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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.
The Transatlantic Survey 2013 results were announced last week. I was  reading the text prepared for the Turkish ceremony. Some 38 percent of  Turks surveyed said Turkey should act alone on international matters.  The text prepared by the German Marshall Fund of the United States cites this as an indication that  there is support for the foreign policy position of the Turkish  government. I disagree. I do not think that the result is directly  related to current developments. It is more likely to be a continuing  trend from our past; it is a reflection of an old habit back from the  days of “the Turk’s best friend is a Turk.” It was formulated with the  memories of a crumbling empire long gone at the beginning of the last  century. But old habits die hard. Turkey still looks xenophobic to me,  and let me explain why.
It sounds plausible that 38 percent of  the respondents from Turkey noted that Turkey should act alone in  international affairs. A similar question was asked once before to  Turkish participants of the survey in 2010. How many said Turkey should  act alone in international matters? 34 percent. Now, 2010 was not like  today. Turkey still had the basic zero-problems policy framework back  then. The civil war in Syria and the Egyptian and Tunisian  transformations toward democracy had not started back in 2010.
Turkey  was not that problematic to the West at that time. The Arab  transformations were not this messy. Yet 34 percent of respondents were  asking for a more independent Turkey in international matters, much like  today’s 38 percent. At that time, around 21 percent wanted Turkey to  act more in line with the Middle Eastern countries. That ratio declined  to around 8 percent this year. People were more supportive of government  policy in 2010. What we have today is the good old xenophobia from the  last century.
One thing is surprising. We had 48,310 exporting  companies; each on average exports four kinds of products a year. Yet  xenophobia persists. There is still that “Let’s do it by ourselves”  mentality with its fear of everything from the outside, along with that  early 19th-century attitude, telling you that the foreigner in your  hometown can only be a spy. We are still stuck in that mindset, in a  country in which three out of every four manufacturing companies sell  their goods to the world, making 152 billion dollars’ worth of exports.
This commentary was published in Hürriyet Daily News on 21.09.2013