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From NATO ally to liability

Erdogan-led Turkey is a very different nation from the one known for prudent foreign policy and military restraint

- David Romano Missouri David Romano is Thomas G. Strong Professor of Middle East Politics at Missouri State University

Reflecting a new Turkish naval doctrine, the phrase “blue homeland” is widely used in Turkey today. Developed by former Turkish Rear Admiral Cem Gurdeniz, the doctrine envisions Turkey ignoring the internatio­nally recognized coastal rights of islands and laying exclusive claim to huge chunks of the Aegean and the Mediterran­ean Seas. The new Turkish territoria­l waters doctrine would leave nothing for Greek Cypriots and encircle most of the Greek islands in the Aegean.

Newly discovered rich gas deposits in the eastern Mediterran­ean may lie at the heart of Ankara’s new naval doctrine, which pits Ankara against Greece, Cyprus, Egypt and Israel. France has sent some of its warships to the Mediterran­ean to back Greece and the others, as a dangerous dance of gunboat diplomacy and naval drills is played out adjacent to gas exploratio­ns vessels in contested waters. France and Greece are members of NATO as well, of course, but this has not prevented a barrage of bellicose exchanges between them and Turkey over maritime boundaries in the Mediterran­ean. While Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned France “not to mess with Turkey,” French President Emmanuel Macron has said the Turks “only respect actions rather than words” and that he has “set red lines for Turkey.”

Turkey and its NATO allies have enjoyed better relations in the past. For 50 years after its admission into NATO in 1952, Turkey played a key and model role in the alliance. Bordering the Soviet Union’s Georgia and Armenia and controllin­g the Bosporus straits to the Black Sea, the Turks offered the alliance unparallel­ed benefits and the second largest land army in NATO. In return, the Turks received NATO’s protection against the Russians, who had since the 19th century been Turkey’s greatest external threat, as well as top-of-the-line NATO military hardware and expertise. During those years a staunchly secular Turkey made significan­t sacrifices on behalf of the NATO alliance. A key NATO radar base was built in Kurecik in eastern Turkey, along with the very important shared NATO-Turkish airbases in Konya and Incirlik. Turkey contribute­d troops to the war in the Korean Peninsula in the early 1950s, the 1991 Gulf War, NATO operations in the Balkans during the 1990s, and the 2002 war against the Taliban in Afghanista­n. Turkey’s role in the Gulf War cost the country a great deal economical­ly. Iraq had been a key Turkish trading partner and major source of oil imports, but Turkish Prime Minister Turgut Ozal allied with the US and other NATO forces in applying sanctions on Saddam Hussein.

The only real glitch during those first 50 years of Turkey’s NATO membership occurred over Cyprus, culminatin­g in the 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus, during which Turkey and Greece almost went to war.

The blame for which resides more with Greece, which had just lost its civilian government

to a military coup. At the time, Greece became a liability in the NATO alliance, violating the terms of Cyprus’ founding treaty of independen­ce. The Greek and Turkish roles in NATO look very much reversed today. Since 2003, Turkey has increasing­ly become a liability and even a danger to other NATO members. The irredentis­m in the region now comes from Ankara rather than Athens. Whereas Turkey once pursued a prudent foreign policy and largely eschewed military adventuris­m in the region, the country under Erdogan’s leadership looks very different today. Turkish forces occupy large swaths of northern Syria, engage in regular strikes in northern Iraq, lead thousands of mercenarie­s in Libya and advise and assist Muslim Brotherhoo­dlinked politician­s in Yemen.

In his speeches, Erdogan increasing­ly criticizes the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne and the borders it created, claiming that Mosul and the islands in the Aegean were stolen from Turkey. Turkey’s overwhelmi­ngly government-controlled media frequently show maps of Turkey that depict the Greek islands, all of Cyprus,

parts of mainland Greece and Bulgaria, and most of northern Syria and Iraq as part of Turkey. France and Greece are not the only NATO allies at odds with Turkey. While Washington, Paris and London supported Syrian Kurdish forces against the so- called Islamic State, or Daesh, Ankara stood accused of backing both Daesh and other radical Islamist groups in Syria. Turkey’s invasions of northern Syria in 2018 and 2019 were not welcomed by its NATO allies and threatened to unravel the Kurdish-led offensive against Daesh.

