Houston Chronicle

Could Trump’s tail be wagging Erdogan?

Kathleen Parker says either the president is trying to create a distractio­n or his impulsive policy with Turkey proves his lunacy.

- Parker writes a syndicated column for the Washington Post Writers Group.

So let me get this straight: President Donald Trump ordered the removal of American troops from northern Syria, knowing that Turkey would invade, seize and occupy Kurd-occupied land.

But now, after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan did just that, killing Kurds who had been U.S. allies in the fight against the Islamic State, Trump is throwing a tariff tantrum and siccing sanctions on Turkey.

On Monday, Trump signed an executive order that raised tariffs on Turkish steel imports to 50 percent and halted negotiatio­ns on a $100 billion trade deal with the country.

If this weird little do-si-do with Erdogan was the result of sober considerat­ion, then the president of the United States isn’t only a morally corrupt sycophant to murderous dictators, he’s bat-guano crazy. But you knew that.

There’s no point pretending that Trump didn’t know what Erdogan intended toward Syria. The two men spoke on the phone on Oct. 6, and Trump soon after ordered the withdrawal of American troops from northern Syria and, what do you know, Turkey invaded.

The State Department said Trump doesn’t support the incursion, which may or may not be true. In any case, saying you don’t support it doesn’t mean you didn’t deliberate­ly create circumstan­ces that made such an incursion possible.

How credulous must one be to accept that these events were coincident­al?

But Trump is a wheeler-dealer. He wouldn’t cut such a deal without something in return. He already has two towers in Istanbul, so that’s probably not on his to-do list. What does Erdogan have that Trump wants?

It’s anyone’s guess at this point. But Trump has blood on his hands, which means America has blood on hers. Whatever motivated our moody president, the consequenc­es were obvious. The immediate effects are well-known, but the longerterm ripple effects could plague the region, not to mention America’s standing in the world, for years to come.

Thanks to Trump and Erdogan, it is now more likely the Islamic State will begin reorganizi­ng. The American pullout also strengthen­s the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad and, by extension, Russia and Iran.

Naturally, the willfully ignorant and impulsive Trump issued his order to withdraw troops despite repeated warnings from his military and foreign policy advisers. It seems plain enough that he didn’t heed their advice because he didn’t want to hear it.

Bottom line: Trump appears to have wanted to please Erdogan. The sanctions and tariff hike may be merely part of the setup. Thus, while tensions rise in the Middle East — and America’s foes jockey for position to benefit from the aftermath — Trump has created cause for plausible deniabilit­y. Hey, I thought it was the right thing to do. We can’t be involved in endless wars.

As we’ve learned the past three years, Trump does what Trump wants. He’s the CEO of America, after all. Then, once he unleashes havoc, he delegates to others the burden of his consequenc­es: “Turkey, Europe, Syria, Iran, Iraq, Russia and the Kurds will now have to figure the situation out,” he tweeted.

For starters, on Sunday, around 785 people connected to the Islamic State escaped from a detention camp.

The impetus behind all this chaos and carnage apparently was Erdogan’s wish to rid himself of some of the 3.6 million Syrian refugees languishin­g in Turkey. He and Trump surely could find common cause in that sentiment. Under Erdogan’s plan, Turkey would resettle and oversee about one million refugees along the newly confiscate­d border area. From his perspectiv­e, the Kurds living there are terrorists, though they fought alongside American and European troops against the Islamic State. Thus, Erdogan is solving two problems, thanks, it seems, to Trump’s generous acquiescen­ce.

From Trump’s point of view, what’s the big deal? American troops leave the badlands and let the others fight amongst themselves. The bigger picture reveals that Trump has further alienated our allies, made America less trustworth­y, surrendere­d American leverage in the area, and enabled what is essentiall­y a campaign of ethnic cleansing.

Trump, apparently, feels empowered while directing geopolitic­s by the seat of his pants, feeding his rapacious ego with the admiration of totalitari­ans from Kim Jong Un of North Korea, Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippine­s and the Saudi royals. But, Erdogan, what’s he got?

One shudders to think: Either Trump is wagging the dog to create a distractio­n. Or, not to state the obvious, he is not the “extremely stable genius” he claims to be.

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