By Andre Vltchek
February 18, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
So far Turkey,
militarily the second mightiest NATO country, has
been able to get away with virtually anything it has
chosen to brew in the Middle East.
The reason why, is simple: to confront Turkey’s
bullying and expansionism militarily would be like
confronting the United States or Israel; thousands
of innocent people would die as a result, or perhaps
even millions.
Moscow is well aware of the situation. Its
diplomacy is superb. And its desire to keep Syria as
one entity has gained admiration and support in many
parts of the world. But not in the West, not in
Israel and not in Ankara.
Periodically, Russia and Turkey are able to find
common ground, on many issues. The people of both
countries like each other a lot; there are great
cultural, economic and strategic ties. And to give
credit where it is due, both governments are ready
to compromise, on various essential issues.
But periodically, there comes a time when the
Turkish administration begins to acts irrationally
and unpredictably. During such moments, agreements
begin to collapse, and people die. Russia gets
caught between a rock and the deep blue sea. Russia
wants to resolve things peacefully, but it is also
determined to protect its most important ally in the
Middle East – Syria.
The problem is that while the Russian government
is extremely rational, the Turkish government is
often not. And when logic and hysteria meet, the
consequences can be very dangerous.
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In Damascus, most of the people analyze
the situation with a clear mind. My
government contacts in Syria wrote for this
essay:
“Russia was
invited to fight terrorism, by both Syrian
government and by the Syrian people. Turkish forces
are occupation forces. They were not invited by
anybody. They cross into our territory, whenever
they choose, and it is both immoral and illegal.
Turkey supports terrorists here.”
My colleague, a leading Turkish intellectual,
Erkin Oncan, and an expert on the Turkish-Russian
relationship, commented for this essay from
Istanbul:
“Erdogan has
been playing a ‘balance game’ between the US and
Russia, since the coup attempt in 2016. Erdogan’s
government has developed good relations with Russia.
On the other hand, Turkey never ceased sending
messages to the US: We are your real allies in the
Middle East; we, not the Kurds.”
For years, Turkish, Russian and Syrian analysts
knew: Erdogan has been playing it both ways. Too
much depended on Turkey’s involvement, both negative
and positive things; but mostly negative. Even the
United States handles Ankara with ‘silk gloves’,
compared to how it deals with other rebellious
allies.
Mr. Oncan continues:
“Turkey never
raised level of tensions so high as now.”
“Despite
everything, Russia was the best alternative for
AKP’s ‘anti-American’ stand. Turkey developed
serious economic and political relations with
Moscow, and this ‘balance game’ was in favor of
thealliance with Russia, at least for some time.”
“But, policy
towards Syria has annulled Erdogan’s balance game.
Because Erdogan’s ties with ‘the Syrian opposition’
became the essence of the AKP’s Syria strategy.”
“With the Sochi
Agreement, it seemed that Erdogan was changing his
approach towards Damascus. But since the accord was
signed, it was obvious that AKP will be antagonistic
to Sochi. Being against Assad, supporting the
‘Muslim opposition’, became domestic political
issues, not just the foreign policy one.”
“Erdogan got
suddenly stuck between his US-Russia balance game
and appetite for Syria.Then, an enormous problem
re-emerged – jihadism.”
“It is a known
fact that the AKP government has supported the
jihadi terrorists for many years. And in the recent
years, Turkey openly started to operate with the
FSA. And the government kept forging closer and
closer relations with increasingly radical cadres.”
“If Turkey
complies with the Sochi agreement, it will have to
leave theSyrian forces alone. And if it does that,
it could befacing a big retaliation in both Syria
(terrorist groups there) and Turkey itself. It is
because Turkey has never hesitated to let the
jihadists into the country.”
“If Turkey
starts to formally negotiate with Syria, it will be
viewed by many that its main pillar of the Middle
East policy has collapsed.”
“In case that
Turkey makes peace withits big brother – the US – it
would have to start negotiating with the YPG, the
biggest enemy of Turkey and the biggest ally of the
US in Syria.”
“In this
paradoxical and ambiguous situation, when both
‘Ottoman dreams’ and the ‘balance play’ arehigh on
Erdogan’s agenda, Turkey seems to be levitating once
again towards the USA If a compromise is reached
with the US, Erdogan seems to consider speeding up
his plans to invade Syria. Because Russia advocates
the territorial integrity of Syria, the
USA advocates the occupation.”
The chain of events is progressing with dizzying
speed. On 16 February 2020, Aleppo, the largest
Syrian city, was finally liberated by the Syrian
government forces. Or more precisely: Aleppo is now
out of the firing range of the terrorist and
so-called opposition groups, for the first time in
years.
A friend of mine, a Syrian educator, Ms.
FidaBashour, explained for this essay:
“The latest
situation surrounding the Turkish occupation in our
country is very serious. They have no right to
occupy us, whatsoever. The mood in the country is
one of victory and worry at the same time. It has
been a very long, tough ten years since the war
broke out. Nevertheless, we are winning. As our army
has just secured the City of Aleppo fully today (on
16th February), we have faith in our capacity to
prevail and recover fully.”
I met President Erdogan a long time ago, when he
was still the mayor of Istanbul, and I was covering
the Yugoslav War, visiting Turkey regularly, in
order to understand the past of the Balkans. He was
confusing then, as he is confusing now. As the mayor
of one of the greatest cities on Earth, he had some
good intentions and extremely impressive results.
