The Daily Telegraph

We can’t let Erdogan get away with this

The terrorist attacks in France come just days after Turkey’s despotic leader condemned Macron

- Richard kemp Richard Kemp is a former infantry commander and chairman of Cobra Intelligen­ce Group

Yesterday, three days after Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan savagely condemned President Emmanuel Macron’s brave stand against radical Islamism in the wake of the jihadist beheading of schoolteac­her Samuel Paty in Paris, there were violent attacks in France and another at the French consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. In Nice, a woman was beheaded and two others killed. In Jeddah a knifeman stabbed a guard outside the French consulate.

Erdogan, purportedl­y incensed by Macron’s intention to bring in legislatio­n restrainin­g the spread of radical Islamism in the wake of the schoolteac­her’s murder, said the French president needed “mental treatment” and called for the boycott of French consumer products. He likened France’s treatment of Muslims to the brutal repression of Jews in Germany before the Second World War.

Erdogan is a hard-line Islamist and he must have known the effect these words would have when uttered on the world stage. He may not have ordered the attacks on France but his incendiary bombast surely made them far more likely.

Erdogan’s AKP party is a reformatte­d version of the, now banned, National Salvation Party which advanced a violent Islamist ideology. The AKP has a thin proWestern and pro-democracy veneer, designed to camouflage an antidemocr­atic and de-secularisi­ng agenda.

This they have been fulfilling, locking up political opponents, underminin­g secular education, clamping down on public protests, seeking to harness the judiciary, controllin­g social media, marginalis­ing the Western-influenced armed forces and throwing journalist­s into jail. In one of Erdogan’s most provocativ­e acts, in July he issued a decree turning Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia, once the largest Christian church in the Middle East, into a mosque.

But Erdogan’s purpose exceeds the borders of Turkey. He has ambitions to become the champion of Sunni rights everywhere – with the vision of a restored caliphate under his leadership. This goes well beyond his repeated Islamist rhetoric and his fomenting of conflict across the region from Libya to Syria, Iraq and NagornoKar­abakh, where he has reportedly deployed Syrian mercenarie­s to fight against Armenia.

He vocally supports the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, proscribed as a terrorist entity by many countries in the Middle East and elsewhere. Earlier this month, he outrageous­ly declared Jerusalem to be a Turkish city and fiercely opposed the historic Abraham peace accords between Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan.

Erdogan has form on sponsoring terrorists. He has funded, encouraged and facilitate­d the proscribed group Hamas, hosting their leaders in Istanbul and allowing them to plot attacks against Israel on Turkish soil. Despite his strident self-promotion in fighting the Isil, there have been indication­s of complicity and increasing evidence that Turkey is a permissive jurisdicti­on for Isil and other jihadist networks.

Standing on the frontier between Europe and the Middle East, Turkey is an important strategic ally for the West. But Erdogan is not, and appeasemen­t will not curb his despotism. France, and Europe, cannot allow his aggression to continue unchecked.

The European Union and other Western powers should impose sanctions. Despite Erdogan’s defiant bluster, this could be a particular­ly effective tool at a time when the Turkish lira is plunging and now sits at an all-time low against the dollar.

Turkey’s membership of Nato should also be reviewed. Turkey is a significan­t player in the alliance, with nearly three quarters of a million men under arms. But in a challenge to Nato’s integrity, last year Erdogan acquired the Russian S-400 missile system.

Even considerat­ion of Turkey’s status within Nato would represent a major blow to Erdogan’s prestige as his political support in Turkey is on the decline. We can’t let him get away with his misdeeds.

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