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Turkey: America's unacknowledged problem

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  • Turkey: America's unacknowledged problem

    http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=11083

    Turkey: America's unacknowledged problem
    By Efraim Inbar
    Dec. 31, 2014

    [Efraim Inbar is director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic
    Studies, a professor of political studies at Bar-Ilan University, and
    a fellow at the Middle East Forum.]

    Turkey is a NATO ally, and U.S. President Barack Obama has called
    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan his best friend. But
    Erdogan-led Turkey does not behave as an ally or a friend of the U.S.
    This is not a new development.

    Erdogan and his Islamist party, the Justice and Development Party
    (AKP), have ruled Turkey since 2002. Erdogan's Turkey has gradually
    distanced itself from the West, adopting domestic and foreign
    policies fueled by Ottoman and Islamist impulses.

    Turkey has been on the road to an authoritarian regime for several
    years. Infringements on human rights have gradually increased. In
    truth, Turkey has never had a political system with checks and
    balances able to constrain attempts to consolidate power around one
    politician. In recent years, Erdogan has weakened further the few
    constitutional constraints against "Putinization" of the Turkish
    political system.

    The longer Erdogan rules, the more power-hungry he seems. His
    authoritarian personality becomes clearer every day. The press is
    hardly free. Erdogan arrests even Islamist journalists who are
    critical of his policies. His party has infiltrated the judicial
    system and the police. Foci of power, such as the bureaucracy, the
    banking system, industrial associations and trade unions, have been
    mostly co-opted by the AKP. Opposition political parties are largely
    discredited. The military, once active in politics as the defender of
    the Kemalist secular tradition, has been successfully sidelined.

    >From a realpolitik perspective, the domestic political developments,
    deplorable as they may be in Turkey, could be ignored by the
    democratic West as long as Ankara continues to be a useful ally.
    Unfortunately, Turkey no longer qualifies as a trusted ally.

    The most recent examples of nefarious Turkish behavior are its
    support of Islamic State and Hamas. Turkey is playing a double game
    on the issue of Islamic State. It pretends to cooperate with the U.S.
    policy in the attempt to contain radical Islam, but actually Turkey
    supports the radical group. It allows passage of volunteers through
    Turkish territory to join Islamic State in Iraq. The group gets
    logistical support via Turkey, and sends its wounded militants for
    treatment in Turkey. Turkish military forces stood idly by the
    besieged city of Kobani, just across the Turkish border, while the
    Islamists killed Kurdish fighters. Finally, Turkey denies the
    American air force access to Turkish bases, forcing the U.S. to use
    far away bases when attacking Islamic State targets.

    Turkey is also openly supporting another radical Islamist
    organization, Hamas. Despite the fact that the West regards Hamas a
    terrorist organization, Ankara regularly hosts Hamas representatives
    to meet the highest Turkish dignitaries. Hamas, an offshoot of the
    Muslim Brotherhood, has a rabid anti-American position. Moreover,
    Salah al-Aruri, a senior Hamas operative, operates out of Istanbul.
    Recently, the Turkish branch of Hamas was involved in a series of
    attempts to carry out terrorist attacks against Israel, and in
    orchestrating a coup against the current leadership of the
    Palestinian Authority.

    Such behavior should not surprise policy makers in Washington. In
    2003, Ankara denied the request from Washington to open its territory
    so that the U.S. military could attack Saddam Hussein's forces from
    two separate fronts.

    AKP-ruled Ankara also defied American preferences on Syria, a country
    allied with radical Iran and on the American list of states
    supporting terrorism. In January 2004, Bashar Assad became the first
    Syrian president ever to visit Turkey. In April 2009, the two states
    conducted their first ever joint military exercise. No other NATO
    member had such close relations with the authoritarian regime in
    Damascus, which has been closely allied with Iran for several
    decades.

    Turkey further deviated from the Western consensus in 2008 by hosting
    Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir twice. Bashir, who was
    charged with war crimes and genocide in Darfur, presided over an
    Islamist regime.

    Turkey even welcomed the president of the Islamic Republic of Iran,
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, for a visit in August 2008. No Western country
    has issued such an invitation to the Iranian leader. Additionally,
    Erdogan congratulated Ahmadinejad immediately after his re-election
    in June 2009. When it comes to Iran's nuclear threat, Ankara, unlike
    its NATO allies, has refused to adopt the U.S. stance on harsher
    sanctions, fearing in part the economic consequences of such steps. In
    June 2010, Turkey voted at the U.N. Security Council against a
    U.S.-sponsored resolution meant to impose a new round of sanctions on
    Iran.

    Turkey also has consistently defied advice from Washington to tone
    down its anti- Israel statements and mend relations with an important
    American ally. All American efforts in this direction have failed.

    There is also a clear divergence between the U.S. and Turkey on
    important global issues such as Russia and China. For example, U.S.
    wanted to send ships into the Black Sea via the Bosporus Strait
    during the Georgia war in August 2008. Turkey flatly denied several
    such requests on the pretext that the military vessels were too large.
    Moreover, Turkey proposed the creation of a regional security
    framework involving Turkey, Russia, Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan
    that left out a NATO role. More blatantly, Turkey has failed to
    participate in the Western economic sanctions imposed on Russia
    during the recent Ukraine crisis.

    Dissonance exists also with regards to China. While the U.S. fears the
    rise of China, Turkey sees this country as a potential economic
    partner and not a problem. It held military exercises with China.
    Ankara even considered purchasing anti-aircraft systems from Beijing,
    an incredibly brazen position for a NATO member.

    It is not clear why Washington puts up with such Turkish behavior. The
    Obama administration seems to be unable to call a spade a spade. It
    refuses to acknowledge that Turkey is a Trojan horse in NATO, and
    that Ankara undermines American interests in the Middle East and
    elsewhere.




    From: A. Papazian
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