Past Event
Ottoman Revival: How are Regional Powers Reacting to Turkey’s Resurgence in the Middle East?
Date
May 9, 2019
About the event
In recent years, Turkey has resumed its historic role as a major power in the Middle East, adopting a new and more assertive role in Arab affairs. New levels of cooperation with Iran and Russia, and heightened competition with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Egypt, have elevated Turkey’s profile as a potential regional hegemon with a pronounced Sunni Islamist orientation. Ankara’s response to the boycott of Qatar and the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi intensified this perception. Turkey believes it is pursuing its legitimate national interests and resuming its rightful place at the center of Middle Eastern and Islamic affairs after an unrequited hundred-year flirtation with Europe.
Is Turkey a Sunni Islamist version of Iran, wielding sectarian religious appeals and strident political ideology in an attempt to reshape Middle Eastern realities? How are Arab countries and Israel reacting to Turkey’s assertion of its interests? What is the nature of the Turkish-Iranian relationship, especially given the de facto end of the war in Syria? And what does all that mean for the Gulf Arab countries, given the close alliance between Qatar and Turkey?
AGSIW hosted this panel discussion to examine these issues and more.
Follow the conversation on Twitter: #GCCTurkey.
The views represented herein are the author's or speaker's own and do not necessarily reflect the views of AGSI, its staff, or its board of directors.
Speakers

Steven A. Cook
Eni Enrico Mattei Senior Fellow, Middle East and Africa Studies, Director, International Affairs Fellowship for Tenured International Relations Scholars, Council on Foreign Relations

Gönül Tol
Founding Director, Turkey Program and Senior Fellow, Black Sea Program, Middle East Institute