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                 | Turkey cools down tempers over                                Syria By MK Bhadrakumar
 
 
  As Monday dawned, Turkey kept its fingers                                crossed in keen anticipation of the nationwide                                address by President Bashar al-Assad on the                                situation in Syria. Ankara sent an open message                                ahead of Assad's speech that if he failed to                                announce reforms even in a third attempt, he would                                "miss a big chance" to preserve power. 
 Turkey saw hopeful signs in the                                "retirement" of Rami Makhlouf, the controversial                                cousin of the president, soon after Assad's                                special envoy Hasan Turkmani returned to Damascus                                after talks with the Turkish leadership.
 
 The influential editor of Hurriyet                                newspaper Murat Yetkin quoted Turkish Foreign                                Ministry officials that Ankara has been giving                                "strong messages" to Assad and the two-fold                                message is that: a) There shouldn't be any use of                                violence; b) He should forthwith
 
 
 announce concrete reform                                steps. Yetkin quoted Turkish officials, "We are                                not interested in names, but principles." In                                short, Ankara is not pressing for a "regime                                change".
 
 The Turkish officials felt                                exasperated that Assad kept changing his mind.                                Yetkin quoted them: "There are groups inside and                                outside Syria that want to stop him from taking                                reformist steps, in order to see him put down at                                the expense of the Syrian people. Ankara doesn't                                want that. That's why we don't want him to miss                                this chance."
 
 'Not enough, but yes'
 In the event, Assad met the Turkish                                leadership more than half way by announcing a road                                map that was largely specific but left vague in                                patches. Assad outlined steps for revising or                                rewriting the constitution and the formation of a                                national dialogue committee to draw up new                                election laws. He set time limits for reaching                                reforms: a new parliament will be elected by                                August and the package of political reforms will                                be finalized by September.
 
 The dialogue,                                he said, would "commence immediately". The Turkish                                reaction has been mixed. President Abdullah Gul                                said it is "not enough, but yes" - meaning,                                despite shortfalls it is a step forward. Ankara                                seems satisfied that Assad took its suggestions.                                Gul said Assad could have said things more openly                                and still wouldn't have risked his hold on power.
 
 Gul's was the voice of reasonableness; it                                had nothing of the harshness of Prime Minister                                Recep Tayyip Erdogan's tone who recently described                                the Syrian crackdown as "savagery". There has been                                some cool stocktaking by Ankara.
 
 Only last                                weekend, Gul's key advisor Ersat Hurmuzlu told                                Saudi Arabia's al-Arabya television that Assad had                                less than a week to meet the demands of the                                protesters, failing which "it wouldn't be possible                                to offer any cover for the leadership in Syria                                because there is the danger ... that we had always                                been afraid of, and that is foreign intervention."                                By Monday, Hurmuzlu had retracted.
 
 "We are                                not redesigning others' houses. It is Syria's own                                problem," he clarified. Obviously, the Saudis are                                muddying the waters for Ankara. The Saudi media                                have been highly critical of Assad and openly call                                for regime change. The Asharq Alawsat carried a                                pungent commentary on Monday:
 
 The problem with Syria today is that                                  everybody is looking at what is happening there                                  as if it is the conclusion of [what is happening                                  on] the Arab scene, and that the same pattern                                  exists for each country. Many believe that the                                  Syrians are "copying" the Tunisians, the                                  Egyptians, and others, and this is simply not                                  true. The size and depth of the Syrian                                  opposition within the country is greater than                                  everybody thinks. The demands that are being                                  called for today by the Syrians have been in                                  place ever since 2000. Again, the European voice has                                been strident, too. British Foreign Secretary                                William Hague said:
 Therefore what is                                  happening in Syria is not the same as what                                  happened in other parts of the region; it is a                                  genuine movement ... Syrians are demonstrating                                  and shouting, "We don't love you [Assad], we                                  don't love you, leave us alone and your party                                  too!"
 
