The National - News

QATAR RISKS US WRATH WITH $15BN AID OFFER TO TURKEY

▶ Experts say Arab boycott means Doha is trapped in Ankara alliance

- DAMIEN McELROY

A Qatari pledge to inject $15 billion into the Turkish economy to stave off its collapse is likely to deepen divisions with its neighbours and puts Doha in the cross hairs of US retaliatio­n.

Analysts described the announceme­nt, made during a trip to Turkey by Qatar’s emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, as a risky move by the emirate at a time when it is isolated from key neighbours.

Sir Ivor Roberts, an adviser to the Counter Extremism Project and retired British ambassador, said Qatar’s aid to Turkey would put further distance between Doha and its traditiona­l allies. The fallout for Qatar and Turkey would be felt beyond the region.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan is making “a terrible mistake” if he believes US President Donald Trump is more likely to “de-escalate than escalate”, he told

The National. “Qatar has been going its own way with a variety of undesirabl­e groups and decisions such as this put it on very thin ice. It’s not likely to get away with it this time,” he said. “It will be more isolated not less.”

Ghanem Nuseibeh, a senior visiting fellow at King’s College London, said the Qatari leader made the trip to Turkey as payback for Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s support since the boycott by Qatar’s neighbours’ in 2017.

Doha has been shunned for more than a year for funding terrorism and its support of extremists.

“This is clearly a political move as a result of a demand by Turkey that Qatar could not turn down,” he said. “Qatar is politicall­y stuck and this investment is seen by many as political blackmail by Turkey. Qatar finds itself unable to break out from this alliance with Turkey and Iran as long as the conflict with its Arab neighbours is not resolved.”

For its part, America refused to back down on its sanctions against Turkey despite the $15 billion (Dh55bn) lifeline for Mr Erdogan that left Doha in the position of choosing between allies with troops on its soil.

Larry Kudlow, director of the National Economic Council, said the 50 per cent tariff on Turkish steel imports was a reflection of how dissatisfi­ed Mr Trump was with Turkey.

Hours after news of the cash injection broke, Mike Pence, the US vice president, said that the parties to what Mr Erdogan has described as an “economic war” would be foolhardy to test Donald Trump’s determinat­ion. The Turkish lira crossed seven to the dollar after US sanctions were imposed to secure the release of Andrew Brunson, an American preacher held for meeting Kurdish activists.

HSBC analysts estimate that the effect of Qatar’s multi-year pledge will be limited given that Turkey’s dollar-denominate­d external financing has reached $238bn for this year alone. It is likely to be eaten up by inflation as oil costs for the Turkish consumer have risen 73 per cent since the currency collapsed.

Yet Turkish analysts described Qatar’s decision as a “show of solidarity”. “Relations between Doha and Ankara are ... very different from other nations in this region,” Serkan Demirtas, a political analyst, told the Chinese news agency Xinhua.

Meanwhile, even $15bn is unlikely to delay the day of reckoning for the Turkish economy for long. “Qatar is already overstretc­hed ... and $15 billion is a significan­t amount, but such an amount is not going to provide a long-term solution to Turkey’s woes,” Mr Nuseibeh said.

There is a saying in the United States, “when in a hole stop digging”. It seems in the latest phase of the diplomatic crisis between the US and Turkey, both sides are insisting on digging deeper and escalating their brinksmans­hip.

Crises between allies, even among Nato members, are not uncommon but they are almost never this public or this nasty. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has argued that the US is at war with Turkey and that he will retaliate – in fact he has asked Turks to boycott American-made products such as the iPhone – and has, with the help of his submissive press, unleashed torrents of accusation­s.

He has also threatened to search for alternativ­e allies or alliances. President Donald Trump, on the other hand, has promised more sanctions on top of those announced on steel and aluminum imports, if the detained American pastor Andrew Brunson is not sent home.

In the meantime, the Turkish lira, already battered by poor economic performanc­e, experience­d some of its worst days as it sank dramatical­ly, putting at dire risk large segments of the Turkish private sector.

This really is like a play in three interconne­cted and yet discordant acts. It begins on the night of July 15, 2016 when elements of the Turkish military tried and failed to overthrow the government. The coup failed in part because the authoritie­s had got wind of it; they blamed Mr Erdogan’s former ally, the Pennsylvan­ia-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, for mastermind­ing it. Nonetheles­s, Mr Erdogan used the coup attempt to construct a new narrative that would help him take control of the Turkish state.

Takeover he did, as he purged the military, judiciary, bureaucrac­y, universiti­es and civil society organisati­ons and staged a disputed referendum on a new presidenti­al system that effectivel­y put an end to the separation of powers; the legislatur­e, the judiciary and other institutio­ns such as the central bank.

Mr Erdogan’s post-coup narrative became decidedly anti-American – some say he was disappoint­ed by then President Barack Obama’s torpid support at the time of the coup. But Turkish authoritie­s had welcomed Mr Trump’s arrival.

Yet it is after Mr Trump was inaugurate­d on January 21, 2017, that Brunson was arrested and accused of underminin­g the Turkish state, collaborat­ing with Mr Gulen and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, the PKK. This was followed by the arrest of three long-standing local American consular officials. These officials, who are Turkish nationals and are critical components of the diplomatic service, were also accused of trying to overthrow the state.

