Russian Intervention Shatters Turkey's Neo-Ottomanist Dreams For Syria. (Memri).
Since the Arab Spring of 2011, Turkey's foreign
policy has been focused on Syria and on the ousting of its 'Alawite
President Bashar Assad, who Turkey hoped would be replaced by a
like-minded Sunni ruler from the Muslim Brotherhood.
During the 13 years
of its rule, Turkey's government, led by the Justice and Development
Party (AKP), steered the country away from its traditional alliance with
the West and towards the Middle East and the Islamic world, claiming
historic hegemony over, and responsibility for, the countries of the
region – a role that Turkey sees as its Ottoman legacy.
President
[formerly PM] Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the Prime Minister [formerly FM]
Ahmet Davutoglu designed a neo-Ottomanist, expansionist and foreign
policy that involved grand aspirations to become the region's main
superpower.
They supported Islamist jihadist factions in many countries,
incurring sharp criticism from the governments of Libya, Tunisia,
Egypt, Iraq and especially Syria, where they played a major role in
sparking and escalating the civil war.
The AKP government allowed free passage to thousands of jihadi fighters into Syria, and provided material and logistic support to radical organizations that are fighting the Assad regime, including ISIS, Jabhat Al-Nusra and Ahrar Al-Sham –with the exception of the Kurdish forces, whom Turkey terms "terrorists" despite their important role in fighting ISIS.
After Turkey, a NATO ally, finally opened its
strategically important Incirlik airbase for the use of coalition forces
in July 2015, the U.S. and the West turned a blind eye to Turkey's
aggression against the Kurds, and agreed to most of Turkey's demands,[1] including
by supporting its program for training and equipping an opposition
force in Syria to fight both ISIS and the Assad regime– a project that
turned out to be a failure.
When the U.S. and Europe rejected Turkey's
initiative for a safe zone in Syria where Turkey would build cities to
settle refugees, Turkey pressured them by allowing hundreds of thousands
of Syrian refugees from camps in Turkey to migrate to European
countries, thus presenting Europe with a massive refugee problem.
Russia's current involvement in Syria has definitely put an end to
Turkey's safe-zone plans. Turkey's opposition parties, as well as its
independent media, have for years criticized Erdogan and Davutoglu's
Syrian policies as "disastrous," yet the AKP government was confident
that its plans for Syria would produce the outcome it desired.
AKP
leaders treated Syria as a domestic issue, and claimed that "not a bird
could fly over that country without Turkey's approval."[2] In August 2012 Davutoglu predicted that Assad would fall within a few weeks,[3] and
in September of that year Erdogan announced that "very soon, we
[Turks]will meet and hug our [Sunni] brethren in liberated Damascus, say
the Fatiha [prayer] at the tomb of Salah Al-Din Al-Ayyoubi and pray
together in freedom at the Emevi mosque."[4]
Russia's recent military intervention in Syria
along with Iran, aimed at propping up Assad's rule, as well as its
airstrikes that target not only ISIS but also the so-called moderates
supported by Turkey (which in reality are also Islamist terrorist
groups), have transformed the face of the conflict. Russia's reassertion
of its involvement in the Middle East, and its recent incursions into
Turkish airspace, threaten to spark a Russia-NATO clash on the
Turkey-Syria border.
With its naval bases in Western Syria, Russia could
interfere with Turkish and other vessels along the navigation routes in
the eastern Mediterranean. Turkey is certainly the most affected party
in this new game, for its dreams regarding Syria, which never matched
its actual abilities, are fast becoming a nightmare.
Reactions to the recent development in Syria, some
oppositionist Turkish columnists criticized the AKP government for its
foreign policies, which they characterize as sectarian, Islamist and
based on neo-Ottoman fantasies.
They also criticized the government for
supporting radical Islamist organizations in Syria that have become a
threat to the region and to Turkey's own security, and for manipulating
the West into believing that there is a moderate opposition to the
Syrian government, when in fact there is none.
Conversely, columnists in Islamist and pro-AKP
papers slammed Russia's campaign in Syria and accused that it was part
of a plan secretly concocted by Russia along with the U.S.
The following are excerpts from some of these articles. Read the full story here.
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