman Empire.6 Ottomanism was an ‘attempt by the
2
Yelda Demirağ, ‘Pan-ideologies in the Ottoman Empire against the West: From
Pan-Ottomanism to Pan-Turkism’, The Turkish Yearbook of International
Relations, XXXVI (2006).
3
Christoph Marcinkowski, The Islamic World and the West (London: Transaction
Publishers, 2009): 114.
4
Serif Mardin, ‘Turkey: Islam and Westernization’, in C. Caldarola (ed.), Religion
and Societies: Asia and the Middle East (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter & Co., 1982).
5
Mardin, ‘Turkey: Islam and Westernization’, 175.
6
Demirağ, ‘Pan-ideologies in the Ottoman Empire’, 145.
4
Chapter One
Ottoman government to use one single citizenship as a common political
identity in order to achieve equality and unity among all Ottoman subjects
and transcend differences of faith, ethnicity, and language’.7
In other words, the motive was to create an ‘Ottoman nation’ and make all
communities perceive themselves as Ottoman, in one sense forming a
melting-pot. In this way, the Empire would sustain Greek, Serbian,
Bulgarian, Armenian and Albanian separatists’ loyalties.8 However, these
expectations did not materialise and the ideology of Ottomanism was
replaced by the rising Turkish nationalist ideas of the beginning of the
1900s.
After a long time, the first neo-Ottomanist traces were seen during the
Turgut Özal era. By and large, Özal’s Ottomanism referred to a
multicultural state9 which embraced ‘the relative tolerance of Ottoman
Islam as sources of pluralism and openness for domestic social and
political life’.10 As a matter of fact, in some way Özal’s Neo-Ottomanism
was a counteraction to Kemalist foreign policy understanding. Although
by that time Kemalist discourse had abandoned the Ottoman legacy, Özal
initiated a new era of taking the Ottoman Empire as a positive example. In
Taşpınar’s words:
Özal’s approach was to have Turkey rediscover its imperial legacy and
seek a new national consensus where the multiple identities of Turkey can
coexist. It reminds Turks that they once had a great multinational empire
that ruled the Middle East, North Africa, the Balkans and parts of Central
Europe. Such emphasis on the Ottoman legacy is not part of a plan to
Islamize Turkey and Turkish foreign policy. Rather, it is an attempt to
7
Kemal H. Karpat, ‘Historical Continuity and Identity Change or How to be
Modern Muslim, Ottoman, and Turk’, in K. H. Karpat (ed.), Ottoman Past and
Today’s Turkey (Leiden: Brill, 2000): 6.
8
Yilmaz Çolak, ‘Ottomanism vs. Kemalism: Collective Memory and Cultural
Pluralism in 1990s Turkey’, Middle Eastern Studies, 42:4 (2006): 587–602.
9
Sedat Laçiner, ‘Özalism (Neo-Ottomanism): An Alternative in Turkish Foreign
Policy?’ Journal of Administrative Sciences (2003): 161–202; Sedat Laçiner,
‘Turgut Özal Period in Turkish Foreign Policy: Özalism’, USAK Yearbook of
International Politics and Law, 2 (2009); Sabri Sayarı, ‘Turkish Foreign Policy in
the Post-Cold War Era: The Challenges of Multi-Regionalism’, Journal of
International Affairs, 54 (2000): 169–82.
10
Nora Fisher, ‘Neo-Ottomanism, Historical Legacies and Turkish Foreign
Policy’, EDAM Discussion Paper Series 2009/03: 10.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
5
balance and broaden the horizons of Kemalism and its over-obsession with
Turkey’s Western identity and trajectory.11
This Neo-Ottomanist approach was dominant during the Özal era in order
to open up a new foreign policy understanding for Turkey. As it is not
possible to implement a policy counter to society’s sensitivities, Özal did
not pursue such an ideology and put it into practice against the mainstream
ideology of the Republic of Turkey, ‘Kemalism’. That is why, since NeoOttomanism and Kemalism have commonalities even though they are
differentiated in some contexts, Özal wisely emphasised those commonalities
which were appreciated by the majority of Turkish society – such as
relations with the Western world. Yet, in contrast to Kemalism’s
isolationist foreign policy, Neo-Ottomanism, or in Laçiner’s word
‘Özalism’, concentrates on an active foreign policy based on not only
former Ottoman territories, but also other territories in the world. Although
Neo-Ottomanism was subject to much discussion and criticism,
nevertheless, for this emphasis on the relations with the West, it was
welcomed in general. Moreover, it paved the way for Turkey’s bridge role.
Özal’s vision was of using the economy to remember the historical and
cultural ties employed in Turkey through common market proposals.12
Turkey’s relations with Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan,
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan in the Caucasus and Central Asia and later
with Bosnia, Macedonia, Kosovo and Albania in the Balkans were
reconstituted through this vision. Indeed this was a mutually constituted
relationship as the relations were not held solely through Turkey’s
initiation; those countries were seeking assistance from Turkey as well.13
Despite the expansion, Turgut Özal’s foreign policy did not deviate from
the traditional Kemalist approach since his conduct was loyal to the
Western orientation.14 In this sense, it is safe to say that Neo-Ottomanism
got its strength from relations with the West as well. That is why Özal
attached great importance to relations with the European Union and the
USA.15
11
Ömer Taşpınar, ‘Turkey’s Middle East Policies: Between Neo-Ottomanism and
Kemalism’, Carnegie Papers, Carnegie Endowment (2008): 1–29 (14).
12
Sedat Laçiner, From Kemalism to Özalism, the Ideological Evolution of Turkish
Foreign Policy, Unpublished PhD thesis (London: King’s College University of
London, 2001): 308.
13
Laçiner, From Kemalism to Özalism, 308–9.
14
Laçiner, From Kemalism to Özalism, 332.
