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In a tough Turkish election, Erdogan’s drone-making son-in-law enters the fray

- DAVID LEPESKA David Lepeska is a Turkish and Eastern Mediterran­ean affairs columnist for The National

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has over the years proved to be an indefatiga­ble campaigner. And true to form, he has overseen a major rollout seemingly every day since kicking off his campaign for the May 14 election.

He drove Turkey’s first electric car and christened its first aircraft carrier. He marked the launch into orbit of Turkey’s first domestic-made high-resolution observatio­n satellite, the long-awaited opening of Istanbul Financial Centre, and the start of natural gas production from the biggest energy field in the Black Sea. This week, he is set to visit Trabzon province to open the longest road tunnel in Europe.

But all this activity may have worn down the president, as he was nowhere to be seen when Turkey’s first homemade attack helicopter and fighter jet made their first public voyages last Tuesday. That same evening, in fact, he cut short a live TV interview as the reporter looked concerned and started to get up from his chair to come to Mr Erdogan’s aid.

The president later cited a nasty stomach flu and said he would take Wednesday off to recover, on doctor’s orders. Following widespread speculatio­n on his health, he was back at it again on Thursday, joining Russian President Vladimir Putin online to inaugurate Turkey’s first nuclear power plant, built with Russian guidance.

Also on Thursday, Turkey’s largest defence sector event, Teknofest, kicked off in Istanbul, with activities for children and high-profile speeches and product demonstrat­ions. The industry’s pride and joy is Baykar Technology’s Bayraktar TB2 unmanned drone, which costs $5 million and has shaped conflicts in Syria, Libya, Nagorno-Karabakh and Ukraine.

Turkey is building a TB2 production plant in Ukraine, where a police dog, a Kyiv zoo lemur, a Lviv crepe, a catchy war song, and more have been named for the drone. The TB2 led the way as Turkey’s defence exports increased more than a third last year, to $4.4 billion. Baykar delivered a quarter of that total.

Just last week, Romania agreed to buy 18 TB2s, underscori­ng how Turkey’s defence and industrial achievemen­ts have emerged as a campaign issue. Main opposition presidenti­al candidate Kemal Kilicdarog­lu last month argued that Turkey’s defence sector should be nationalis­ed.

But after Baykar expressed displeasur­e with this view, the candidate walked back his remarks. “The stronger Turkey’s defence industry,” Mr Kilicdarog­lu said last week, “the more it sits at the table, the more it becomes a state that demonstrat­es strength.”

Apparently it was too little, too late. Selcuk Bayraktar, chairman at Baykar and Mr Erdogan’s son-in-law, seemed to issue a warning to Mr Kilicdarog­lu during a rare public speech at Teknofest. “He who thinks he has closed the door on the landlord stays outside,” he said.

Thanks in part to a troubled stint as finance minister for Berat Albayrak, Mr Erdogan’s other son-in-law, Mr Bayraktar has quietly emerged in recent weeks as the Turkish president’s political successor. Like Mr Erdogan, he grew up in Istanbul in a family with roots in Turkey’s conservati­ve Black Sea region. He was offered a scholarshi­p at the prestigiou­s Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, where he earned a master’s in manoeuvrin­g unmanned systems.

Returning home to work in his father’s aerospace firm, he soon designed the affordable drone that “changed the nature of warfare”, according to The New Yorker. Mr Bayraktar has since gathered significan­t social and political capital, along with a measure of celebrity. He is wildly popular in Turkey, with more than 5.2 million followers on Twitter and Instagram.

In a series of Instagram posts from Turkish cities devastated by February earthquake­s, he seemed to play the part – embracing children, giving comfort, pitching in at displaceme­nt camps and vowing to rebuild thousands of homes.

His social media is also filled with Islamic greetings, support for education initiative­s, and photos with officials such as Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. Mr Bayraktar’s father, Ozdemir, was a close friend of Mr Erdogan’s mentor and former prime minister Necmettin Erbakan – to whom the TB2 prototype was dedicated.

All the pieces seem to fit, which is yet another reason – in the year of Turkey’s centennial, with nationalis­t votes in great demand – the governing Justice and Developmen­t Party (AKP) has put industrial and defence achievemen­ts front and centre. Mr Erdogan also visited Teknofest at the weekend, appearing with Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev before highlighti­ng Baykar’s achievemen­ts and announcing that the first-ever Turkish astronaut would soon visit the Internatio­nal Space Station.

As his main challenger shoots videos in his home office, Mr Erdogan’s regular attendance at major events and rollouts underscore­s the advantages of the incumbent. The president is not only a symbol of the Republic, and its leader, but he is able to take credit for the achievemen­ts of Turkish businesses and occasional­ly offer handouts. When he opened the spigot on Turkey’s Black Sea gas field, for instance, Mr Erdogan promised Turks a month of free heating.

But the campaign focus remains nationalis­t pride. At Teknofest, Baykar announced that Turkey’s first unmanned fighter jet will begin production next year.

On Monday, Mr Erdogan changed his Twitter profile photo to a confident, more defence sector-friendly Top Gun-style picture. Yet, Turkey’s longtime leader has made clear that, if he does win, it will be his last term. With this in mind, the AKP may quietly want voters to know that, if Mr Erdogan were to fall ill, Turkey’s leadership would be in capable hands.

“In this day and age, the biggest change in our lives is driven by technology,” Mr Bayraktar said in an interview last year. “Who drives the changes? The ones who create technology.”

Bayraktar has gathered significan­t social and political capital, along with a measure of celebrity

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