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tepav@tepav.org.tr / tepav.org.trTEPAV veriye dayalı analiz yaparak politika tasarım sürecine katkı sağlayan, akademik etik ve kaliteden ödün vermeyen, kar amacı gütmeyen, partizan olmayan bir araştırma kuruluşudur.
Political Islamists have met the insurgencies in the Arab world with  sympathy, because they thought it would give them a chance for political  power. Certainly political Islamists in Turkey, who were bored with  loneliness, were inclusive. But unpredictable outcomes of the “Arab  Awakening” have started to emerge as it is in every major economic,  social and political change. Especially the developments in Syria are  leading to confusion on one hand and triggering fissions on the other  hand. As a matter of fact, one can see this better if one follows the  debates and newspapers of the Islamist groups in Turkey. Principally,  the divisions being talked about provide significant clues regarding the  Islamic movements and in which direction they might develop in the long  run. 
One may collect the causes that led to division among  Islamic groups under six headings. The first is the confusion caused by  the Iran-Syria strategic alliance. The Iranian Islamic revolution has a  positive and historic influence over some of the political Islamists of  Turkey. It shaped their mind set. Therefore, coming out with an  anti-Syrian stance, which might leave Iran in a difficult situation with one of its strategic allies, is not a  case that might be digested easily. Some Islamists see this as a  betrayal of Muslim Iran, their first love. This also triggers debates. 
Secondly,  in an equation which includes Iran, denominational differences are not  ignorable. Discussions may shift from Muslim identity to sectarian  identities that could fragmentize easily. At that, in a facsimile of the  Marxists in the old days, any number of factions may emerge, and each  and every group may refer to texts and start to seek witnesses from  history in order to prove its rightfulness and the correctness of its  ideas. 
The third reason is the anti-Israel stance of the  al-Assad regime. This debate revives the question of “who is the  essential enemy?” Is the essential enemy for Muslims Israel or the al-Assad regime? Different answers to this question deepen the discussions. 
The  fourth is the authoritarian Saudi Arabias and Qatars, which limit and  ban real Muslims’ political actions, supporting the Syrian opposition.  According to the debates, is standing with those regimes, which are  remote from Islam, an acceptable attitude religiously and morally? 
The  fifth reason is Ba’ath regimes that have Hamas for long years. This has  proven its positive stance in the Palestine case. If Ihvan comes to  power in Syria, can it act in same manner in the Palestinian question? 
The  last reason is that: Islamists who support the Syrian dissidents are  interestingly allied with and standing on the same line as the United  States and U.K. Also their discourse is being formed under the  “democracy” umbrella which is a Western ideology. In this case, does  “Arab Awakening/Spring” belong to the Islamic worldview or a struggle  for realizing a Western ideology? 
As a result, apparently,  political Islamists will not only come up against political, economic  and social change along with the “Arab Awakening/Spring,” but also they  will find themselves in a new, long and gloomy discussion.
This commentary was published on 17.05.2012 in Hürriyet Daily News.