15
For further discussion about Neo-Ottomanism and Kemalism see: Faruk
Loğoğlu, ‘Neo-Ottomanism: a Stratagem?’, accessed 1 July 2011 at
6
Chapter One
On the one hand, in line with Özal’s neo-Ottomanism approach, although
it is not officially proclaimed, there is an inclination among some experts
in Turkey to call the AKP’s foreign policy a ‘neo-Ottoman strategy’.16 On
the other hand, there are some experts who criticise this nomenclature as
well. For instance, Soner Çağaptay objects to the naming of this strategy
as ‘Neo-Ottomanism’, as, according to him, a closer look reveals that
during the AKP era, Turkey was asserting itself exclusively in the Muslim
Middle East, while ignoring other areas of the Ottoman realm.17 In spite of
these criticisms, what is plain is that the AKP’s foreign policy has been
built on the current Minister of Foreign Affairs Ahmet Davutoğlu’s
thoughts, which are called ‘strategic depth’. Further, the relations between
his way of thinking and Eurasianism will be scrutinised in the following
sub-sections.
When it comes to Neo-Ottomanism’s comparison to Eurasianism, to some
extent Neo-Ottomanism – similarly to Eurasianism – reflects Westernist
and Pan-Islamist approaches at the same time. Taşpınar accentuates this
point further:
Neo-Ottomanism embraces a grand, geostrategic vision of Turkey as an
effective and engaged regional actor, trying to solve regional and global
problems. Since the concept of neo-Ottomanism may evoke an imperial
agenda, one important point needs clarification: Turkey, in this neoOttoman paradigm, does not pursue a neo-imperialist policy aimed at
resurrecting the Ottoman Empire. Instead of imperial nostalgia, neoOttomanism is essentially about projecting Turkey’s ‘soft power’ – a
bridge between East and West, a Muslim nation, a secular state, a
democratic political system, and a capitalistic economic force. Like French
Gaullism, it seeks Turkish ‘grandeur’ and influence in foreign policy.18
www.hurriyetdailynews.com/h.php?news=neo-ottomanism-a-strategem-2008-0927; Nora Fisher, ‘Neo-Ottomanism, Historical Legacies and Turkish Foreign
Policy’, EDAM Discussion Paper Series 2009/03; Çolak, ‘Ottomanism vs.
Kemalism’.
16
Taşpınar, ‘Turkey’s Middle East Policies: Between Neo-Ottomanism and
Kemalism’, 14.
17
Soner Çağaptay, ‘The AKP’s Foreign Policy: The Misnomer of “NeoOttomanism”’, accessed 30 November 2011 at
www.washingtoninstitute.org/templateC06.php?CID=1270.
18
Taşpınar, ‘Turkey’s Middle East Policies’, 3.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
7
On the other hand, Eurasianism is identified with the East and its
underdeveloped institutions are despised by opponents,19 although NeoOttomanism is praised in some circles in Turkey because it pursues aims
related to the East. To clarify, the West is associated with democracy and
development in the minds of many people in Turkey, while the East is
associated with backwardness and underdevelopment. In addition, the
division between Eurasianism and Neo-Ottomanism stems from the
perception of those ideologies within Turkish society. Hence, whereas
Neo-Ottomanism is accepted as a rightful quest, Eurasianism is considered
a shift from traditional Turkish foreign policy.20 As a matter of fact some
believe that while a Neo-Ottomanist Turkey can bring democracy and
prosperity to the Ottoman Empire’s former territories and can play a
leadership role, in any kind of Eurasianist dream Turkey would stay in the
shadow of Russia.
Islamism ‘Pan’ and ‘Neo’
Although Pan-Islamism in the sense of a union of all Muslims is in fact as
old as Islam itself, as an ideology it came out in the late 1800s.21 One of
the champions of it was Jamaleddin Afghani (Sayyid Jamal al-Din
Muhammad, b. Safdar al-Afghani, 1838–1897), who sought to unite all
Muslims under an Islamic state to withstand Western encroachments.
According to Afghani, Muslim societies were weak due to corrupted rulers
and various divided sects. And this weakness was the main reason why
Western civilisation had become superior. That was why Muslim
solidarity was essential in order to challenge Western imperialism and
maintain the freedom of Muslims, in Afghani’s way of thinking.22 In this
19
Abdulhamid Bilici, ‘Ergenekoncu Hayale Rus Darbesi’ (Russian Sabotage the
Ergenekonist Fantasy), accessed 13 Spetember 2016 at
www.timeturk.com/tr/makale/abdulhamid-bilici/ergenekoncu-hayale-rusdarbesi.html; Ihsan Dağı, ‘Competing Strategies for Turkey: Eurasianism or
Europeanism?’ CACI Analyst, accessed 20 May 2009 at
www.cacianalyst.org/?q=node/177.
20
Suat Kınıklıoğlu, ‘Neo-Ottoman Turkey’, Project Syndicate, accessed 4 April
2011 at www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/kiniklioglu2/English; Suat
Kınıklıoğlu, ‘The return of Ottomanism’, accessed 4 April 2011 at
www.suatkiniklioglu.org/en/my-today-s-zaman-column/the-return-ofottomanism.html.
21
Azmi Özcan, Pan-Islamism: Indian Muslims, the Ottomans and Britain (1877–
1924) (Leiden: Brill, 1997): 23.
22
For further information on Afghani’s Pan-Islamist approach see: Shaukat Ali,
Pan Movements in the Third World: Pan-Arabism, Pan-Africanism, Pan-Islamism
8
Chapter One
form, Pan-Islamism is a counter-hegemonic vision like Asian and African
nationalism, but it is different from Pan-Arabism, Pan-Turkism, etc., as it
excludes ethnicity as an essential condition toward founding an Islamic
state.
