“How many goodly creatures are there here!
How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world,
That has such people in't!”
How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world,
That has such people in't!”
“Caliban has a new master….Freedom, hey-day! hey-day, freedom! freedom, hey-day, freedom!”
--William Shakespeare, “The Tempest
If
you want a sense of where the Middle East is going, consider this
viewpoint from an unlikely source. Suat Kiniklioglu is not just a member
of the Turkish Parliament for the ruling (Islamist) AK party, he’s a
member of the party’s Central Executive Committee and deputy chair of
the party’s foreign affairs commission. In other words, he’s a very
important person in Turkey’s ruling establishment and especially foreign
policy.
Yet
rather than take an optimistic view about the advance of Islamic
politics in
the region, he’s very worried, worried enough to write a column
entitled, “Back to a Barbarian Age” in the May 16 edition of the
Islamist newspaper, Today’s Zaman.
What
is this barbarianism? It consists of rising group hatred and looking
down on others as culturally inferior and uncivilized. One might think
he’s about to launch still another attack on the West as evil,
imperialistic, and anti-Muslim. Not at all.
His complaint is:
“We
are now back to the very primordial
identities that once dominated our political behavior and determined
the group to which we belonged or were seen as belonging. We are no
longer socialists, conservatives or liberals. These days we are first
judged by what tribe we belong to and more increasingly what faith we
believe in.”
Yes,
he continues, “I am constantly reminded in Europe and the US that I am a
Muslim.” It is interesting to not that he was born in Germany and
clearly that played a role in making him identify himself as a Muslim
(and not just a Turk) that he ended up in the AK party.
But his complaints are about the Middle East:
“When
I travel in the Middle East, I am reminded that I am a Sunni. The
Middle East is being ravaged by barbarians who want to divide the world
into Sunni and Shiite. We can no longer make any political assessment
without entertaining these ethnic, religious and sectarian identities.
We are truly back to the Middle Ages. All of our accumulated knowledge,
sophistication and political culture seems to have been lost. The Middle
East is pervaded and increasingly infected by the sectarian rivalry
between the Shiite Persians and the Wahhabi Saudis, who are now fighting
proxy wars all over the region. As if we are all in agreement with the
Saudis’ extremely harsh interpretation of Wahhabism, we Sunnis find
ourselves in the same camp.”
Note
what he’s saying here. On one hand, there is a Shia
bloc led by Iran; on the other is a hardline Sunni Islamism which he
blames on Saudi Arabia but might just as well refer to the Muslim
Brotherhood. These two camps are now waging war in Syria for their
“primordial and primitive agenda.” These “barbarians” (Islamists) “have
blatantly hijacked the push for a normal democratic order in Syria,”
instead committing acts of terrorism that must be condemned
And
then he concludes: “With all its sins and shortcomings, the secular
order we [Turks] established over the last eight decades has taken hold
and promises to support our sociopolitical order.”
Why would a leading figure in an Islamist party identify the era of rising Islamism as a “great
shame…[in which the Middle East ] fell prey to the thirst of barbarian bloodshed”?.
Part of the answer is specifically Turkish:
--Kiniklioglu
is one of those moderates swept up into the AK, in his case an expert
on communications and foreign affairs, who may not be comfortable with
the party’s program.
--In
addition, he is (correctly) asserting that (up to now) Turkish Islam
has been more moderate than the versions in Iran and the Arabic-speaking
world. This is common, however, among others—I’ve often heard it from
Egyptians—seeking to blame everything on the Saudis
and Iranians. Ironically, (perhaps subversively?) he is praising the
(secular) Turkish republic which his own party is now dismantling.
--He’s
describing the biggest headache for Turkish foreign policy since a
battle between Sunni (Arab) Muslims and Shia (Iranian-led) Muslims is
crowding Turkey out of any real influence in the region.
But
I note something else here, too: Genuine fear of what Islamic and
Islamist politics have unleashed. Not the utopian brotherhood of the
international Islamic community (umma) pushing out competing nationalist
conflicts, but rather the evil genie of hatred, jihad among “brothers,”
war, murder, and intolerance.
It
involves the persecution of Christians and turning them into refugees,
as well as the threat of renewed war with Israel. But it also puts a
fuse to set off bloody conflicts in Iraq (as we have already seen),
Lebanon, Syria, and Bahrain. Just as Arab nationalism pledged unity and
brought decades of strife among Arab regimes, political Islam is the
weapon and motive for new conflicts.
We
have already seen its devastating role in Afghanistan, Iran, the Gaza
Strip, Iraq, Lebnaon, and Sudan. Many in the West are in denial. (Even
the use of the word “barbarian” in this context would bring down charges
of second-degree hate crime upon a non-Muslim.) But I think
Kiniklioglu and a lot of other Muslims are beginning to see the scary
new world
that he and his counterparts have set into motion.
Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of
International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His book, Israel: An Introduction, has just been published by Yale University Press. Other recent books include The Israel-Arab Reader (seventh edition), The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley), and The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan). The website of the GLORIA Center and of his
blog, Rubin Reports. His original articles are published at PJMedia.
Professor Barry Rubin, Director, Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center http://www.gloria-center.org
The Rubin Report blog http://rubinreports.blogspot.com/
He is a featured columnist at PJM http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin/.
Editor, Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal http://www.gloria-center.org
Editor Turkish Studies,http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=t713636933%22
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