By
Finian Cunningham
October 28, 2021 -- "Information
Clearing House -
"Strategic
Culture Foundation
" -
As far as
Ukraine goes, Ankara seems to be setting the
pace for NATO’s deepening involvement in the
country’s war.
Russia is investigating reports of
Turkish attack drones being deployed for the
first time in Ukraine’s eight-year civil
war. The Ukrainian Armed Forces (UAF) under
the command of the Kiev regime
claimed that the drones were used
earlier this week in combat against ethnic
Russian rebels.
This is a potentially dramatic escalation
in the smoldering war. For it marks the
direct involvement of NATO member Turkey in
the conflict. Up to now, the United States
and other NATO states have been supplying
lethal weaponry to the Kiev regime to
prosecute its war against the breakaway
self-declared republics of Donetsk and
Luhansk.
American, British and Canadian military
advisors are also known to have carried out
training missions with UAF combat units.
Britain is in
negotiations to sell Brimstone missiles
to the Ukrainian navy.
But the apparent deployment of Turkish
attack drones is a potential game-changer.
Russia’s foreign minister Sergei Lavrov
hinted at the graveness when he announced
Wednesday that Moscow was carrying out
urgent investigations about the purported
participation of Turk-made Bayraktar TB2
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.
Previously, Lavrov rebuked Turkey to stay
out of the conflict and to not feed
Ukrainian hostilities.
No Advertising - No
Government Grants - This Is Independent Media
Get Our Free
Newsletter
Last week, Russian President Vladimir
Putin
warned that NATO’s support to the Kiev
regime was posing a direct threat to
Russia’s national security. The Kremlin’s
assessment can only be more alarmed on the
back of NATO member Turkey being now
implicated as one of the war’s protagonists.
In all likelihood, Turkish military
personnel would be required to assist in
operating the drone flights.
The war in the Eastern Ukraine region
known as Donbass has persisted for nearly
eight years. It was triggered after a
NATO-backed coup d’état in Kiev in February
2014 against an elected government that had
been aligned with Russia. The new regime was
characterized by anti-Russian politics and
Neo-Nazi ideology. The ethnic Russian
population of Donbass rejected the
Western-backed regime, leading to a war. The
ethnic Russian people of Crimea likewise
voted in a referendum in March 2014 to
secede from Ukraine and to join the Russian
Federation with which it has centuries of
shared history. Kiev’s forces are accused of
aggression and potential war crimes from
shelling civilian homes and infrastructure.
This week an oil depot in Donetsk was
bombed by a drone. It is not clear if
the drone was one of the Turkish weapons.
Western governments and NATO accuse
Russia of invading Eastern Ukraine and of
annexing Crimea. Moscow rejects that as an
absurd distortion of reality. Such
vilification is no doubt partly why Russia
cut off diplomatic links last week with
NATO.
Russia says it is not a direct party to
the Ukraine conflict. It points to the Minsk
Accord negotiated in 2015 with France and
Germany which clearly states that Russian is
not a party to the conflict. The accord
obliges Kiev to grant autonomy to the
Donbass region. However, the Kiev regime has
stubbornly refused to implement the Minsk
deal, even though the incumbent President
Volodymyr Zelensky was elected in 2019 on
election promises to pursue a political
settlement.
The emerging Kiev-Ankara axis is not out
of the blue. Turkey has been voicing
increasing support for Ukraine. Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan recently made
provocative
declarations about not recognizing
Crimea as Russian territory and returning
the peninsula to Ukraine.
Last week too saw the visit to Kiev by US
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin during
which the Pentagon chief
lambasted Russia as the “aggressor” in
the Ukraine conflict. Austin also
truculently told Moscow that the latter’s
red line about Ukraine joining NATO was null
and void. As if to underline the Pentagon’s
determination, two nuclear-capable B-1B
bombers flew from Texas to the Black Sea
where they were warded off by Russian
fighter jets.
Then there was also the NATO defense
ministers’
summit in Brussels last week out of
which a new “master plan to contain Russia”
was unveiled. German defense minister
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer went on to say
nuclear weapons were needed in Europe to
contain Russia. Her comments provoked a
furious
response from Moscow which summoned the
German military chargé d’affaires in
protest.
Moreover, it is highly pertinent that
France and Germany – the two other
guarantors of the Minsk Accord along with
Russia – have remained silent despite the
continual violations of the ceasefire in
Donbass by the Kiev regime’s forces. Every
week, there are offensive shelling and
mortar attacks across the Contact Line
hitting civilian sites in Donetsk. Yet Paris
and Berlin keep a stony silence. This is but
a silent complicity in condoning aggression.
All in all, the signals amount to a
bright green light from Washington and its
NATO allies to the Kiev regime to step up
hostilities against the Donbass. That
ultimately means Russia.
Now with reports of Turkish drones
augmenting the firepower of the Ukrainian
Armed Forces that evinces NATO effectively
at war on Russia’s doorstep.
Turkey’s drones have been deployed in
several recent conflicts: in Libya in
support of the Tripoli-based government
against the Russian-backed forces of Khalifa
Haftar; in Syria against the Russian-backed
Syrian government forces; in
Nagorno-Karabakh in support of Azerbaijan
against Armenia. In the latter war, Ankara’s
drones were believed to have played a
decisive role in giving Azerbaijan the upper
hand.
Ironically, when Russian leader Vladimir
Putin
hosted Erdogan last month in Sochi the
two appeared to engage in an amicable
exchange. The Turkish president has also
recently chafed at relations with NATO over
alleged interference in Turkey’s internal
affairs. There has been chatter of Ankara
moving towards Moscow in geopolitical
alignment. That seems way off the mark.
For as far as Ukraine goes, Ankara seems
to be setting the pace for NATO’s deepening
involvement in the country’s war. Given
NATO’s collective defense pact and already
fraught relations with Moscow, mercurial
Erdogan is tempting a very dangerous fate.