In the Ottoman Empire, Abdulhamid II was the first and the last sultan to
adopt Pan-Islamism against Western intervention in Ottoman affairs,
during his reign between 1876 and 1909. The first constitution of the
Ottoman Empire was enacted after Abdulhamid’s accession to the throne
and clearly reflects a Pan-Islamic tendency. According to the constitution:
‘The Ottoman Sultanate, as the exalted Caliphs of Islam, belongs to the
eldest member of the house of Osman … His Excellency the Padişah as
Caliph, is the protector of the religion of Islam.’23
Abdulhamid’s Pan-Islamist approach might be regarded as an effort to
save the Ottoman Empire and its societal unity, while some experts argue
that it was adopted to sustain unification of all Muslims all over the
world.24 As a matter of fact, both arguments can be taken as the core
elements of Abdulhamid’s Pan-Islamist approach, as he believed that ‘It
was Islam that kept the different groups of the Empire like the members of
one family … because the social structure and the politics of our Empire is
based upon religion’.25 Moreover, he was a fervent supporter of the
unification of Muslims all around the world, and in Abdulhamid’s own
words:
as long as the union of Islam continues, England, France, Russia, and
Holland can be counted on my fingertips, because in the Muslim lands now
under their domination even one word of the Caliph would be enough for
starting a jehad against them which would be a catastrophe for the
Christians.26
(Lahore: Publishers United Ltd., [pref. 1976]): 196; Ziaullah Khan, ‘Sayyed Jamalud-Din Afghani’s reflections on Western Imperialism – An Analysis’, Pakistan
Journal of History and Culture (July-December 1989): 54–67.
23
Quoted in Özcan, Pan-Islamism, 40.
24
For this debate see: Mümtazer Türköne, Islamcılığın Doğuşu (Ankara: Lotus
Yayınevi, 2003); Serif Mardin, ‘19. yy’da Düşünce Akımları ve Osmanlı Devleti:
Tanzimattan Cumhuriyete (İstanbul: İletisim Yayınları, 1985); Niyazi Berkes,
Türkiye’de Çağdaşlaşma (İstanbul: Yapı Kredi Yayınları, 2002); Demirağ, ‘Panideologies in the Ottoman Empire’.
25
Quoted in Özcan, Pan-Islamism, 47.
26
Quoted in Özcan, Pan-Islamism, 50.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
9
In addition to this debate, it was a fact that the European colonial advance
(such as the occupation of Tunisia and Egypt) during the late 1800s and
the emergence of pan-nationalist thought (such as Pan-Slavism and PanGermanism) posed a threat toward the territorial unity of the Ottoman
Empire.27 The Empire was a multinational state and the idea of
nationalism was one of the powerful motives behind the nationalist
uprisings against the Ottoman Empire – such as the 1821 Greek uprising,
1876 Bulgarian uprising, etc. Further, since the European colonial
advancement and the decline of the Ottoman Empire occurred at the same
time, the Empire lost a majority of its territories. It might be said that in
this climate, adopting Pan-Islamism as an official ideology and applying it
in the Empire’s political life to prevent further separation was more a
rational choice than a matter of pursuing the unification of all Muslims for
idealistic purposes. However, Abdulhamid preferred to adopt both
perspectives together in order to save the Ottoman Empire and the Muslim
world from what Landau called ‘the foreign attacks’.28
On the other hand, although Pan-Islamism is a counter-hegemonic
ideology, Pan-Islamists had accepted that the West had technical
superiority and that during the revival of the Muslim world that
technological advancement could be adopted. The main discourse was that
Western technology would have to be adopted but imitation of the West
was out of question. In this context, many intellectuals made explicit
statements. One of them was Mehmet Akif Ersoy (1873–1936), a wellknown figure at the time. He expressed his approach on this matter as
follows: ‘By imitating the religion, by imitating the customary practices,
the clothes, by imitating the way people greet each other, in short by
imitating every single thing, a real social community cannot emerge and
live.’29
Despite all its efforts, the Ottoman Empire collapsed without managing to
unite Muslim people under an Islamic state. Owing to Kemalist secularist
understanding, thoughts of Islamism and Ottomanism were kept in the
background until the Turgut Özal era. With Özal’s arrival, pro-Ottomanist
and pro-Islamist approaches gained momentum and started to be
influential in Turkey again.
27
Abdul Rauf, ‘Pan-Islamism and the North West Frontier Province of British
India (1897–1918)’, Perceptions (Winter 2007): 21–42.
28
Jacob M. Landau, The Politics of Pan-Islam, Ideology and Organization
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994): 9.
29
Quoted in Demirağ, ‘Pan-ideologies in the Ottoman Empire’, 148.
10
Chapter One
Özal’s Neo-Ottomanist approach was a synthesis of Turkism, Nationalism
and Islamism. In this context, Özal’s main contribution was his attempt to
integrate a Turkish-Islamic Synthesis into the official state discourse.30
The Turkish-Islamic Synthesis was a strategy produced by a group of
intellectuals called Aydınlar Ocağı (Intellectuals’ Hearth) and adopted by
the military after the 12 September 1980 coup. The main aim of this
Synthesis was to integrate Islamists and Nationalists against radical leftist
ideologies in order to reduce their appeal and to get rid of the influence of
non-Turkish strands of Islamic thinking. In this way, the integrity of the
Turkish nation-state would be maintained and counter-revolutionary
sentiments would be eliminated.31
Although Özal was a pious Muslim, he generally supported secularist
aspects of the state. While he supported the Turkish version of Islam, Özal
emphasised the differences between this and the Iranian version of Islam
and Wahhabism, the dominant form of Islam in Saudi Arabia. The reason
for this emphasis was that the Turkish version of Islam was more tolerant
and liberal than the other versions. From the perspective of Özal, that was
the prerequisite to establishing a link between Muslims and the rest of the
world.32
30
Gareth Jenkins, Political Islam in Turkey: Running West, Heading East? (New
York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008): 149.