His political goals have been, however,
thoroughly confusing, overly ambitious, and often
regressive.
Later, for years, I have worked in both Syria and
Turkey, visiting the border region around Attakya
and Gyazentep, on many occasions.
The Turkish involvement in Syria, its countless
invasions and cross border operations, have
destroyed entire villages and towns in both Syria
and Turkey. In Syria, the destruction is both
physical and economic. In Turkey, entire villages
and towns have been de-populated, as they used to be
fully dependent on trans-border trade, friendship
and family ties.
Erdogan does not seem to care. It matters little
to him that this area of conflict which he helped to
ignite, is one of the cradles of human civilization.
Turkey, together with its Western allies both
armed and trained, then injected some of the most
brutal jihadi cadres into Syria. The most brutal of
them are Uyghurs from the Northwest China, which the
West trains in various battlegrounds, hoping that
they will, one day, return to China and help to ruin
the PRC.
The training has often been conducted, cynically,
in so-called refugee camps. I covered this
barbarity, both in my reports and in my film for the
Latin American network TeleSur.
Patrick Henningsen is a leading global affairs
analyst, co-founder and executive editor of
21 Century Wire, with an in-depth knowledge of
Syria. He agreed to share his thoughts with me –
about the recent developments in Syria, particularly
the Turkish operations there:
“Turkey’s
apparent schizophrenic behavior in the region is a
byproduct of the country’s legacy national security
issues combined with the current ruling party’s
sweeping domestic reformist agenda which also has a
strong revanchist component to it. Turkey’s primary
security objective of crushing any and all Kurdish
PKK/YPG enclaves in Syria cannot be divorced from
the historic transition which is taking place
domestically. The right-wing nationalist coalition
of Erdogan’s AKP Party and the Party of Nationalist
Movements (the Grey Wolves) are in the process of
rolling back the secular Kemalist Republic – into a
‘New Turkey’ which is effectively an Islamist state.
This Neo-Ottoman revival would like to see Turkey
regain its former position at the center of the
Islamic world, which means it has to project
influence and power regionally, and also globally.
This includes both talking and acting tough in
Syria. It is also intervening in Libya too.
Erdogan’s dedicated support of the Muslim
Brotherhood and co-opting of fundamentalist Islamist
militants like Jabat al-Nusra and the Free Syrian
Army should be viewed as a tool to project power by
proxy without having to sacrifice actual Turkish
soldiers. The President’s pious nationalist base at
home will support his calls conquest and regime
change in Syria because they see Erdogan as a
transformational populist leader who is returning
Turkey to its rightful place in the world.
Currently, Turkey is attempting a complicated dance
routine between Russia, the US and NATO, pandering
to all parties as is necessary, but always with
Turkish interests in mind. While he may often be
bluffing with periodic threats made to Syria, Russia
and America, know that he is always doing so with
his base in mind. It’s about ‘Turkey First’ and
“Make Turkey Great Again.’ All of this makes for a
very complicated state of affairs for Turkey. Dare
we say, Byzantine.”
Nobody could have defined the situation better!
In 2019, at one point, when I was working with
two Syrian commanders in Idlib province, we faced
both the ISIS positions and Turkish observation
posts.
I stood at one of the Syrian artillery locations.
Russian soldiers were nearby, clearly visible. And
so were the rural houses used as local ISIS
headquarters.
It all felt grotesque.
The Russian forces could have wiped out these
intruding Turkish installations in just a few
seconds. The Syrian armed forces could have done the
same. But they did not consider doing it. Why didn’t
they?
“Why?” I asked.
A Syrian commander replied:
“If we do that,
Turkey would attack Aleppo or Damascus, or at least
Homs. They have one thing in common with the
Americans and Israelis: they only care about their
own lives, and their own losses. They believe that
they are untouchable. They come here, occupy out
land, and if we retaliate, they kill dozens of our
people, or even hundreds.”
Tellingly, the Turkish positions in Idlib
co-existed peacefully with ISIS.
The Turkish role in Syria, Iraq (Erbil area) and
China (support for the Uyghur terrorists) is
extremely destructive, and well documented.
Syria has to be fully liberated from the
terrorist groups. It will happen, soon. In fact, it
is happening right now. Turkey has zero legitimacy
on the foreign, Syrian soil. It is strong,
militarily. But it will not be allowed to brutalize
the great Syrian nation for much longer, just
because of its ruthless military might.
Andre Vltchek is a
philosopher, novelist, filmmaker and investigative
journalist. He has covered wars and conflicts in
dozens of countries. Five of his latest books are “China
Belt and Road Initiative: Connecting Countries,
Saving Millions of Lives”, “China
and Ecological Cavillation” with
John B. Cobb, Jr., Revolutionary
Optimism, Western Nihilism, a
revolutionary novel “Aurora” and
a bestselling work of political non-fiction: “Exposing
Lies Of The Empire”.
View his other books here.
Watch Rwanda
Gambit, his
groundbreaking documentary about Rwanda and DRCongo
and his film/dialogue with Noam Chomsky “On
Western Terrorism”.
Vltchek presently resides in East Asia and the
Middle East, and continues to work around the world.
He can be reached through his website and
his Twitter. His Patreon
Originally published by
NEO
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