Since 2002, Erdogan’s Turkey has caused lots of complex problems for NATO. Besides its support for Islamist and radical groups in Syria, Libya, Yemen and elsewhere, Turkey for a long time denied NATO use of its shared airbases against Daesh. Erdogan repeatedly threatened to unleash waves of refugees into Europe if the EU did not pay Turkey to host the refugees and if it dared to criticize Turkish invasions of Syria.

During the 2016 attempted coup in Turkey, the government accused the Americans of being involved and cut off electricit­y to the Incirlik base – where the US forces maintain several nuclear warheads. Erdogan’s government has repeatedly helped Iran to evade US sanctions.

In 2015, Turkey shot down a

Russian warplane flying along its border with Syria, which threatened to drag NATO into a war with Moscow. Just a few years later, however, Ankara repaired relations with Moscow and purchased advanced Russian military hardware, including the S400 air defense systems. Since the Russian equipment, operating in conjunctio­n with the new American F-35 fighter aircraft, could potentiall­y expose critical vulnerabil­ities in the latter (allowing the Russians to learn the F-35’s weaknesses), the Americans were forced to remove Turkey from the F-35 fighter program. The list goes on and Turkey has become an unpredicta­ble, dangerous force in the region and very much at odds with the interests of its NATO “allies.”

US officials began publicly questionin­g Turkey’s place in NATO several years ago. Dana Rohrabache­r, the Republican chair of a House subcommitt­ee on emerging threats, expressed serious doubts in 2016 when he said: “Ten years ago Turkey was

a solid NATO ally and a staunch opponent of radical Islam and a friend of the United States, and today that’s all in question … Erdogan is purging pro-Western people throughout his country who are in positions of influence … and there’s reason for us to be seriously concerned.”

The rupture between Erdogan and his NATO allies is so serious that most of the Turkish military officers who trained with NATO in America and Belgium have come under suspicion in Ankara, with most of those abroad at the time of the 2016 attempted coup requesting political asylum lest they be arrested in Turkey on trumped-up charges.

In a world where Russian expansioni­sm is no longer the threat it was in Soviet times, such developmen­ts put in question Turkey’s very place in NATO. There seems little doubt that today’s Turkey would not be admitted to the Western military alliance. The problem, however, is that with an increasing­ly hostile Turkey already a part of the alliance, NATO lacks any mechanism for expelling members.

American policymake­rs in particular also seem to reason that expelling Turkey from NATO would only exacerbate Ankara’s current tilt towards Russia and Islamist tendencies. They instead hope to use NATO to smoothen out relations with the Turks, with NATO’s headquarte­rs in Brussels this week serving as a venue for negotiatio­ns between Turkey and France over their dispute in the Mediterran­ean.

Only time will tell if it is right to treat Turkey as the ally the Americans and other NATO members wish they still had rather than the liability that Erdogan and his government have become.

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 ?? Getty Images/File ?? The blue-homeland doctrine envisions Turkey ignoring internatio­nally recognized coastal rights of islands and laying claim to huge chunks of the Aegean and the Mediterran­ean Seas.
Getty Images/File The blue-homeland doctrine envisions Turkey ignoring internatio­nally recognized coastal rights of islands and laying claim to huge chunks of the Aegean and the Mediterran­ean Seas.
 ?? AFP ?? Things were not always so bad between Turkey and its NATO allies. A staunchly secular Turkey made significan­t sacrifices on behalf of the NATO alliance.
AFP Things were not always so bad between Turkey and its NATO allies. A staunchly secular Turkey made significan­t sacrifices on behalf of the NATO alliance.

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