31
For further information on Turkish-Islamic Synthesis see Angel Rabasa and F.
Stephen Larrabee, The Rise of Political Islam in Turkey (California: RAND, 2008);
Cemal Karakaş, Turkey: Islam and Laicism between the Interest of the State,
Politics and Society, Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF) Report No. 78;
Gökhan Çetinsaya, ‘Rethinking Nationalism and Islam: Some Preliminary Notes
on the Roots of “Turkish-Islamic Synthesis” in Modern Turkish Political Thought’,
The Muslim World, 89: 3–4 (1999): 350–76; Binnaz Toprak, ‘Religion as State
Ideology in a Secular Setting: The Turkish-Islamic Synthesis’ in Malcolm
Wagstaff (ed.), Aspects of Religion in Secular Turkey, No. 40 (Durham: University
of Durham, Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, Occasional Paper
Series, 1990): 10–15; Anat Lapidot, ‘Islamic Activism in Turkey since the 1980
Military Takeover’, Terrorism and Political Violence, 3 (1997): 62–74 (Special
Issue on ‘Religious Radicalism in the Greater Middle East’ edited by B. MaddyWeitzman and E. Inbar).
32
For further discussion on Özal’s Neo-Ottomanist and Neo-Islamist approach see:
Laçiner, From Kemalism to Özalism; Gamze G. Kona, ‘The Rise and the Fall of
Political Islam in Turkey’, paper presented at the International Conference on
‘Political Islam in the Middle East’, Chaim Herzog Centre, Ben-Gurion University,
Beersheba, Israel, 29 March 2006; Çolak, ‘Ottomanism vs. Kemalism’.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
11
I have, I hope, demonstrated that Turkey has never abandoned secularism.
In this context one can refer to Ghazâlî's distinction between faith and
reason. The Turk is aware that faith, in itself, does not affect secularism,
nor does it prevent him from being rational, provided that their respective
realms are not encroached. In life today there is no difference in this
respect between the Christian European and the Muslim Turk. Thus a
synthesis has been achieved between the West and Islam, a synthesis
which has put an end to the identity crisis of the Turk … French and
Germans have separate cultures, but both constitute Western civilization,
so would Turks while stressing and vitalizing their Turkish nationalism …
the universal humanism created by secularized Islam, together with the
concept of the brotherhood of mankind, a product of Turkish Sufism.33
The next revival of Islamism occurred during the late 1990s when Refah
Partisi (the Welfare Party) won 21.4 per cent of the vote. The December
1995 elections saw the RP become the biggest party, while the ANAP
(Motherland Party) and DYP (True Path Party) were the opposition
parties. However, that percentage was not enough to form the government.
That was why ANAP and DYP formed a coalition, though it lasted only
three months. After that, the RP and DYP agreed to form a government on
28 June 1996. Thus, Necmettin Erbakan, who was the leader of RP,
became the first Islamist prime minister of Turkey. During the RP and
DYP coalition, Islamist discourse was dominant in Turkey’s foreign
policy. Once Erbakan became prime minister, he began visiting many
Muslim states such as Pakistan, Iran and Indonesia. In particular, the first
official visit, to Iran instead of the USA, was a clear message of how the
new Turkish foreign policy was going to be formalised. During almost two
years in office Erbakan did not conduct an official visit to any Western
country.34 Moreover, Erbakan’s salient distrust toward the European
Union, the USA and Israel discouraged the government from embarking
on high-level relations. The distrust was mutual: the USA also was
suspicious about the ‘fundamentalism’ of Erbakan and considered his rule
a threat to their interests.35
The next step was establishing an Islamic organisation which could be an
alternative to the EU. For that reason, on 15 June 1997 in Istanbul,
33
Turgut Özal, Turkey in Europe and Europe in Turkey (Nicosia, Northern
Cyprus: K. Rustem & Brother, 1991): 296–7.
34
Hasret D. Bilgin, ‘Foreign Policy Orientation of Turkey’s Pro-Islamist Parties’,
Turkish Studies, 9:3 (2008): 411.
35
Philip Robins, ‘Turkish Foreign Policy under Erbakan’, Survival, 39:3 (2007):
82.
12
Chapter One
Developing Eight (D-8) was formed by Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran,
Malaysia, Nigeria, Pakistan and Turkey. D-8’s objectives are described as
follows: ‘improve member states’ positions in the global economy, diversify
and create new opportunities in trade relations, enhance participation in
decision-making at the international level, and improve standards of
living’.36 This initiative is still functioning but it lacks some essential
aspects in order to become an alternative organisation to the EU, with
problems that include geographical disparity and differences in political
priorities.
The RP’s counter-discourse on Turkish foreign policy was not long-lasting.
The then coalition resigned because of the ‘February 28 post-modern
coup’.37 On 28 February 1997, during a National Security Council meeting,
the Turkish military leadership produced a memorandum consisting of
several decisions to protect secularism against ‘reactionaryism’, and
forced Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan to sign the memorandum.
Although Erbakan signed the memorandum, he was forced to resign. Since
there was no dissolving of the parliament, and because of the brutal action
taken against Turkey’s political institutions and figures, this intervention
by the Turkish military leadership was called a ‘post-modern coup’. Even
though the Islamist discourse lost its influence after the RP era, it is still
effective in Turkey as the offshoot of the RP and the AKP (Justice and
Development Party) has become stronger than ever, but with more modest
discourses.
In this sense, Islamism and Ottomanism have been two of the most
significant ideologies that have shaped political and social life in Turkey –
along with Pan-Turkism and Pan-Turanianism – and that underpin
Eurasianist discourses in the country.
Pan-Turkism: Red Apple
Pan-Turkism emerged in the late 19th century among the Turks in the
Russian Empire and it was an example of diaspora nationalism. It had a
36
Developing Eight Countries (D8), accessed 16 July 2011 at
http://cesran.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&i
d=223&Itemid=241&lang=en.
