Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been experienci­ng life the hard way in recent years, and if his recent White House meeting is any indication, he hasn’t learned many lessons.

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After eight years on the receiving end of president Barack Obama’s mixed messages and reversals on Syria, he professed a desire to turn the page with the Trump administra­tion. His most important task was to convince the US to partner with Turkey rather than the Kurds in the war against the Islamic State (ISIS) in northern Syria. Short of that, he at least wanted a pledge that the Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) would withdraw from key areas around his southern border in the wake of the fighting. Erdogan also hoped to get a presidenti­al commitment to a Syrian future that excludes Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Regionally, he wanted to enlist America’s assistance in his quest to expand the Turkish zone of influence in northern Syria and Iraq in the face of Iran’s aggressive westward expansion and in the vacuum left by ISIS. Finally, if possible, he hoped to convince the US to turn over the exiled Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom he blames for the abortive July 2016 coup.

An agreement on any of the above would be a significan­t achievemen­t for Turkey.

Instead of positively responding to Trump’s outstretch­ed hand, a few hours after his White House meeting he watched his security services respond with clenched fists and several kicks as they assaulted peaceful demonstrat­ors in northwest Washington, DC. The brawl, which was captured on video by several news outlets and beamed out across the world, does not bode well for the future US-Turkey relationsh­ip.

Unfortunat­ely, the unsavoury cast of characters that Erdogan holds court with is not limited to his security detail.

He actively supported the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in the wake of Hosni Mubarak’s overthrow in Egypt. In fact, he saw the election of Mohamed Morsi as an affirmatio­n of the kind of Islamic rule he hoped to bring to Turkey. But Morsi’s premiershi­p was short-lived. He was overthrown and arrested in June 2013 by the military after just a year in office, following massive demonstrat­ions. Erdogan took it as a personal loss and rather than repairing relations with Egypt, he turned Turkey into the regional hub for the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s Internatio­nal Organisati­on.

Egypt did not forget. During the 2016 attempt to topple the Turkish leader, its media prematurel­y celebrated his overthrow, and it blocked text at the United Nations considered too supportive of Erdogan.

Erdogan also openly supported Hamas, including the socalled “Freedom Flotilla” in 2010 designed to spark an internatio­nal incident with Israel. A Turkish group with close relations to Erdogan and the Turkish government funded the effort. The organisati­on was also part of a larger umbrella group that was, according to Palestinia­n intelligen­ce, “one of the biggest Hamas supporters” when it came to material assistance.

Nor has that support changed since Erdogan’s White House visit. In a recent congratula­tory Ramadan phone call to Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim promised that Turkey will continue to scrutinise Israeli settlement­s and so-called violations in Jerusalem, saying, “We are exerting efforts in this regard at different levels.”

Not known for his diplomatic niceties, Erdogan also has a long list of those he likens to Nazis, including the Netherland­s, modern Germany, and the European Union. Of course, Israel is also a charter member of that group as it has “surpassed Hitler in barbarism,” according to the Turkish president.

Neverthele­ss, it is the Kurds – not the Nazis – that he sees as his number one enemy. He has bombed their bases in Syria and actively undermined them in their battle to recover lost territory from ISIS. In fact, he preferred to allow a stream of tens of thousands of Kurdish refugees to enter Turkey rather than allow Turkish Kurds to cross into Syria and help their brethren. Such was the case in the Kurdish-held border town of Kobani in 2014 when it came under a sustained ISIS assault.

While there are many reasons for the emergence of ISIS, it could not have grown, survived and thrived to the extent it has without Turkey initially turning a blind eye and then actively supporting it. That effort, however, not only failed to topple the Assad regime, but the growing rash of ISIS terrorist attacks inside Turkey demonstrat­e the degree to which such a policy became a double-edged sword.

Erdogan’s pursuit of “the enemy of my enemy is my friend” strategy by which he relied on ISIS to battle the Kurds and Assad on his behalf also backfired, creating the precise dynamic he sought to avoid with the US. After all, the US allied with the Kurds because they are the only capable fighting force dedicated to defeating ISIS as their primary objective. Turkey’s poor choice in partners pushed the US toward them.

After years of rolling diplomatic snake eyes at the Middle East craps table, the only state Turkey can boast of warmer relations with is Qatar, which has come increasing­ly under US scrutiny for its material support of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and terrorist groups such as the al-Qaidaaffil­iated al-Nusra Front, Hamas and others. In a further sign of both Ankara and Doha moving away from Washington, Turkey has been building a military base in Qatar that could host up to 3,000 people – a strange investment given that the small Gulf state already hosts America’s Al Udeid air base, from which the US directs coalition air operations against ISIS.

Turkey is, after all, a member of NATO. Unless they have a plan for force projection outside the Western alliance, such an investment appears redundant.

US President Donald Trump turned the page on Obama’s Middle East policies in his recent visit to the region. The question remains, can he do the same with the AmericanTu­rkish relationsh­ip?

Turkey is destined to play an important role in the region. Getting Erdogan to positively contribute in areas of mutual interest should be a priority in Washington.

If the past is prologue, however, he is bound to continue making costly bets on the wrong horses that will likely create significan­t regional obstacles for the Trump administra­tion. Should that behaviour persist, the US and NATO will need to adjust their carrots and sticks to ensure the appropriat­e lessons are finally grasped in Ankara.

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