Turkey On
The Ropes
By The Saker
July 03, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Unz
Review"-
This has
been an amazing week which saw the first clear sign
of the collapse of the EU and Turkish President
Erdogan presenting his excuses to Russia for the
downing of a Russian SU-24 over Syria 7 month ago.
While the latter event was largely eclipsed by the
former, it might be the sign of something even more
dramatic taking place: the collapse of Turkey.
Does that
seem like hyperbole?
Let’s look
again.
The
Presidency of Erdogan has been nothing short of
cataclysmic for Turkey which resulted in a perfect
storm of crises, each of the very serious:
1)
Crisis in Syria: the Turkish policy of
support for Daesh to overthrow Assad has failed.
Abjectly so. Not only is Assad still in power, but
the latest bombing in Turkey seem to indicated that
Daesh is turning against Turkey now (assuming the
official explanations is true, which it might not be
as we will discuss below). The entire Syria policy
of Erdogan is now in shambles.
2)
Crisis with the EU: the last thing the
Brits did before Brexiting was to
tell Turkey that it could join the EU in 3000 years.
Other EU member states were not as direct, but
everybody knows that this is true. Furthermore, the
grand Erdogan-Merkel friendship and alliance has
completely fizzled out.
3)
Crisis with the Armenians: when the German
Parliament recognized the genocide of the Armenians
and, soon thereafter,
so did the Pope, it was pretty darn clear that
the western powers that be were sending Turkey a
simple message: a raised middle finger. Love story
over, screw you!
4)
Crisis with the USA: US special forces have
now been spotted in Iraq wearing Kurdish badges.
While minor, this incident is telling and has
greatly angered the Turks. Bottom line: the Empire
needs the Kurds in Iraq and Syria and Turkey takes
second place right now.
5)
Crisis with Iran: by supporting Daesh, by
trying to sabotage the “Islamic pipeline” and by
trying to overthrow Assad, Turkey has completely
alienated Tehran.
6)
Crisis with the Kurds: by engaging in an
even more brutal level of anti-Kurdish violence the
Turks have basically re-ignited a full scale civil
war and the Kurds are showing no signs of getting
weaker. In fact, they are currently more powerful
than ever, courtesy of the US invastion of Iraq.
7)
Crisis with NATO: following the downing of
the Russian SU-24 NATO clearly indicated to Erdogan
that he was on his own and that NATO would not get
involved in an Turkey-triggered war.
8)
Crisis with Russia: the downing of the
SU-24 did not result in the expected Russian
military response, but resulted in 7 months of
crippling economic sanctions by Russia and an
enormous loss of prestige by Turkey. More about this
later.
So, this
can be all summed up by saying that Turkey under
Erdogan has shown a truly Ukrainian-level of
incompetence, arrogance and delusion.
It is in
this, truly dramatic, context that Erdogan had to
write his letter of apology.
The first
thing which should be said about this is that
Erdogan took a major political risk: after spending
months chest-thumping and declaring uri et orbi
that Turkey will never, ever, apologize if only
because Turkey was in the right, this sudden “zag!”
puts Erdogan is a very difficult position. Hence the
initial rumors that the letter said that he was
“sorry” but not “apologizing” or, second variant,
that the apology was only to the family of the
murdered Russian pilot, but not to Russia. This did
not last too long and pretty soon the bewildered
Turks gave up trying to give this apology a
face-lift. It was exactly what everybody understood
it to be: a real full and humiliating apology.
Next there
was a statement of the Turkish foreign minister
categorically denying that any compensation would be
paid. That too lasted a couple of hours until it was
admitted that not only would Turkey pay, but Turkey
would pay whatever was demanded.
Finally,
there is a very real possibility that the bombing of
the airport in Ankara Istambul might be a very
direct message sent to Erdogan: “if you try to
appease the Russians we will unleash hell on you”.
And while Daesh is a prime candidate for sending
that kind of message, there are other possible
candidates: the US, of course, and the Turkish
deep-state. To make matters even more complicated,
we should not discard any scenario as impossible,
including the possibility that Erdogan himself, and
his supporters, engaged in a false-flag event to
justify 1) cooperation with Russia against terrorism
and 2) turning against Daesh.
Right now,
the official version (Daesh did it) makes sense to
me, but I would not discount any other possibility.
