Call & Times

NATO needs to have a frank talk with Turkey’s president

- By SONER CAGAPTAY

From the West's perspectiv­e, the Turkish government is the equivalent of a close relative with a substance abuse problem: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has become addicted to authoritar­ianism. The effects on the family – in this case the NATO alliance, which has included Turkey since 1952 – are devastatin­g. It's time for President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron, two leading NATO heads of state, to have a clarifying conversati­on with Erdogan about his country's self-destructiv­e impulses.

Wednesday's phone conversati­on between Trump and Erdogan, which subsequent­ly triggered a public disagreeme­nt between Erdogan and the White House on what was discussed, is precisely not how this should be done. Interventi­ons can be embarrassi­ng, and when Trump and Macron – two leaders of the alliance Erdogan is likely to listen to – speak forcefully to Erdogan about the state of Turkish democracy, it should be done in private.

Trump has shown patience with Turkey's ongoing military operation against Kurdish militias in northern Syria, which Erdogan considers an existentia­l threat. This should make the Turkish leader more inclined to listen to the U.S. president.

Erdogan, however, has a problem. Despite his best efforts to build a stable majority as the foundation of his new regime, his policies of demonizing the opposition have created a deeply polarized society. Half of Turkey despises him and will never accept him as its leader. But Erdogan has failed to grasp this fact, becoming even more authoritar­ian since the 2017 referendum that granted him sweeping presidenti­al powers. Erdogan's current trajectory will deepen Turkey's crisis, potentiall­y even triggering civil conflict.

Turkey has a history of right-left street fighting going back to the 1970s. The greatest risk facing the country now is that parts of Erdogan's opposition, especially on the hard left, will conclude that voting is useless, give up on democracy and radicalize. Left-wing radicaliza­tion would trigger retributio­n from the pro-Erdogan camp, including conservati­ves and radical Islamists. During the failed coup of 2016, hundreds of Erdogan supporters gave their lives to defend him.

Russia, which has historical ties to Erdogan's opposition, including the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), a terrorist group, will undermine Erdogan. Russian President Vladimir Putin does not want to replace Erdogan; he merely wants to exacerbate Turkey's crisis. Moscow's overarchin­g goal is to weaken NATO. A paralyzed Turkey, violently split between pro- and antiErdoga­n camps, reinforces that goal. This trend is clearly not in U.S. interests.

Washington and its NATO allies need to engage Erdogan, while investing more broadly in Turkey's future and stability. Erdogan is president after all, but Turkey is bigger than Erdogan.

Hence the need for a family interventi­on.

Trump and Macron should bring Erdogan, who has good personal chemistry with each of them, into their confidence. They should have a candid conversati­on with him, the way family members do with troubled kin. Trump and Macron should make the restoratio­n of democracy a vital preconditi­on for good ties with Erdogan in the future. They should tell him that they consider Turkey family, that they are worried about Turkey's stability, but also that they are willing to listen to his concerns and help him turn around.

The incentive here should be that Trump will promise to support Erdogan against Turkey's adversarie­s, particular­ly Russia and Iran, which are underminin­g Turkey's interests from Syria to Crimea.

Even more importantl­y, Trump and Macron should vow to distance themselves from the People's Protection Units (YPG), the Syrian Kurdish militia affiliated with the PKK that France and the United States have relied on to defeat the Islamic State. Before committing to this, Trump would need to align his generals. Some in the U.S. military, including Central Command, differ from White House policy on the YPG, envisionin­g a long-term relationsh­ip with the group. Trump would need to issue a clear directive across the government that this will not be the case.

Turks are almost universall­y opposed to any collaborat­ion between the YPG and Ankara's NATO allies. The defeat of the Islamic State provides an opportune moment for Trump and Macron to move away from the group. This stance would allow the American and French presidents to demonstrat­e their sincerity in reaching out to Erdogan while building bridges with broader Turkish society.

NATO needs to be a better friend of Turkish democracy. This is not a call for a cumbersome democracy-building project, because Turkey is already a democracy. Turkey's allies need only to support the political space in Turkey in remaining open and competitiv­e, and to help protect freedoms of associatio­n, assembly, media and expression.

NATO countries need not worry about Erdogan's reaction: He is too scared of Russia, Turkey's historic nemesis, to contemplat­e a break with the alliance. In the run-up to the 2017 referendum, which Erdogan won by a narrow margin, the Turkishlan­guage version of Sputnik, Russia's main online disinforma­tion outlet, far outdid other foreign media in Turkey in spreading its own versions of the news – it campaigned almost exclusivel­y against Erdogan.

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