Abstract
This article seeks to test the relevance of neoclassical realism in explaining the
foreign policy behavior of a regional power in an era of turbulent change in the
regional system. Taking Turkey’s policy response to the Arab Uprisings as a case
study, it tries to explain, from a neoclassical realist perspective, the causes of
Ankara’s miscalculations while formulating an ambitious policy in 2011, as well
as its failure to adapt to the new realities on the ground between 2013 and 2016.
Overall, it argues that neoclassical realism provides a satisfying explanation for
Turkey’s policy failure in this period, and that the problems of miscalculation
and maladaptation in Turkish foreign policy were caused by distortive effects
of certain unit-level factors. In this sense, while ideological tendencies of the
ruling Justice and Development Party, as well as its consolidation of domestic
power, shaped the content and styling of Ankara’s policy response after 2011,
the extensive utilization of foreign policy for domestic purposes by the ruling
party hindered Turkey’s adaptation to shifting balances in the regional power
structure between 2013 and 2016.