37
Cengiz Çandar, ‘Post-modern Darbe’, Daily Sabah, accessed 16 July 2011 at
http://arsiv.sabah.com.tr/1997/06/28/y12.html; Stephen Vertigans, Islamic Roots
and Resurgence in Turkey: Understanding and Explaining the Muslim Resurgence,
(Connecticut: Praeger Publishers, 2003): 69–71.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
13
reflective motive toward the aggressive politics of the Russian government,
such as the Russification and Christianisation policies.38 Pan-Turkism
aimed to unite all people of Turkic origin on an ethnic basis. At the end of
the 19th century, more than 13 million Turkic peoples (consisting of 11
per cent of the whole population of the Empire) were living in the Russian
Empire. And 85 per cent of this Turkic population were Muslim.39
Through Pan-Turkism, it was intended that this 11 per cent would be
separated from the Russian Empire, after the Empire’s destruction. Then, a
solid Turkic union would be established by means of merging with the
Ottoman Turks on a vast land which included the territory of the Russian
Empire and the majority of the territory of the Ottoman Empire. For all of
these reasons, this school of thought can be considered as one of the
irredentist movements.
In a manner, the word ‘Pan-Turkism’ was used in the sense of PanTuranianism, and vice versa, during the early 20th century. To clarify the
difference between these two schools of thought, it is meaningful to say
that whereas Pan-Turkism aspired to unite all Turkic peoples, PanTuranianism was aimed at the unification of the Turkic peoples with the
Finno-Ugric peoples. The pre-eminent theorists of the Pan-Turkist
movement were the Crimean Tatar Ismail Gasprinsky (1851–1914), the
Tatar intellectual Yusuf Akçura (1876–1935), the Azeri Turk Ahmet
Agayev (1869–1939), the Azeri Ali Hüseyinzade (1864–1941) and Ziya
Gökalp (1876–1924), the Turkish sociologist.40
Ismail Gasprinsky disseminated his ideas through his newspaper
Tercüman and advocated the idea of ‘unity in language, ideas, and deeds’.
Although Gasprinsky synthesised Turkism and Islam, he was a fervent
advocator of Westernisation.41 This was a precaution to prevent being left
behind the developed West. Another prominent figure, Yusuf Akçura, is
known for his work ‘Üç Tarz-ı Siyaset’ (Three Kinds of Policies), which
38
Stefan Wiederkehr, ‘Eurasianism as a Reaction to Pan-Turkism’, in Dmitry
Shlapentokh (ed.), Russia between East and West: Scholarly Debates on
Eurasianism (Leiden: Brill, 2007).
39
Jacob M. Landau, Pan-Turkism: From Irredentism to Cooperation
(Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1995): 7; Serge A. Zenkovsy, PanTurkism and Islam in Russia (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1960): 9.
40
Wiederkehr, ‘Eurasianism as a Reaction to Pan-Turkism’; Landau, PanTurkism: From Irredentism to Cooperation.
41
Hakan Kırımlı, ‘Ismail Bey Gaspıralı, Türklük ve Islam’, Doğu-Batı, 31 (2005):
147–76 (169).
14
Chapter One
was published in the Cairo-based journal Turk. In this paper, Akçura
examines Ottomanism, Islamism and Turkism. And it was Pan-Turkism
that Akçura supported at the expense of Ottomanism and Pan-Islamism, as
he believed that ‘Turkism was the sole concept capable of sustaining the
Türk millet (Turkish Nation)’.42 This way of understanding gained
acceptance and Akçura’s work has been regarded as the manifesto of the
Pan-Turkists.43 As for Ziya Gökalp, he was in favour of Turkish
nationalism in his articles in the journal Türk Yurdu. He also supported the
vision that the Ottomans should pursue a more open foreign policy and not
be imprisoned in their territory. The developed Western world’s science
and technology would guide the Ottomans to reach the level of other
contemporary civilisations.
The most important criticism directed against Pan-Turkism is related to the
racist specification of its main justification. Landau, Finkel and Sirman
emphasise that the supporters of Pan-Turkism have headed toward the use
of racist undertones since World War II.44 For instance, the cover of
Bozkurt45 might be an obvious example of this (see Figure 1.1). In this
specific cover, the claimed extent of the Turkic ethnic homeland is shown
and the meaning of the slogan at the top is ‘Turkish race is above all
others’, while the bozkurt, i.e. the steppe wolf, is symbolised below the
title.46
Pan-Turkism can be counted as one of the long-lived nationalist
movements. During the late Ottoman era, the early Turkish Republican era
and the 1960s, and after the disintegration of the Soviet Union, PanTurkism was at the peak of its power. In particular, the Turkic world
witnessed a significant revival of Pan-Turkism during the disintegration of
the Soviet Union. When the Soviet Union, the most powerful
multinational state of the 20th century, collapsed, five new Turkic-Central
Asian states emerged: Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan,
42
Touraj Atabaki, ‘Recasting Oneself, Rejecting the Other: Pan-Turkism and
Iranian Nationalism’, in Willem Van Schendel and Erik-J. Zürcher (eds), Identity
Politics in Central Asia and The Muslim World: Nationalism, Ethnicity and
Labour in the Twentieth Century (London: I. B. Tauris, 2001): 69.
43
Touraj Atabaki, ‘Recasting Oneself, Rejecting the Other’, 69.
44
Jacob M. Landau, Radical Politics in Modern Turkey (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1974);
Andrew Finkel and Nukhet Sirman, Turkish State, Turkish Society (London:
Routledge, 1990).
45
Bozkurt was a Pan-Turkist journal which was published between 1939 and 1942.
