Los Angeles Times

Ally sees payoff to siding with Azerbaijan

Lending support in conflict with Armenia boosts Turkey’s push for regional influence.

- By Laura King

Nearly two decades ago, after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s political party came to power, it formulated a foreign policy summed up by the succinct phrase: “Zero problems with neighbors.”

But these days, it’s hard to find a conflict anywhere in Turkey’s extended neighborho­od — the Middle East, North Africa, the eastern Mediterran­ean — in which Erdogan’s government does not play some role.

Now Turkey is a driving force behind the f ight over Nagorno- Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave situated inside Azerbaijan, Turkey’s close ally. Since the latest hostilitie­s erupted on Sept. 27, Erdogan’s government has cheered on its “Turkic brothers” and brusquely rejected appeals from European allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on, who urge a negotiated settlement.

It might seem like an odd time for Erdogan, whose personal popularity has waned as he resorts to increasing­ly authoritar­ian measures to ensure his grip on power, to plunge into yet another ugly and complex regional quarrel. But the 66year- old leader and his Justice and Developmen­t Party, or AKP, have a long history of playing the nationalis­t card whenever discontent at home is on the rise.

“This all f its with the domestic rhetoric of Erdogan and the AKP, to ‘ make Turkey great again,’ ” said Sinan Ulgen, a visiting scholar with the think tank Carnegie Europe.

In some ways, the conflict is a welcome distractio­n for Erdogan. Even before the coronaviru­s outbreak hit, Turkey’s once- booming economy had faltered, and as elsewhere, the public health crisis aggravated f iscal woes. As the pandemic has worsened, with the country’s death toll approachin­g 10,000, the government’s disorganiz­ed COVID- 19 response was poorly received even by a traditiona­lly supportive business community.

At a moment like this, Azerbaijan, with its close linguistic and ethnic ties to Turkey, makes for a perfect cause celebre, said Alan Makovsky of the Center for American Progress, a Washington think tank — just as next- door Armenia, with whom relations are historical­ly hostile, makes for a perfect foil.

“When you look at polls of which countries Turks consider their friends, Azerbaijan is always at the top,” Makovsky said.

Turkish media, largely loyal to the government after years of official attacks on independen­t outlets, have glorified Azerbaijan’s exploits in the battle for Nagorno- Karabakh, which ethnic Armenians call the Republic of Artsakh.

As the fighting escalates, many analysts point to the culminatio­n of a military partnershi­p that has been decades in the making.

Turkey has played an immense role in helping build Azerbaijan’s military. The Caucasus nation was outmatched against Armenia when the two fought their last big battle, in the years before and after the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union.

Svante Cornell, director of the Central Asia- Caucasus Institute, said Azerbaijan “learned the lesson that failure to organize a proper military force was the reason they lost.” That conf lict ended in a shaky 1994 truce.

Aided in recent years by a windfall of energy revenue, Azerbaijan set about systematic­ally developing its military strength. Turkey stepped in with structural support, sophistica­ted training and a raft of arms sales, to dramatic effect.

“There is a clear imprint of the Turkish military on Azerbaijan,” Cornell said.

As in Libya and Syria, the Nagorno- Karabakh conf lict has been a proxy staging ground for Turkey’s longrunnin­g rivalry with Russia, which has a defense alliance with Armenia and a military base in the country. Some analysts see authoritar­ian leaders like Erdogan as seizing a moment of waning U. S. and European inf luence to act.

“It’s obvious that Erdogan has ambition to position Turkey as a regional leader, and he hasn’t hit a wall yet,” said Nicu Popescu, an analyst with the European Council on Foreign Relations. He likened Turkey’s bid for inf luence in the southern Caucasus, Russia’s backyard, to Moscow’s entangleme­nts in Syria and Libya, which are more in Turkey’s immediate sphere.

“It’s a gold- rush mentality,” Popescu said. “You go, you move fast, you mark your territory. If you need to punch some noses in the process, you do it, but you grab as much terrain as you can.”

Despite decades of enmity between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the latest f ighting almost certainly did not break out spontaneou­sly, said Ezgi Yazici, who has analyzed the Nagorno-Karabakh conf lict for the Washington- based Institute for the Study of War.

Turkey and the government in the Azerbaijan­i capital, Baku, “likely prepared and coordinate­d for a potential Azerbaijan­i interventi­on to dispute Armenia’s claim in Nagorno-Karabakh for months with Turkish drone sales, joint military drills, and reported Syrian proxy mobilizati­on to Azerbaijan,” Yazici wrote in an email. “Even if Azerbaijan decided on its own to launch an offensive, Erdogan’s actions certainly facilitate­d and likely encouraged Azerbaijan­i action.”

The Turkish leader has made little secret of a broader agenda, characteri­zing his government’s stance as an expression of its “deserved place in the world order.” Both by backing Azerbaijan in the current fighting and by claiming a role in brokering any eventual peace, Turkey’s leader sees an opportunit­y to enhance his prestige, Ulgen said.

“It allows Turkey to make a case to the internatio­nal community that it has become more inf luential, more important,” he said.

In the battle zones, of course, the question of regional jockeying is far from theoretica­l. With civilian casualties mounting, Armenia on Thursday accused Turkey of preventing aircraft carrying emergency assistance from f lying over its territory, and aid groups warned of a looming humanitari­an crisis.

Popescu predicted that ultimately, Armenia might agree to relinquish some territory around Nagorno-Karabakh. But any settlement is unlikely to be in line with maximalist demands made by Azerbaijan’s leaders, with Turkey’s support, including a call for Armenian forces to leave the enclave, Ulgen said.

“That’s not very realistic,” he said. “The object for Turkey is to reposition, to prepare for political negotiatio­ns — to have a seat at the table.”

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? SOLDIERS seek cover from occasional Azerbaijan­i drones overhead near Hadrut, Nagorno- Karabakh. Turkey has become a driving force behind the f ighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno- Karabakh.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times SOLDIERS seek cover from occasional Azerbaijan­i drones overhead near Hadrut, Nagorno- Karabakh. Turkey has become a driving force behind the f ighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno- Karabakh.

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