Turkey’s
Meddling in Syria Brings Terror to Istanbul
By Stephen
Kinzer
January 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Boston
Globe"
- Today’s
bombing in a historic Istanbul square frequented by
tourists was the indirect result of Turkey’s wildly
adventurist policy toward the Syrian conflict. It is
a lesson to other countries, including the United
States: Do not believe you can control insurgent
groups inside Syria. Meddle too deeply in their
conflict, and the war will come home to you.
President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced that the suicide
bomber was a young Syrian. Efforts by the government
to limit reporting of the incident add to the
presumption that the ISIS terror group was
responsible. That would make sense.
Erdogan was
once a bosom buddy of the Syrian leader, Bashar
al-Assad. When the first antigovernment protests
erupted in Syria in 2011, Erdogan advised his friend
how to respond. Assad replied that he needed no
advice and would do what he believed best. That set
off Erdogan’s volcanic emotions. He vowed to do
everything in his power to depose Assad — including
supporting terror groups like ISIS.
Turkey has
allowed foreign fighters to pass through its
territory to join those groups. It has allowed ISIS
to maintain clinics inside Turkey where wounded
fighters are treated and then sent back to the
battlefield. Its intelligence service has illegally
shipped weapons to insurgents in Syria. When
journalists discovered one caravan of weaponry, and
military officers protested, Erdogan had them
arrested.
Under
intense pressure from the United States and its
other NATO allies, Turkey has begun to reassess its
support for anti-Assad groups. That led ISIS to
carry out suicide bombings inside Turkey. The first
two served Erdogan’s purposes because they targeted
Kurds: one outside a Kurdish cultural center in the
border town of Suruc in July, which killed 33
people, and then a horrific follow-up in Ankara in
October in which more than 100 were killed as they
marched to protest attacks on Kurdish groups.
Kurdish political leaders complained bitterly that
the government was not protecting them.
Erdogan
sees two great enemies in Syria: the Assad
government and Kurds. He was happy to collaborate
with any group, including ISIS, that shared his wish
to destroy those two forces. Terror groups, however,
are never satisfied with anything less than total
commitment. It was folly for Turkish leaders to
believe they could manipulate Syrian rebel groups
for their own ends. They did not heed President John
F. Kennedy’s famous observation that “those who
foolishly sought power by riding the back of the
tiger ended up inside.”
Today’s
bombing in Istanbul may be the incident that finally
brings Turkey to shift focus and concentrate its
efforts on the true enemy: violent jihadist groups
like ISIS and the Nusra Front, which is Syria’s Al
Qaeda affiliate. It is late in the game for such a
switch. By allowing ISIS and other anti-Assad groups
to move freely in Turkish towns along the border,
Turkey set the stage for conflict. It was inevitable
that ISIS would continually demand more from Turkey.
When Turkey reached a limit, it became an enemy.
Until now,
terror attacks inside Turkey have been carried out
either in the border area, the Kurdish region, or
places where critics of Erdogan’s government gather.
This one is different. It happened in a historic
square near magnificent mosques and Byzantine ruins
that attract millions of tourists each year. The
dead include foreigners, mainly Germans. This will
naturally affect tourism, but more important is the
symbolism of such violence striking at the nation’s
historic heart.
In a rant
that reflected his emotion-driven approach to
politics, Erdogan said foreign academics and writers
shared responsibility for the attack. He even named
MIT professor Noam Chomsky, a longtime defender of
the Kurds, as one of them. That reflected his
evidently deep-seated view that Turkey’s estimated
15 million Kurds pose more of a threat to the nation
than terror groups like ISIS. Today’s bombing may
finally force him to reconsider.
Stephen
Kinzer is a senior fellow at the Watson Institute
for International Studies at Brown University.
Follow him on Twitter
@stephenkinzer.©
2016 Boston Globe |