46
Landau, Pan-Turkism: From Irredentism to Cooperation, 3.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
15
Figure 1.1 The Cover of Bozkurt Newsletter
and the Kyrgyz Republic. The population of these states was more than 50
million. Along with Turkey, these Turkic states have been called ‘one
nation with six states’ ever since. It is also often argued that Turkey is the
16
Chapter One
backbone of these states. Admittedly, Turkey is the most powerful and
best-established Turkic nation in the world. What is more, Turkey has
been the core state of Pan-Turkic movements in the post-1990s. For
instance, a statement of Mahir Yağcılar, leader of the Kosovo Turkish
Democratic Party, former Minister of Environment and incumbent
Minister of Environment for Kosovo, had a confirmatory attribute
regarding this issue. In October 2010, Yağcılar stated at the World Turkic
Forum in Istanbul that ‘The main target of the forum is to improve our
values, expand our national values and make them international … The
Turkish Republic is the mainland for us.’47
Since the Soviet dissolution, a myriad of activity to bring Turkic-speaking
countries together has been organised at both the state and individual level
in the Turkic world; this includes the annual Friendship, Brotherhood, and
Cooperation Congress of the Turkic States and Communities, the annual
Eurasian Economic Summit, the World Turkic Forum, the Summit of
Turkish-speaking countries’ leaders, and the Turkish-speaking Countries
Parliamentary Assembly (TurkPA). While some of these have been held
since 1993, such as the Friendship, Brotherhood, and Cooperation
Congress of the Turkic States and Communities, some have started as
recently as 2008, such as TurkPA. However, all these initiatives are
consequences of endeavours to rediscover the linguistic and cultural
affinities between Turkic countries. Through these initiatives, activists are
in search of means of promoting closer cultural, economic and political
ties between Turkic-speaking countries.
Although Turkey takes the initiative, there are several obstacles toward
accomplishing such a comprehensive aim. First of all, despite the fact that
some of the Turkic countries have a vast amount of proven oil reserves, it
cannot be claimed that they are economically powerful states, yet. Having
said that, this does not mean that Turkey does not have economic relations
with these states. Apart from enhancing the cultural ties, Turkey places a
lot of importance on economic relations with the Turkic states. Since the
1990s Turkey has provided 1.2 billion dollars in credit to these countries
in order to make them attractive investment areas for Turkish
47
‘Istanbul Summit Looks to Foster Greater Unified Turkic Identity’, Hurriyet
Daily News, accessed 29 October 2010 at
www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=summit-discusses-turkic-identity-2010-1021. For an elaborate discussion of Turkish nationalism and Turkish ethnopolitical
mobilisation in Kosovo see Hüsrev Tabak, The Kosovar Turks and Post-Kemalist
Turkey: Foreign Policy, Socialisation and Resistance (London: I. B. Tauris, 2016).
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
17
businessmen.48 The volume of Turkey’s trade with Turkic states was
approximately 1 billion dollars during the 1990s. However, the volume has
increased since 2002 when the AKP came to power. As seen in Figure 1.2,
there was a steep increase in the trade volume between 2002 and 2010,
compared to the 1990s. Until recently, the trade balance was in favour of
Turkey. However, with the start of importing natural gas and oil from
Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan the balance has changed in
favour of the Turkic states. Despite all these developments, unless there is
at least one economically powerful state among the Turkic states, it is
highly unlikely that the ideals of Pan-Turkism will be accomplished.
5000
3750
2500
1250
0
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Turkey's Import
Turkey's Export
Figure 1.2 Turkey–Turkic States’ Foreign Trade (US $ millions)49
Mehmet Alagöz, Sinem Yapar and Ramazan Uctu, ‘Türk Cumhuriyetleri İle
İlişkilerimize Ekonomik Açıdan Bir Yaklaşım’ (The Relationships with the Turkic
States: An Economic Approach), Selçuk Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü
Dergisi, 12 (2004): 59–74.
49
Statistics of the Undersecretary of Foreign Trade, accessed 10 April 2011 at
www.dtm.gov.tr/dtmweb/index.cfm?action=detayrk&yayinID=1116&icerikID=12
25&dil=TR.
48
18
Chapter One
The second obstacle is that some of these states are not even close to
sustaining their own internal security. For instance, Kyrgyzstan is one of
the states that has not managed to strengthen its own internal and external
security. Religious extremism and illegal drug trafficking are still major
challenges for Kyrgyzstan.50 The final obstacle is the leadership issue
among these Turkic countries. This issue has come to prominence since
Turkey tried to play a ‘Big Brother’ role instead of Russia following the
dissolution of the Soviet Union. It is well known that this role was not
welcomed by the post-Soviet Turkic states. In this regard, in the case of
forming a Union and being a leader state, there are several candidates
apart from Turkey, including Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.51
These three drawbacks are the answers to the question of why PanTurkism is a distant goal, and as long as these barriers remain, it seems
this aim will stay unrealised.
As for a brief comparison of Eurasianism and Pan-Turkism, there are
certain differences between them. First of all, it is true that one of the
motives of the founders of Eurasianism was to build a counter-view
against Pan-Turkism. It was a timely opportunity for Russian emigrants to
build an ideology against separatist thoughts of Pan-Turkism. Another
disparity between Eurasianism and Pan-Turkism is the ‘open–closed
nationalism’ dichotomy. Similarly to Pan-Slavism, Pan-Turkism is
‘closed’ nationalism while Eurasianism is unequivocally ‘open’ nationalism.
Concerning the characterisation of a potential union, Pan-Turkists give
ethnic roots a lot of importance. As can be understood from the name of it,
there is no alternative to establishing a Turkic Union which is composed of
only Turkic-origin people. Whereas Turkist intellectuals emphasise the
one-sided link among the Turkic-origin peoples, Eurasianists are more
comprehensive. And in a potential Eurasian Union, people’s common
culture and historical destiny are deterministic instead of ethnic.
