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Is Turkey Arming Jihadists?

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  • Is Turkey Arming Jihadists?

    Is Turkey Arming Jihadists?

    Commentary Magazine
    02.01.2013

    Michael Rubin | @mrubin1971

    Last week, I noted that Turkey may soon find itself on the Financial
    Action Task Force's black list alongside Iran and North Korea because
    of its failure to take action against terrorist financing. Adam Marx,
    an avid reader of COMMENTARY and an informal student of Turkey, was
    kind enough to point out that a new law on Turkey's books may not be
    enough, given Turkey's recent trend not only to finance terrorists in
    Libya, Syria, and elsewhere, but also to arm radical Islamists. If
    everyone-Chuck Hagel and Obama's CIA pick John Brennan-agrees that
    Hamas and Mohamed Morsi represent the worst, most bigoted aspects of
    the Muslim Brotherhood, then there should no longer be any illusion
    regarding Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ=9Fan, whose political roots are in the
    same movement. Eric Trager's essay asking why so many Western analysts
    got the Muslim Brotherhood wrong and addressing the myths which so
    many still grasp is a must read. But while there is a reckoning with
    regard to Egypt, ErdoÄ=9Fan and his Western supporters have gotten
    away with murder.

    Greece, for example, last month intercepted a Turkish ship that
    apparently was part of an effort to arm either Libyan jihadists or,
    even worse, transit weaponry to al-Qaeda affiliates in northern
    Mali. Likewise, Yemeni authorities twice last month reportedly seized
    Turkish arms bound for al-Qaeda affiliates in Yemen. Syrian Kurds
    regularly complain that Turkey is shipping weaponry to the al-Qaeda
    elements in Syria like the Nusra Front, because ErdoÄ=9Fan would
    rather have a radical Islamist entity on Turkey's border than a
    secular Kurdish canton.

    If there's one lesson which can be drawn from the past two decades, it
    is that the strategy of various Middle Eastern states to support
    Jihadism abroad while crushing terrorists at home backfires. Saudi
    princes believed that they could fund al-Qaeda abroad, only to have
    the group start attacking Saudis and foreign workers inside the
    Kingdom. Bashar al-Assad also believed that he could use al-Qaeda to
    undermine Iraq and perhaps Jordan, only to find himself fighting a
    death struggle with the same al-Qaeda alumni inside Syria. If
    ErdoÄ=9Fan continues down the path of promoting the Muslim Brotherhood
    and even more radical groups abroad, he may very well set the stage
    for a terrorist backlash in Turkey in coming years. The terrorists of
    course will have primary blame for their actions but, when that
    instability occurs, the Turks-and those who have supported
    ErdoÄ=9Fan's religious agenda-will have no one to blame but themselves
    for such a short-sighted strategy.

    UPDATE: Since I wrote this originally, it seems that a suicide bomber
    has attacked a side entrance to the U.S. Embassy in Ankara,
    Turkey. Our thoughts are with the victims. Alas, this will not be the
    last suicide bombing Turkey experiences.

    UPDATE 2: The U.S. tipped off Turkey about the presence of bin Laden's
    fugitive son-in-law not only in Turkey, but in a swank section of the
    capital. Turkey has decided to extradite the fugitive to Iran, rather
    than hand him over to U.S. authorities.

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