By
Clifford Smith & Jonathan Spyer
Wednesday,
February 01, 2023
Last week, Turkey’s president,
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, threw the international community into a tizzy when he
announced that Sweden should “not expect” Turkey’s support to join NATO after a
far-right politician burned a Quran at a protest in front of the Turkish
Embassy, ironically, in protest of Turkey’s duplicity concerning Sweden’s bid to
join NATO. For months, the addition of Sweden to NATO was treated as a fait
accompli by the West, perhaps just requiring a little more cajoling of Ankara,
even though Turkey had not technically taken final steps to admit Sweden.
While
there is ambiguity in Erdogan’s words, they threw NATO enlargement into doubt
at a time when almost all member nations are pushing for more unity in support
of Ukraine’s war against Russian aggression. Erdogan’s actions are jeopardizing
major geopolitical events and hampering the interests of his fellow NATO members,
potentially even jeopardizing the long-term health of the alliance itself.
Why?
The
situation is complicated and fluid, but suffice it to say, Western officials
have been underestimating Erdogan’s toxicity from the beginning. Several
trends, too little considered by Washington and European leaders, have led to
this moment. Getting beyond Turkey’s obstinance will be tricky.
Before
the Quran-burning incident, Turkey was dragging its feet on Sweden’s joining
NATO ostensibly due to Sweden’s soft treatment of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party
(PKK). This organization is made up of mostly Turkish-born members. It is
designated by Turkey and many other countries (including the U.S. and Sweden)
as a terrorist organization. To appease Ankara, Sweden has strengthened some
counterterrorism laws and has extradited some Kurds whom Turkey considers
terrorists, although the Swedish judiciary has disallowed the extradition of others.
However,
while Turkey may genuinely be concerned about the activities of some Swedish
Kurds, Erdogan’s true agenda is different.
Turkey
has been in a struggle with Kurdish political movements of all sorts since the
fall of the Ottoman Empire resulted both in the founding of modern Turkey and
the resulting wranglings that left the Kurds as the largest stateless ethnicity
in the world. Sweden’s large Kurdish
population (estimated
to be between 100,000 and 150,000) is politically active, and the current
government requires the cooperation of Kurdish politicians for its one-seat
majority in parliament. This has led Sweden to increase support for the Syrian
People’s Protection Units (YPG) and its political arm, the Democratic Party
Union (PYD), which controls a semiautonomous zone in northern Syria.
Erdogan
considers the PYD simply a branch of the PKK, but the PYD, which controls the
Syrian Democratic Council, is not widely viewed in this way outside of Ankara.
Instead, most other nations view the YPG as a key part of
international anti-ISIS efforts and an inspiring example of religious and
ethnic tolerance in
the Middle East. Nonetheless, Erdogan has launched three major incursions
against the Syrian Kurds since 2016 and remains in a state of low-key warfare
against the YPG and its allies. These operations also endanger Syria’s dwindling Christian
population, many of whom have found refuge in Kurdish-controlled areas of
Syria. That is, it seems likely that Erdogan’s real goal is to weaken or
eliminate Swedish support for Kurdish autonomy in Syria.
Ankara’s
rage over a crude far-right protest that included the burning of a Quran,
particularly considering the relative silence of many other majority-Muslim
states, might surprise people who still think of Turkey in terms of the secular
republic created by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. But put plainly, this is not your
grandfather’s Turkey. During Erdogan’s two-decade rule, he has moved Turkey
markedly in his own pan-Islamist,
neo-Ottoman ideological
direction. In the words of one scholar, Turkey’s educational system now
features one of the most “supremacist and intolerant curricula in the Muslim
world” and actively
promotes radical
Islam in other countries as well. Having fostered such sentiments among its own
population for years, Ankara’s rage, in part, may be real.
But it
is also a tactic. While Erdogan has no real friends in the Arab world (except Qatar), he has actively courted Islamist
and Islamist-leaning countries such as Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Malaysia. His goal seems to be to create an
Islamist bloc at a time when much of the Arab world is drifting away from
Islamism. By pounding Sweden over this protest, he presents himself as a
leader, and a desirable partner, to other leaders who seek to weaponize
political Islam.
This is
not only about foreign governments. Top Erdogan aides have deemed international Islamist
movements, such as the Muslim Brotherhood of the Arab world and South Asia’s
Jamaat-e-Islami, as “soft-power proxies” for Ankara. During a recent trip to
the United Nations, Erdogan made his first stop a meeting with top Islamist leaders in
the U.S., who, in turn, themselves advocate for Turkey.
The
ideological shift that has occurred under Erdogan has further implications.