50
For further information about the security issue in Kyrgyzstan see Krishnamurty
Santhanam (ed.), Eurasian Security Matters (New Delhi: Allied Publishers, 2010);
Hooman Peimani, Conflict and Security in Central Asia and the Caucasus
(California: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2009); Stephen J. Blank (ed.), Central
Asian Security Trends: Views from Europe and Russia, accessed 18 February 2014
at www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/pub1063.pdf.
51
John C. K. Daly, ‘The Rebirth of Pan-Turkism?’, accessed 29 October 2010 at
www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=33286.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
19
The last comparison is on the philosophy of territory. So far, the territory
of a potential Eurasian Union has been clarified. However, the territory of
the potential Turkic Union is composed of lands where Turkic-speaking
people live. On the one hand, this is a vast area to unite. On the other hand,
the lands of Turkic-speaking people are spread from the Balkans to Siberia
and not all of these lands have a common land border.
Pan-Turanianism: An Ideology from the Balkans
to the Yellow Sea
Pan-Turanianism can be understood as a movement for the political
unification of all speakers of Turanian languages. The term is often used in
the same way as Pan-Turkism, but it is a more comprehensive nationalist
movement compared to Pan-Turkism. Pan-Turanianism aims at not merely
the unity of all Turkic peoples, but also the unification of the Ural-Altaic
race. According to Arnakis, this race embraces; ‘the Ottoman Turks of
Istanbul and Anatolia, the Turcoman peoples of Central Asia and Persia,
the Tatars of South Russia and Transcaucasia, the Magyars of Hungary,
the Finns of Finland, the Baltic provinces, the aboriginal tribes of Siberia
and even the distant Mongols and Manchus’.52
As for the word Turan, adequate information can be gathered from
Ferdowsi’s53 Shahnameh.54 This epic gives information about the word
Turan, which was the name given to northeast Iran. According to this epic,
King Fereydun had three sons, Silim, Tur and Irij. The King divided the
world up for his sons. Asia Minor was given to Silim, Iran to Irij and the
eastern part of the world (Turan) to Tur.55 However, today, the word
Turan is used for Central Asia.
Pan-Turanianism is an ambiguous concept; so much so that everyone
interprets it in different ways. For example, Ladis K. D. Kristof evaluates
the movement as anti-Slav. According to Kristof, ‘Its immediate purpose
was to check and counter-balance Pan-Slav expansionism in the Balkans
by forging an alliance with the Pan-Turkic movement and establishing ties
52
George G. Arnakis, ‘Turanism: An Aspect of Turkish Nationalism’, Balkan
Studies, 1 (1960): 19–32 (19).
53
An Iranian poet, who lived between 940 and 1020.
54
An epic poem written by Ferdowsi between 977 and 1010.
55
Osman G. Özgüdenli, Ortaçağ Türk-Iran Tarihi Araştırmaları (The Research of
History of Turk-Iran in Middle Age) (İstanbul; Kaknus Yayinlari, 2006).
20
Chapter One
with all the Finno-Ugric peoples of the north from the Baltic to the Urals.
Thus the Slavs were to be “taken from behind” and hemmed in.’56
Another interpretation is made by Kaveh Farrokh. From his perspective, it
was a racist, anti-Slav movement and aimed to establish a Turkic superstate, but for the benefit of Britain. In this context, Farrokh points out that:
Simply put, pan-Turanianism is an ideology that aims at creating a Turkic
super state stretching from the Balkans in Europe, eastwards across
Turkey, Iran (Persia), the Caucasus, Central Asia up to and including
northwest China … Pan-Turanianism is perhaps one of the last racialist
movements that first began in the nineteenth century.57
To sum up, Pan-Turanianism is the idea of uniting all speakers of Turanian
languages under the Turan state. But, it might be considered a utopia.
Even comparing it to other pan-nationalisms, it is unequivocal that all of
them might be more promising than Pan-Turanianism. Yet, several
activities have been held in alleged Turanian lands (see Figure 1.3) in
order to gather Turanian people. One of the biggest events, held in
Hungary since 2008, is the Turanian Convention. It is a tribal convention
and attracts more than 100,000 people every year.58 By doing so,
conveners aim to raise awareness and keep their own traditions alive.
People from Turkey also show great interest in this Convention while they
undertake other initiatives, such as the institution known as the Turanian
Research Association and a journal called Turan.
When it comes to the outcomes of the brief comparison of PanTuranianism with Eurasianism, they are similar to the outcomes which can
be obtained from the comparison of Pan-Turkism with Eurasianism. The
first variable is a theoretical approach. From this perspective, it can be
alleged that Pan-Turanianism is also an ideology that emerged to balance
the Pan-Slavist vision. The second variable is the open–closed nationalism
dichotomy. Pan-Turanianism is a ‘closed’ nationalism, while Eurasianism
is an ‘open’ nationalism. Pan-Turanianism emphasises the Turanid race
that includes the Uralic- and Altaic-speaking peoples more generally.
56
Ladis K. D. Kristof, ‘The Russian Image of Russia: An Applied Study in
Geopolitical Methodology’, in Charles A. Fisher (ed.), Essays in Political
Geography (London: Methuen & Co Ltd, 1967): 364.
57
Kaveh Farrokh, Pan-Turanianism Takes Aim at Azerbaijan: A Geopolitical
Agenda, accessed 15 March 2009 at
www.rozanehmagazine.com/NoveDec05/Azerbaijan-Text[nopict].pdf.
58
For more information see http://kurultaj.hu/english/.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
21
Figure 1.3 Alleged Turanian Lands59
However, Eurasianism does not address any specific race and, what is
more, common culture and history are highlighted.
59
‘Turanian Lands, Turanian People’, accessed 23 May 2012 at
www.hunmagyar.org/turan/turan.html#turan.
22
Chapter One
Concerning the characterisation of a potential Turan state/union, it is clear
who are entitled to be its citizens – speakers of Ural-Altaic languages.
