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The Turkish Leader And The Iraqi Ruler
3.10.2012
By Hiwa Osman
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Ekurd.net |
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Hiwa Osman, IWPR Iraq’s country director, previously
served as Iraqi president Jalal Talabani’s media
adviser.
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Read more by
Hiwa Osman
October 3, 2012
The congress of the Justice and Development Party (AKP)
demonstrated the difference between the prime
minister of Iraq and the prime minister of Turkey.
With every new turn of events in Turkey and the
Middle East, Erdogan’s position as “prime minister
of everyone” in Turkey is strengthened and tries to
transcend ethnic and sectarian differences. He sends
messages of conciliation to his opponents and
manages to corner his adversaries into engaging with
him, or at least not working openly against him.
This is simply because his behavior is that of a
statesman, not a party or sect leader. A stark
contrast to our prime minister, who started his
career as a prime minister for all of Iraq but
managed to lose an ally or a new ground with every
new development that took place.
The AKP congress was a clear demonstration of this.
The Turkish PM’s invitation to Maliki’s adversaries
was enough for Maliki to forget that he is the prime
minister for the whole of Iraq and decide to boycott
the congress.
As a result, it was clear that the Kurds were there
and were represented at a high-ranking level. The
Sunnis of Iraq were also heavily represented. This
was all happening while news of Maliki’s boycott was
all over the media.
This sent a clear signal that he is prime minister
of his sect only. Even within his sect, he does not
represent everyone. They may be on his side on this
occasion, but in many other instances they are
against him. Maliki should look at the congress and
at Erdogan’s behavior and learn from him.
The way the congress was conducted and its large
international and regional presence should also send
Maliki a message. While he making allies with the
worst possible neighbors — Iran and the dying Syrian
regime — Erdogan is embracing the people of Syria,www.ekurd.net
the Kurds, a new Egypt and all the other promising
nations.
The main reason for this is that Erdogan wants to be
a leader and Maliki wants to be a ruler. The
difference between the two is huge. One looks at
policy and how to include everyone; the other looks
at who is with him and who is against him.
A leader thinks of tomorrow while a ruler thinks of
today and yesterday. A leader thinks of winning
people and a ruler looks at intelligence reports.
(Apparently, our prime minister enjoys keeping
intelligence reports on his adversaries in his
office).
The list is long and, to cut a long story short,
Maliki should seriously revise his policy and adopt
a new approach to how he conducts himself with
friends and foes. He may win the non-confidence
battle, but he will lose more by remaining the way
he is.
Today he is the prime minister of only the Shia
people of Iraq. Soon, this will change and he will
lose that too.
Looking at the Iraqis who were at the conference,
they were a lot more relaxed in the presence of
Erdogan than they would be around Maliki. He should
ask himself why that is.
After all, Iraq is a new country and one cannot be
an old ruler of a new democracy.
Hiwa Osman is IWPR’s country director in Iraq, previously
served as Iraqi president Jalal Talabani’s media
adviser, a regular contributing writer and columnist for
Ekurd.net. Osman's
website is www.hiwaosman.com
Copyright © 2012 Ekurd.net
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...
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expressed in this commentary are solely those of the
author
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