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  • Turkey to Deploy Patriot Missiles

    TURKEY TO DEPLOY PATRIOT MISSILES

    Turkey Analyst,
    vol. 5 no. 23
    5 December 2012



    Richard Weitz

    Turkey's membership in NATO has many unique dimensions, including in
    the number of missile-related crises the country has experienced.
    Washington pledged to withdraw its nuclear missiles from Turkey during
    the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis in return for securing a Soviet nuclear
    pull-out from Cuba. In 1990 and 2003, Turkey had to overcome West
    European qualms about deploying NATO air defense systems in Turkey to
    counter Saddam Hussein's threats. After considerable wavering, Turkey
    averted a major NATO crisis in 2010 when it agreed to host advanced
    U.S. ballistic missile defense radar. Now Turkey has secured a NATO
    commitment to relocate some of the alliance's most advanced air and
    missile interceptors despite considerable foreign and some domestic
    opposition.



    BACKGROUND: With daily incidents of mortar rounds and shells falling
    on Turkish territory, and frequent Syrian airstrikes against
    rebel-held towns near the Turkish border, last month the Turkish
    government used NATO's Article 4 security consultations to request
    deployment of NATO Patriot surface-to-air missiles near its border
    with Syria. Turkish officials insist that the deployment would be for
    defensive purposes only, as a "precautionary measure" to counter any
    threat emanating from Syria. In justifying his original request,
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an insisted that `this is entirely a
    defensive measure against possible attacks from the other side.''
    NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen encouraged the request,
    arguing that the Patriots would help defend Turkey's population and
    territory, `contribute to the de-escalation of the crisis along NATO's
    south-eastern border,' and serve as `a concrete demonstration of
    Alliance solidarity and resolve.' In late November NATO teams surveyed
    possible sites for the Patriots, which include the southeastern
    provinces of Diyarbakır or Å?anlıurfa or Malatya, which already hosts
    the NATO BMD radar.

    NATO's Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) Missile Interceptor
    Batteries are some of the most sophisticated air and missile defense
    systems in Western inventories. Each battery has 16 PAC-3
    interceptors; each weighs 340 kg, carries 50 kilograms of explosives,
    and flies at 5,000 km/h. Combined with the high accuracy of their
    radar sensors and targeting systems, the Patriots can intercept
    warplanes and short-range ballistic missiles as far as 100 km away,
    allowing them to command an area well beyond the Turkish-Syrian
    border--all of northern Syria up, including the embattled towns of
    Aleppo and Homs.

    While the earlier 1990 and 2003 Turkish requests for Patriots provoked
    major intra-alliance divisions, on this occasion the NATO
    decision-making process appears to have been much smoother. Foreign
    Minister Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu and other Turkish diplomats engaged in
    lengthy and comprehensive consultations with the other NATO
    governments even though only Germany, the Netherlands, and the United
    States have the PAC-3s. The United States strongly backed the proposed
    deployments and the German Foreign Minister acknowledged the
    legitimacy of Turkey's security concerns. Public opposition to the
    deployments in NATO countries has been minimal.

    The December 4 meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels, citing
    the clear threat to Turkey as well as the principle of allied
    solidarity, formally approved the deployments. Rasmussen and the NATO
    governments issued statements of strong support for Turkey. `To anyone
    who would attack Turkey,' the Secretary-General warned, `don't even
    think about it.' The national parliaments in Germany and the
    Netherlands must now authorize the deployments. Although these
    approvals are considered a formality, it will probably take at least
    another month before the Patriots are relocated to Turkey and become
    operational given the large number and physical size of the PAC-3
    systems, which include the interceptor missiles, the launchers, their
    radars, an engagement control station, a power plant, and other
    components.



    IMPLICATIONS: Within Turkey, some opposition groups, unenthusiastic
    about ErdoÄ?an's aggressive campaign against Syrian president Bashar
    al-Assad, see the deployments as yet another Western-inspired step
    towards a Turkey-Syria war that could further strain Turkey's
    relations with Iran, Iraq, and Russia for the benefit of NATO.
    Resistance to the Patriot deployment was sufficiently strong that
    ErdoÄ?an has had to resort to the dubious logic of arguing that the
    parliament has no say in the matter since the deployment was a NATO,
    and not a Turkish, decision.

    Some of Turkey's other neighbors also oppose deployments, though there
    is little they can do to stop them. The Syrian government naturally
    railed against Turkey's `new act of provocation,' with the Syrian
    foreign minister accusing Ankara of `deluding'' Turkish public opinion
    that Syria presents a threat. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's
    representative in Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps, Brigadier General
    Yadollah Javani said on Nov.27 that "Turkey will suffer much detriment
    from establishing Patriots in their territory."