 I hope our Turkish colleagues will                                  bring every possible pressure to bear on the                                  Assad regime with a very clear message that they                                  are losing legitimacy and that Assad should                                  reform or step aside. And I hope they will be                                  very clear and very bold about                                that.French Foreign Minister Alain                                Juppe outstripped Hague: "Some believe there's                                still time for him [Assad] to change his ways and                                commit to a [reform] process. For my part, I doubt                                it. I think the point of no return has been                                reached." But Turkey grasps too well the nuances                                of European diplomacy to know what such gratuitous                                advice means. 
 United States President                                Barack Obama phoned Erdogan on Monday following                                Assad's speech. The White House statement said,
 
 The leaders agreed that the Syrian                                  government must end the use of violence now and                                  promptly enact meaningful reforms that respect                                  the democratic aspirations of the Syrian                                people.But Erdogan's office merely                                said he and Obama agreed to monitor developments                                in Syria closely. It claimed that the conversation                                was wide-ranging and covered the situation in                                Libya and the imperative need of a Middle East                                process as well. 
 Libyan quagmire
 Why is Turkey cooling down tempers after                                having ratcheted up the rhetoric? A combination of                                factors is at work. First, as it happens                                frequently in Turkey, hot-headed politicians say                                intemperate things due to domestic compulsions and                                before long, the Foreign Ministry steps in for                                course correction.
 
 Turkey's able diplomats                                would have assessed that Assad's position was not                                so shaky despite the West's pressure tactic.                                (Interestingly, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud                                Barak said on Monday he would expect Assad's                                departure in a time frame of six months.)
 
 Turkey would know six months is a long                                time in politics. So, it would rather work to see                                if the reasonable assurances by Assad regarding                                reforms could be tested on the ground. Assad                                carefully chose an ethnic Turkmen as his special                                envoy to hold talks in Ankara last week, which                                itself was a highly symbolic gesture to instill                                confidence. Ankara took note.
 
 Furthermore,                                Turkish diplomats would factor in that the Western                                intervention in Libya is in a bit of a mess. The                                initial assumption that Muammar Gaddafi's regime                                would pack up has been belied and it didn't turn                                out to be a clear-cut fight between                                authoritarianism and democracy. It is proving to                                be a tribal confrontation and a conflict between                                ethnic groups and evidently, the Western                                interventionists overestimated the power of the                                Libyan opposition.
 
 Turkey understands the                                importance of avoiding a similar miscalculation                                over Syria. If there is anarchy in Syria, it will                                be almost entirely Turkey that picks up the debris                                - not Iraq, Jordan, Israel or Lebanon. A                                distinguishing feature of the Turkish state that                                Kemal Ataturk founded has been to avoid getting                                entangled in conflicts in the Muslim Middle East.                                "Peace at home, peace abroad" - that's how Turks                                describe their state dogma. The Saudis may clap                                their hands in glee, Europeans may exhort, but the                                toil will be Turkey's alone.
 
 Finally, what                                about international legitimacy? Russia and China                                made it clear in their joint statement issued in                                Moscow last weekend after the visit by President                                Hu Jintao that they won't let the West do a                                "Libya" on them over Syria. Russian President                                Dmitry Medvedev said in an interview on Monday                                that Moscow will use veto if the West presses for                                a resolution on Syria at the United Nations                                Security Council.
 
 "What I will not support                                is a resolution similar to 1973 on Libya, because                                I am convinced that a good resolution has been                                turned into a piece of paper to cover a senseless                                military operation," Medvedev said.
 
 He                                pointed out that the use of violence on the part                                of the Syrian opposition would prompt any                                government to respond with force, and in any case,                                Russia finds it unacceptable if attempt is made to                                interfere in the domestic affairs of another                                sovereign country under the questionable slogan of                                "protecting civilians".
 
 A delegation of                                the Syrian opposition visited Moscow on Monday.                                The Russian stance is that it should be left to                                the Syrians to settle their problems and the                                international community should assist such a                                process rather than, as Foreign Minister Sergei                                Lavrov put it, "Create circumstances for new armed                                conflicts." Ankara knows Moscow's stance reflects                                the aspirations of the Arab street.More
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