These allegation­s were construed of fantastic, conspiracy-laden and prepostero­us allegation­s. But Mr Gulen’s presence in the US has provided the fuel for such an anti-American campaign.

Independen­tly from US-Turkish relations, the second act has to do with the weakening of the Turkish economy. As the memory of the 2008 global financial crisis faded, internatio­nal measures such as quantitati­ve easing came to end; US interest rates increased and the dollar gained almost five per cent in value against all currencies in 2018.

These developmen­ts destabilis­ed Turkey’s high-growth economic phenomenon. It had rested on two pillars: massive infrastruc­ture spending and relatively cheap foreign exchange loans. Turkish inflation shot up. This is where the one-person rule of Mr Erdogan became determinat­ive.

The Turkish president refuses to countenanc­e orthodox economic theory, which maintains the way to combat inflation is by increasing interest rates. He assiduousl­y believes in the opposite, that high interest rates cause inflation. As a result, a non-independen­t Turkish Central Bank has been prevented from increasing interest rates, further underminin­g internatio­nal confidence in the Turkish economy and its currency.

Worse, with the consolidat­ion of all power in the presidenti­al palace, Mr Erdogan also elevated his son-in-law, Berat Albayrak, to finance minister. Mr Albayrak, unlike previous stewards of the economy, has neither the requisite experience nor the internatio­nal standing to succeed.

Moving forward, Mr Erdogan is trapped. The buck effectivel­y stops with him because he has no one to blame for poor economic performanc­e. Instead, his government chose to mount a wall-to-wall campaign blaming currency fluctuatio­ns on sinister hands who are intent on destabilis­ing the new Turkey. Initially the blame was ascribed to Jews by the press, then to a Zionist-evangelica­l cabal by Mr Erdogan and now the government has finally settled on Washington.

America’s behaviour constitute­s this play’s third act. The Trump administra­tion was surprising­ly silent over the detention of pastor Brunson and its consular employees, as well as to dual Turkish-American citizens who have also been charged with coup plotting. The Turkish-American bilateral relationsh­ip was already burdened by significan­t difference­s.

The most important among them was the US decision to partner with the Kurdish People’s Protection Units, or YPG, in northeaste­rn Syria against ISIS. The YPG’s close connection­s to the PKK enraged the Turks and contribute­d to the deteriorat­ion of relations. Ankara’s decision to purchase Russian S-400 missiles that would potentiall­y enable the Russians to glean sensitive informatio­n from the brand new F35 fighters, in turn, caused enormous concern in Washington, especially in Congress. The jailing of a Turkish state-owned bank’s employee in New York on sanction-avoidance accusation­s did not help matters.

Amidst all these issues, the downplayin­g of the Brunson affair and other detainees in Turkey was a mistake. It allowed Mr Erdogan, for whom the detainees were bargaining chips, to think that he could hold them for as long as he wanted. To the Turks’ great surprise, Brunson and the others jumped the queue to become the White House’s number one priority.

It is Vice President Mike Pence’s close ties to the evangelica­l community that finally brought the issue to the surface, coinciding with the rising unease with Turkey not just over the S-400 purchase but also with the detention of the consular officials.

The sudden interest led to negotiatio­ns between Mr Erdogan and Mr Trump at the Nato Summit that seemed to produce results. Mr Trump even convinced Benjamin Netanyahu to release a Turkish Hamas sympathise­r from jail. Whereas Mr Trump thought he had a deal to have Brunson sent home, Mr Erdogan remanded him to house arrest. Whether this was a misunderst­anding between the two mercurial leaders or a ploy by the Turks to get more in exchange is unclear.

Suffice to say, feeling abandoned at the altar, Mr Trump reacted with fury by doubling tariffs on imported Turkish steel and aluminium. This was followed by the characteri­stic acerbic tweets that attacked the Turkish economy. The result was a perfect storm; the Turkish lira suffered its worst losses ever in a matter of days eliminatin­g all confidence in the Turkish economy.

At this stage even if the US and Turkey manage to bury the hatchet, the Turkish economy, already burdened by poor stewardshi­p, will suffer the consequenc­es for some time to come. There is no easy way out of this crisis. The economy will contract much more than anticipate­d as private sector firms with large exposures for foreign exchange-denominate­d loans will struggle to make their payments and the inflation rate increases.

Paradoxica­lly, of all the issues that separated the two countries, the prisoner problem was the easiest to resolve. This particular crisis did not need to happen. The Turkish miscalcula­tion was that these prisoners did not matter to the US; Washington certainly contribute­d to that impression by not forcefully advocating for their release earlier. What Mr Erdogan failed to understand was that the jailing of Brunson and the others under prepostero­us charges refuted the notion of an independen­t Turkish judiciary.

In the end, the case of prisoners highlighte­d the very essence of the new Turkish state for everyone to see: that there is no rule of law in Turkey, there is only Mr Erdogan’s law. Investing under such circumstan­ces is of course possible, but there will always be a premium to pay.

Of all the possible issues, the prisoner problem is the easiest to resolve. And yet both leaders keep on digging

 ?? AP ?? Erdogan addresses his supporters at the Turkish parliament in Ankara last year
AP Erdogan addresses his supporters at the Turkish parliament in Ankara last year
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