ID | 132472 |
Title Proper | Turkey, davutoglu and the idea of pan-Islamism |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ozkan, Behlül |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Turkey's foreign minister was the first intellectual to devise a rationalistic and pragmatic Islamist foreign policy. Five years in office have exposed a huge gap between his ambitions and the country's ability to achieve them. Over the past decade, Turkey's foreign policy has been synonymous with Ahmet Davutoglu and his doctrine of 'stratejik derinlik' (strategic depth). In 2010-11 he was on Foreign Policy's list of the 'Top 100 Global Thinkers'. Yet, despite this popular interest in Davutoglu, there are few academic studies of his foreign policy. He devised Turkey's current, pan-Islamist approach in his work as an academic during 1986-2002, detailing his vision in hundreds of articles published in that period. Davutoglu consistently argued that the end of the Cold War provided Turkey with a historic opportunity to become a global power, as long as it followed an expansionist foreign policy based on Islamist ideology. According to Davutoglu, Turkey was to dominate its hinterland - the Middle East, the Balkans and the Caucasus - and thereby create a new Lebensraum (he uses the Turkish words 'hayat alani', which is a direct translation of the German Lebensraum, or 'living space'). He began to turn his pan-Islamist vision into reality after 2002, following his appointment as foreign-policy adviser to the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), a position he held until he was made foreign minister in 2009. |
`In' analytical Note | Survival : the IISS Quarterly Vol.56, No.4; August-September 2014: p.119-140 |
Journal Source | Survival : the IISS Quarterly Vol.56, No.4; August-September 2014: p.119-140 |
Key Words | Turkey ; Islamist Ideology ; Historic Opportunity ; Balkans ; Global Power ; Cold War ; Caucasus ; Middle East ; Foreign Policy ; Geopolitics ; Political Risk ; Risk Analysis ; Survival ; German Lebensraum |