Unlike Atatürk and most of his predecessors, Erdogan sees NATO and its member
countries as allies in name only. This can be seen in numerous actions in
recent years too many to list, but also in leaked documents, which indicate
that Erdogan wants to “f*** . . .
NATO,” which he
deems “just as terrorist as Israel,” and in his internal actions, such as purging Turkish generals who served
with NATO or in allied Western countries. In other words, it should not be
assumed that Erdogan wants to help NATO. The opposite may well
be closer to the truth.
Indeed,
the past seven years have seen a marked turn in Ankara toward NATO’s foe,
Russia. The tipping point occurred when Russia’s Vladimir Putin became the
first world leader to offer support for Erdogan during the 2016
coup attempt, a brilliant move by Putin who is still receiving dividends for
his calculating action. Not long after, Ankara purchased Russia’s S-400
air-defense system, a move seen as the antithesis of NATO’s interests and
a violation of the Countering America’s
Adversaries through Sanctions Act. In spite of the fact that the U.S. offered Ankara comparable equipment
and expelled it from the advanced F-35 fighter program, Turkey has persisted in
a pro-Russian direction. Indeed, according to a former Turkish parliamentarian,
Turkey’s actions at the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, such as
blocking the Black Sea, leaned toward
Russia, a
fact missed by senior Biden-administration officials.
This is not exhaustive.
Putin,
for his part, knows this. Recent reports indicate that the protest by the
far-right Swedish politician who burned the Quran was organized and
financed by
Chang Frick, a former employee of Russia Today, a Kremlin-backed propaganda
network. While he claims to have become unsympathetic toward Russia after the
2014 invasion of Crimea, he referred to Putin as “his boss” as late as 2019,
although some claim he was joking. Either way, whether the Quran-burning
incident was the result of a paid Kremlin operation or simply one born out of
ideological sympathy for Putin’s outlook, it is fair to say that pro-Russian
ideology is actively assisting in driving Turkey away from Sweden.
There is
also a more hard-nosed dynamic at play here. The Washington Post’s
editorial board recently opined that Erdogan is a “tireless
haggler” and observed that any leverage he is able to gain, he will use, if he
deems it in his interest, “to extract concessions from his NATO allies and
excite his nationalist base ahead of Turkey’s elections.”
While
Erdogan purchased the S-400 missile and got kicked out of the F-35 program, he
continues to rely on the West for military equipment. Ankara is trying to get
approval from Washington to purchase advanced F-16s and upgrade
kits for existing F-16s, and even assuming the Biden administration continues
to support the sale, considering Ankara’s actions toward Sweden, it is
difficult to see how a deal would survive a hostile
Congress. It is
entirely possible that Erdogan’s actions regarding Sweden are in significant
part a ploy to strong-arm Washington on weapons sales. That is, Erdogan is obstructing
the entry of an important European state into NATO in order to give himself a
bargaining card that he can later trade for concessions from Washington on arms
sales.
So
Erdogan has nationalist/ethnic concerns (Kurds), religious/ideological
motivations (Islamism), and geopolitical (tilting away from NATO/toward Russia)
and cynically tactical reasons (arms sales) for his belligerence toward Sweden.
But
while Erdogan has many reasons to want to beat up on Sweden and even to keep it
out of NATO, it is also true that he may not want to permanently rupture his
relationship with the U.S. and the rest of Europe, if for no other reason than
that he must survive his next election. While some believe Erdogan has so
thoroughly rigged the game by banning opposing political parties, jailing
opposition journalists, and taking numerous other anti-democratic
actions that
he is virtually incapable of losing, it seems fair to say he’s not acting like
he’s invincible.
And he’s
got real problems. Erdogan faces runaway
inflation well
beyond what other countries are facing, in part because of his basing his
monetary policy on his
interpretation of
Islamic law. The rapprochement with Israel and Arab rivals that has occurred over
the last year or so should be seen as an attempt to paper over his economic
mismanagement for just long enough to survive the next election. It appears to
be paying off — Abu Dhabi recently invested $10 billion. Completely alienating Europe
or the U.S., meanwhile, could tank markets even more.
This
hodgepodge of competing interests, goals, and tactics is difficult if not
impossible to sort out cleanly, and nobody but Erdogan knows what his true
goals, or red lines, are. But it seems clear that, at minimum, so long as
Erdogan is in power, Ankara will be hostile toward Sweden and will care little
for vital NATO interests or for strengthening the alliance in the face of
Russian aggression in Ukraine. Will Washington and Europe find a way to get the
upper hand and force Erdogan to acquiesce to Sweden’s NATO bid anyway? It’s
going to be messy. Expect further trouble.
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