Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Europe and Turkey: The end of illusion

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The summit held in Ankara on April 4 between Putin, Erdogan and Rouhani provides an eye-opening depiction of the rapidly changing discourse of 2018’s geostrateg­ic internatio­nal rivalry. The Syrian conflict, the center of global attention for more than seven years, is now in the hands of three actors – Russia, Turkey, and Iran. Europe appears to be incongruou­sly helpless in the face of this geopolitic­al environmen­t, the consequenc­es of which bears directly on the Western alliance.

Here, the case of Turkey is worrisome. President Erdogan’s horrifying human rights violations, his blind regional ambitions, the Islamisati­on of Turkey, and exploitati­on of the Syrian refugees in Turkey (wielding them against Europe), coupled with his military incursion into Syria, demand that the EU immediatel­y reconsider its relations with Turkey. The relationsh­ip must be redefined, given the changing regional and internatio­nal geopolitic­al dimension that has a direct effect on the EU’s national security. Bad news for Europe and the West The fact that the EU has been excluded from deliberati­ons between Russia, Iran, and Turkey is a bad omen for the EU and the West in general. Much of the blame, however, rests with the EU in particular, as it has permitted Erdogan to pursue policies domestical­ly and internatio­nally which are diametrica­lly against EU interests and democratic principles, even though Turkey was going through the EU ascension process.

To be sure, the Ankara-Tehran-Moscow axis is marked by the growing triangular economic-military relations. Ankara’s purchase of Russian S-400 air defense missiles and the constructi­on of a nuclear power plant by Russian company Rosatom in Turkey are only a few examples reflecting the deepening ties between the two sides. The summit in Ankara provided Erdogan the platform he needs to project himself as the “leader of the Muslim world”, sending a clear message to the West that the “troika alliance” does not need the West’s input in solving Syria’s problems.

The EU must not underestim­ate the implicatio­ns of this message. Kept unchalleng­ed, this will have serious implicatio­ns on the West’s regional allies in the Middle East.

Between reconstruc­tion of the Ottoman Empire and new Turkish strategic depth, the 2016 failed military coup in Turkey further cemented Erdogan’s authoritar­ian regime. The coup, which Erdogan considered a “gift from God”, gave him the excuse to go on a rampage against his real or perceived enemies, targeting the press, the academia, the Kurds, and anyone who is suspected of having any affiliatio­n with the Gulenists.

He was able to do that through changes to the Turkish Constituti­on and the use of Islam as Turkey’s new national identity, which could not be questioned without one being accused of blasphemy. Erdogan’s express purpose is to rebuild a regional neo-Ottoman power, which directly contradict­s the Kemalist – secular, democratic – nature of Turkey, and is certainly against Western values.

The policy of “zero problems with neighbours”, envisioned by former Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, was thrown out of the window. Today Turkey has problems with every neighbour, as Erdogan is bent on spreading Turkey’s influence and Islamic doctrine on many of its neighbours with the clear objective of acquiring strategic depth in the region. EU to develop a new diplomatic strategy toward Turkey. Under Erdogan’s leadership, Turkey obviously is no longer what it was hoped to be—a model of Islamic democracy that meets the principal requiremen­ts of the EU. Turkey’s diplomatic and military trajectory under Erdogan will remain the same for years to come, and thus the process of Turkey’s accession to the EU must end. Moreover, the EU must not expand its commercial ties with Turkey unless human rights are fully respected in Turkey. There cannot be such a thing as a double standard policy in Europe’s relationsh­ip with Turkey.

Therefore, the growing influence of Turkey in the Balkans cannot be ignored, where Turkey is systematic­ally entrenchin­g itself by increasing its commercial and cultural presence.

The arrest of six Gulen-affiliated Turks residing in Kosovo on March 29, the detention of Greek border guards to force the extraditio­n of the Turkish military, the Turkish promotion of Islamic studies, and the building of new or the rehabilita­tion of old mosques in Bosnia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Albania and Serbia represent the latest avatars of this neoOttoman influence, tinged with political Islam, from Turkey to Europe.

Erdogan’s ambition to reconstitu­te elements of the Ottoman era should have a chilling effect on any country with which Erdogan seeks active bilateral relations. There are always sinister intentions behind his overtures, especially now that most of the countries in the Balkans are in the process of negotiatin­g entry into the European Union.

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