    The missile issue has added yet another burden to the Turkey-Russia
    relationship following the Ankara's October 11 decision to force a
    Syrian passenger plane from Russia to land in Turkey, Russia has
    vetoed UN resolutions that would try to force al-Assad's removal from
    office, and Russia has been supplying arms to Syria, while Ankara has
    had a leading role in the anti-Assad coalition. At one point, ErdoÄ?an
    denounced what he called Moscow's `interference in the internal
    affairs of Turkey.' Russia has traditionally objected to NATO
    military operations outside the Atlantic region without the
    authorization of the UN Security Council.

    Nonetheless, Russia and Turkey continue to keep their differences over
    Syria from damaging their overall relationship. At a December 3 news
    conference with ErdoÄ?an during their one-day summit in Istanbul,
    Russian president Vladimir Putin said that the two governments shared
    the same goal in Syria even though they differ on tactics. Putin
    acknowledged that Turkey had legitimate concerns regarding Syria but
    said that deploying Patriots risked escalating the crisis. Ignoring
    anti-Putin street protests, most of the public comments of Russian and
    Turkish officials focused on energy and economics ' the 11 documents
    they signed following the meeting dealt mostly with energy, finance,
    and science and technology cooperation agreement.



    CONCLUSIONS: Some of the foreign and domestic concerns about NATO's
    Patriot deployment in Turkey reflect the diverse effects they could
    have on Turkey's foreign policy as well as that they have no ability
    to protect Turkey from the stray mortar rounds and artillery shells
    that have been striking Turkish territory from Syria. In a way, the
    debate over the missile deployments resembles the one between the
    U.S./NATO and Russia/China on the former's global BMD initiatives.
    NATO and Turkey call the Patriots defensive weapons and deploying them
    a `precautionary' measure to prevent an escalation of the conflict.
    They see the missiles as directly enhancing Turkey's defenses against
    possible Syrian air and missile attacks. They also believe that this
    augmented defense capability will help deter such attacks and even
    reduce the risk of accidents since the Syrian military will prove more
    cautious about its operations near the Turkish border.

    But opponents of the Patriot deployments see them as having tactical
    capabilities that, while defensive, create potential offensive
    opportunities. For example, the Patriots will reduce fears among an
    anxious Turkish public about Ankara's aggressive role in organizing
    the insurgency against al-Assad. They might also further raise the
    Syrian rebels' morale as well as possibly serving to further
    demoralize Syrian officers and soldiers, who will increasingly
    exercise the option to defect to the insurgency if it looks set to
    win. By erecting an effective air and missile shield that could easily
    extend deep into Syrian territory, the Patriots could help enforce a
    no-fly zone over Syria that extends from Idlib to Shogor Bridge, to
    Al-Zaweya Mountain, and finally to Aleppo from Turkey.

    In June 2012, Turkey had requested that NATO develop contingency plans
    for such a no-fly zone to protect Turkish territory from Syrian
    aggression. With this air shield, the insurgents would find it easier
    to establish secure logistics and communications corridors to provide
    munitions and other supplies to their fighters in Syria. They could
    more ambitiously try to establish a base of operations inside Syria
    and, as the insurgents used Benghazi in Libya, launch offensives
    against the Syrian military more effectively from their new forward
    operating bases.

    The deployment would also serve to engage NATO more directly in the
    Syrian war, something Ankara has long sought but NATO has resisted.
    Unlike in the case of Libya, thus far NATO has largely remained aloof
    from the Syrian crisis. But with the Patriot systems will come
    hundreds of NATO troops to operate, maintain, and protect the
    interceptors, their radars, and their other support elements. In
    effect, the NATO personnel will become a `trip wire' that would make
    NATO military intervention more likely during the inevitable future
    Syrian-Turkish border clashes. NATO's Supreme Commander, not the
    Turkish government, will operate the systems and decide whether and
    how to use them. The issue of Syria's chemical weapons further
    complicates matters. Although NATO leaders insisted that the Patriot
    deployments would not contribute to any of the offensive actions
    described above, international alarm about Syria's chemical weapons
    potential ` also cited as a threat by Turkish officials ` has
    continued to increase, and could serve as a legitimate pretext for a
    more assertive policy by NATO ` and Turkey ` in Syria.

    Richard Weitz is Senior Fellow and Director, Center for
    Political-Military Analysis, Hudson Institute.

    http://www.silkroadstudies.org/new/inside/turkey/2012/121205B.html




    From: A. Papazian
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