Again, regarding characterisation it is not possible to claim that there is a
constraint in the Eurasianist vision. The fourth and final comparison is on
the philosophy of territory. The territory of a potential Turanian
state/union is composed of lands where speakers of Ural-Altaic languages
live. Pan-Turanianism shares this trait with Pan-Turkism.
Discourses of Turkish Eurasianism
Eurasianism was a way of thinking, an ideology or geopolitical thought to
save the Russian Empire from collapse and create a propitious sphere in
order to include all Eurasian nations. This version of Russian Eurasianism
or Classical Eurasianism had various discourses, and having those
discourses was one of the reasons why Russian Eurasianism faded away
around the 1930s. Having many participants and eminent founders
dwelling in different countries of Europe and various discourses caused
the disappearance of Eurasianism until Gumilev’s efforts to put together
Neo-Eurasianism. Gumilev’s followers A. Panarin and A. Dugin made an
enormous contribution to Neo-Eurasianism during the 1990s. However,
Panarin’s death gave rise to a loss of influence and left A. Dugin as the
sole ideologist of Neo-Eurasianism.
Whereas Classical Eurasianism could not penetrate Turkish society, NeoEurasianism has been perceived in various ways by Turkish intelligentsia.
It might be considered that there are two reasons why Neo-Eurasianism
has found greater acceptance than Classical Eurasianism. The first is that
Turkey has been a convenient sphere for ideologies, as it is believed that
Turkey has had a glorious history regarding Turkic ethnic roots and its
facilitative role for new and stimulating ideologies. Besides, Turkey has
started to embrace a new way of understanding this glorious history. That
has been one of the catalysts which has created an appropriate
environment for Eastern-oriented ideologies. The second reason is that the
effect of the perception that ‘The only friend of a Turk is a Turk’ on the
Turkish identity-building process generated a tendency among some
nationalist circles to become conscious against any threat by anyone seen
as an enemy of Turkey. That is why these circles are in support of
sustaining the ‘balance of power’ rhetoric, especially against the Western
world, by promoting ideologies such as Neo-Eurasianism.
Turkish Eurasianism: Roots and Discourses
23
Three aspects – Islam, Ottoman history, and Turkishness – have played
key roles and moulded the Turkish identity despite the efforts to exalt
Turkishness (the ancientness of the Turkish language, history and race; the
Turks’ contributions to Western civilisation60) and degrade Islamic and
Ottoman history during the establishment of the Republic of Turkey. That
is why, in contemporary Turkey, Islamism, Pan-Turkism and NeoOttomanism are popular ideologies for building, in their own capacity, a
new Turkey which can be influential in the international arena, even a
regional power.
The meeting of Turkish intelligentsia with Russian Eurasianism occurred
through Gumilev and Dugin’s works. In particular, Dugin’s initial
thoughts, which aimed to exclude Turkey from a prospective Eurasian
Union, were not welcomed in Turkey, and caused Turkish intellectual
circles to perceive Russian Eurasianism as a Russian imperialist ideology,
even if Dugin later revised his approach to Turkey. Most of the discourses
of Eurasianism, therefore, are built on the aforementioned ideologies, such
as Islamism, Turkism, etc. In the light of this information, in a general
manner, the discourses of Turkish Eurasianism can be classified into three
separate divisions:61 Nationalist Eurasianism, Multiculturalist Eurasianism,
and Westernist Eurasianism (see Table 1.1).
Nationalist Eurasianism
The first discourse is Nationalist Eurasianism, which is in favour of
turning Turkey’s face to the East and making alliances with countries such
as Iran, India, Pakistan, Syria, Russia and so on. It is worth mentioning
that, according to the Nationalist Eurasianists, the alliances with these
countries should not be at the level of establishing a union with all of them.
60
For further information on the early efforts on exalting Turkish identity, see:
Murat Ergin, ‘Cultural Encounters in the Social Sciences and Humanities: Western
Émigré Scholars in Turkey’, History of the Human Sciences, 22:1: 105–130; Reşat
Kasaba, ‘Kemalist Certainties and Modern Ambiguities’, in Sibel Bozdoğan and
Reşat Kasaba (eds), Rethinking Modernity and National Identity in Turkey (Seattle:
University of Washington Press, 1997): 15–36; Ayşe Kadıoğlu, ‘The Paradox of
Turkish Nationalism and the Construction of Official Identity’, in S. Kedourie
(ed.), Turkey: Identity, Democracy, Politics (London: Frank Cass, 1996): 177–93;
Ayhan Akman, ‘Modernist Nationalism: Statism and National Identity in Turkey’,
Nationalities Papers, 32 (2004): 23–51.
61
For the illustration of the discourses see Table 5.1.
Chapter One
24
Table 1.1 Typology of the Discourses of Turkish Eurasianism
TURKISH EURASIANISM
Nationalist Eurasianism
Multiculturalist Eurasianism
Westernist Eurasianism
Anıl Çeçen
(professor)
Attila İlhan
(author, poet)
Erel Tellal
(professor)
Şener Üşümezsoy
(professor)
Doğu Perinçek
(leader of the Turkish
Workers’ Party – jailed for a
while in the Ergenekon trial)
Sami Güçlü
(former minister)
Özcan Yeniçeri
(professor)
Mehmet Perinçek
(doctor – jailed for a while
in the Ergenekon trial)
Nabi Avcı
(incumbent Minister of
National Education, MP)
Ümit Özdağ
(professor)
Akkan Süver
(President of the Marmara
Groups Strategic and Social
Research Foundation)
Namık Kemal Zeybek
(former minister)
Hakan Fidan
(incumbent Undersecretary
of the National Intelligence
Organization, MİT)
Suat İlhan
(retired Lieutenant
General)
Ali Külebi
(Acting President of
National Security
Strategies Research
Centre)
Arslan Bulut
(author, columnist,
researcher)
İhsan Çomak
(assistant professor)