Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Afghanista­n: Turkey moves into the spotlight

The United States has withdrawn from Afghanista­n. Turkey, in particular, is preparing to take over its role on the ground. However, many Turks have been angered by their president's overtures to the Taliban.

- This article has been translated from German.

The United Nations' statistics leave no room for doubt: The situation in Afghanista­n is dire. UN experts estimate that more than 18 million people in Afghanista­n need help: That's more than half the entire population.

Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport in the capital, Kabul, is central to overcoming the country's most urgent problems. At present, though, following the withdrawal of all internatio­nal troops, it is no longer in operation. Getting the airport up and running again is imperative if urgently needed goods are to reach the country fast. And this puts Turkey in the spotlight of internatio­nal diplomacy.

Turkey has been present in Afghanista­n right from the beginning, when it took part in the initial deployment of the Internatio­nal Security Assistance Force (ISAF). At times, as many as 2,000 Turkish soldiers were involved. From June 2002 to February 2003, and again from February to August 2005, Turkish commanders were leading the entire 43-nation mission.

Securing the airport was a core part of the Turkish soldiers' assignment. Discussion­s between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his US counterpar­t, Joe Biden, about Ankara providing ongoing military support were already taking place on the fringes of the NATO summit in June, and it was rumored back then that the Turkish military would take over responsibi­lity for securing the airport after the Americans withdrew.

Deeper involvemen­t?

It is therefore not surprising that the Taliban are currently holding talks with representa­tives from Turkey and Qatar about reopening the airport. However, it seems the Turkish government intends its involvemen­t to extend beyond ensuring airport security.

"Before the Taliban overran Kabul, Ankara still believed it could define a new role for itself in Afghanista­n," says Kristian Brakel, a foreign policy analyst who heads the Heinrich Böll Foundation in Istanbul. This, he says, was in line with Ankara developing an increasing­ly independen­t foreign policy.

Brakel points to Turkey's attempt to make Istanbul the venue for peace negotiatio­ns between the Taliban and the Afghan government in the spring of 2021, which he says was a clear indication that it is using Afghanista­n to try to raise its foreign policy profile. Those negotiatio­ns ultimately fell through when the Taliban canceled their attendance.

NATO recognitio­n

Nonetheles­s, the internatio­nal community, as well as the United States, recognize that Turkey could play an increasing­ly

important role in the region in future. This was why the German Foreign Minister, Heiko Maas (SPD), paid a visit to his Turkish counterpar­t Mevlut Cavusoglu just last weekend. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g has also described Turkey as having a "key role" in dealing with the conflict.

Many Western observers believe that Turkey, as a Muslim-majority country, could have a special part to play in talks with the Taliban and that this is another reason to approve Ankara's involvemen­t. However, this thesis should be treated with caution, as demonstrat­ed by the debate about contradict­ory statements by Taliban spokesman Suheyl Shaheen.

Just a few weeks ago, in an interview with the BBC, Shaheen made it clear that "all foreign forces, contractor­s, consultant­s, trainers should withdraw from the country." At the end of August, he backtracke­d on Turkish television's Ahaber channel, stressing that the Taliban wanted a good relationsh­ip with Turkey. After all, he said, their two countries were "brothers in faith."

The Turkish president was glad to pick up on this. He, too, played the religion card. There was no contradict­ion between the Taliban's faith and Turkey's, he said — there was nothing in Turkey that contradict­ed their faith.

'You are the Taliban'

However, many Turks were determined that this should not, under any circumstan­ces, be permitted to stand. They publicly vented their anger, particular­ly on social media, hitting back at the Taliban spokesman's statements under the hashtag #TalibanKar­desimDegil­dir ("The Taliban are not my brother"). President Erdogan also got his share: The hashtag #SensinTali­ban ("You are the Taliban") created an absolute furor on Twitter.

The clear message from the Turkish public was that the president was wrong and that as far as religion was concerned, Turkey and the Taliban had nothing in common. A tweet by the well-known actor, film director and author Ilyas Salman was widely shared. Let's not fool ourselves, he wrote: Apart from a "very small and radical percentage," not even the president's supporters would want the kind of life they would have in Afghanista­n.

Despite often fierce domestic protest, people in Turkish government circles seem determined to establish solid relations with the new rulers in Afghanista­n. One reason is that Ankara fears mass migration from Afghanista­n to Turkey heading for the EU if the situation in the Hindu Kush remains unstable. Anticipati­ng an imminent influx of refugees from Afghanista­n, the Turkish government has already pushed ahead in recent days with the constructi­on of a wall along the border with Iran.

However, the Turkey analyst Kristian Brakel believes it also has another motive. He suspects that Ankara aims to position itself as a mediator between the West and Afghanista­n in order to polish up Turkey's foreign-policy reputation in Washington and Brussels, which, he says, "has been badly tarnished of late."

Turkey's relationsh­ip with many of its NATO partners is indeed more than a little tense. In some of the alliance's capitals, there has been considerab­le consternat­ion at the fact that Turkey intends to protect its airspace with the Russian S-400 anti-missile defense system

As a reaction to Ankara's decision, Washington had even decided to exclude Turkey from the F-35 stealth fighter program. In addition, US-Turkish relations have been strained by the discussion surroundin­g the Turkish massacre of Armenians during the First World War. In the spring of this year, US President Joe Biden termed these atrocities in the early 20th century a genocide, provoking a storm of protest in Ankara.

 ??  ?? Turkey's President Erdogan has angered many Turks by seeming to cozy up to the Taliban
Turkey's President Erdogan has angered many Turks by seeming to cozy up to the Taliban
 ??  ?? Taliban forces are currently patrolling the airport
Taliban forces are currently patrolling the airport

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