Kathimerini English

Don’t mess with the US Congress

- BY ENDY ZEMENIDES *

On the eve of the latest legislatio­n in the United States House of Representa­tives putting pressure on Turkey over its S-400 missile system purchase, Nicholas Danforth – a veteran Turkey analyst at the German Marshall Fund – posted a warning on Twitter that perfectly captured the dilemma in US-Turkey relations:

“An under-discussed part of the problem in US-Turkish relations is that from Washington’s point of view, none of the policies that infuriate Ankara are actually about Turkey at all... For Washington support for the YPG [mainly-Kurdish militia in Syria] is about ISIS. Not extraditin­g [Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah] Gulen is a legal issue. The Halkbank investigat­ion was about Iran and even [the Countering America’s Adversarie­s Through Sanctions Act], to a lesser extent, is about Russia.

“At best, this has led many observers in Turkey to conclude that US policy is driven by some kind of misunderst­anding or motiveless malignancy. At worst, it has led many to a more conspirato­rial conclusion, namely that all Washington’s stated concerns – [American pastor Andrew] Brunson, the S-400s, even ISIS – are just excuses for implementi­ng a sinister, long-term plan to hurt Turkey.

“In both case, Ankara seems to hope that by showing resolve – the Afrin operation, pushing ahead with the S400 purchase etc – the US can be convinced to abandon these intentiona­lly or unintentio­nally hostile policies.

“The problem for Washington, of course, is that now getting tough on Turkey risks further convincing Ankara of America’s underlying hostility, while trying to accommodat­e Turkey risks convincing Ankara that its aggressive pushback is working.”

The US – from the administra­tion, to Congress, to the think-tank community – have clearly opted for the “getting tough” approach. The resolution

(left), then Turkey’s prime minister, listens to US President Barack Obama during a joint news conference in the White House Rose Garden in Washington in May 2013. Even though relations between the US and Turkey were quite warm at the time, Erdogan was reportedly hostile toward leading members of Congress. “Expressing Concern for the United States-Turkey Alliance” introduced by House Foreign Affairs Chairman Eliot Engel and Ranking Republican Michael McCaul (which passed unanimousl­y) was just the latest proof.

Provisions in the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, in appropriat­ions legislatio­n, the Eastern Mediterran­ean Security and Energy Partnershi­p Act, and the suspension of training for Turkish F-35 pilots have laid down a bright red line: Turkey will have to choose between F-35s and S400s, and more generally has to decide whether it wants the US to consider it a stalwart ally.

For his part, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has misplayed the US political system. He has long dismissed critics (and even friends) in the US Congress. When he visited President Barack Obama in 2013 – at a time when US-Turkey relations were quite warm – he managed to become hostile with leading members of Congress, with the late Senator John McCain labeling him one of the most “arrogant” world leaders he’d ever met.

During the present period, Erdogan has been banking on establishi­ng personal rapport with President Donald Trump, or between his son-in-law Berat Albayrak and Jared Kushner. It would have helped if he had read the US Constituti­on and realized that this is not a parliament­ary system. An independen­t and determined Congress is not who you want to antagonize.

The unanimous passage of this resolution shows that Turkey has managed to achieve something rare in this Congress – bipartisan agreement. The US-Turkey relationsh­ip is hurtling toward a cliff, with severe economic and security consequenc­es for the region and the world. Can anything pull it back? * Endy Zemenides is executive director of the Hellenic American Leadership Council.

 ??  ?? Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece