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LEADER: 02397cam a2200337 a 4500
001 013597367-8
005 20140414131443.0
008 140131s2012 is b 000 0 eng d
010 $a 2013492181
035 0 $aocn826061276
040 $aOSU$beng$cOSU$dDLC
042 $alccopycat
043 $aa-tu---
050 00 $aDR477$b.M87 2012
100 1 $aMurinson, Alexander.
245 10 $aTurkish foreign policy in the twenty-first century /$cAlexander Murinson.
260 $aRamat Gan, Israel :$bBegin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies,$c2012.
300 $a31 p. ;$c24 cm.
490 1 $aMideast security and policy studies,$x0793-1042 ;$vno. 97
500 $aSeptember 2012.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 25-31)
505 0 $aIntroduction. -- The traditional Turkish foreign policy. -- The emergence of a new Turkey. -- Turkey's neo-Ottomanist vision. -- Turkey and the "Arab spring" -- Conclusion.
520 $aThis paper explores two questions: What are the ideological, social, and political roots of the new "Islamic" Republic of Turkey? How was the new thinking of the ascending political anti-Kemalist elite translated into a precipitous change in Turkey's foreign policy? The first section describes the fundamentals that guided Turkey's foreign policy throughout the Cold War period and the geopolitical crisis that occurred at that period's end. The second section highlights the three main causes of the drastic shift in the Turkish orientation towards the Greater Middle East: the American-promoted 'Turkish model,' a new revisionist doctrine of foreign policy introduced by Davutoğlu, and the emergence of the new political elite representing the conservative and religious businesspeople of Central Anatolia. The third section examines how this thinking was translated into concrete policies in the region. The fourth section describes the new dynamic in the region unleashed by the 'Arab Spring.' The conclusion analyzes the ramifications of Turkey's ambition to become the regional kingmaker and its role in an evolving geostrategic environment.
651 0 $aTurkey$xForeign relations.
651 0 $aTurkey$xPolitics and government.
650 0 $aIslam and politics$zTurkey.
710 2 $aMerkaz Besa le-meḥḳarim asṭraṭegiyim.
830 0 $aSecurity and policy studies ;$vno. 97.
988 $a20130117
049 $aKSGG
906 $0OCLC