What is
certain is that the stakes in Turkey are now
sky-high and that Erdogan is fighting for his future
and, possibly, the future of Turkey as a state. His
opening towards Russia
and, at the same time, Israel is a clear sign of
despair. If only because Russia is unlikely to offer
much in terms of rewards for the following reasons:
First, the
Russians are now deeply suspicious of Erdogan and
consider him a loose cannon, possibly a lunatic, who
cannot be trusted and who can make a zag after every
zig.
Second, the
letter was a first, necessary, step to reopen
negotiations, but the negotiations themselves will
be a long process. Foreign Ministers Lavrov and
Cavusoglu will begin these negotiations this week,
but the number of issues to be discussed in very
long. Most importantly, the Russians will demand
tangible and important steps from Turkey, especially
in Syria and in regards to Turkey sponsored
terrorism in Russia and the Ukraine. It is by no
means clear to me that Erdogan will be willing to
make such major concessions. Officially, I expect a
lot of smiles and hopeful declarations, but behind
closed door the Russians will be making many tough
demands. It is not clear to me that Ergodan could
yield to the Russian demands even if he wanted to.
Erdogan
really appears to have deluded himself that he is
some kind of major player and he is now discovering
that he is not. What is even worse, he now probably
realizes that he has many dangerous enemies and no
friends at all.
Potentially, Russia could offer Turkey a lot, way
more than just a return to better relations,
tourists and a market for Turkish vegetables. But my
feeling is that Erdogan is turning to Russia in
despair and to improve his bargaining position
towards all the others enemies he has made. The
problem is that he Russians probably see that too
and that they will be very cautious, even if they
hide this caution behind all manners of nice
diplomatic language.
I might be
wrong here, but I think that the Russians want
Erdogan out. In their minds they have already
“Saakashvilized” him if only because Turkey is an
extremely important country, strategically located
and Russia cannot afford to have a delusional
lunatic ruling it. Furthermore, the Turkish people
have a major problem on their hands: a severe case
of multiple personality disorder. They have to
decide if they want to be secular Europeans, “Young
Turk” neo-Fascist nationalists, Islamic radicals,
Kemalist secularists? Do they want a impossible
mono-ethnic Turkey or can they accept that others
not only live there too, but also that these
“others” lived in these lands long before the Turkic
nomads invaded them? Right now, Turkey is
anti-European, anti-Russian, anti-American,
anti-Kurdish, anti-Armenian, anti-Christian,
anti-Arabic, anti-Persian, anti-Greek, etc. That
makes Turkey a big powder keg which any spark could
detonate. And the problem for Russia is that this
powder keg is uncomfortably close and deeply
involved in the Ukraine, Crimea, the Caucasus and
Central Asia.
What this
all means is that it is in Russia’s strategic
interest to have a responsible and trustworthy
partner to deal with. Sadly, I don’t see that as
very likely because, just as in the case
of the Ukraine and Israel, the problem with Turkey
is that this an artificial, illegitimate and
fundamentally unsustainable country.
Israel, the
Ukraine and Turkey are all built on a rabidly
nationalist/racist worldview which offers no hope to
anybody that does not agree with this worldview.
This is why, for the Turks, the Kurds are either “mountain
Turks” or “terrorists” who deserve to be shot.
It would be naïve to the extreme to think that the
mindset which made the genocide of Armenians, along
with many other minorities (Christian Assyrians,
Syrians, Chaldeans and Greeks), has somehow
disappeared especially if we keep in mind that a)
the Turks still deny the reality of this genocide
and b) that this genocide has never stopped,
but only slowed down:
Genocide, besides the actual physical destruction of
the members of the target group, aims also to erase
all traces of the target group’s identity, through
forced assimilation. In the Armenian case, it was
mainly women and children who were forced to convert
to Islam, adopting Turkish or Kurdish names and thus
lost their Armenian identity over time. Another
measure of the genocidal process is deleting all
traces of the population who have been massacred or
driven away by such deportations. This includes
destruction of all buildings and monuments while
renaming all the names of villages, towns, rivers,
and other things that can attest to the presence of
Armenians in the area. In 1914, the Armenian
Patriarch of Constantinople presented a list of
Armenian sacred places that were under his
supervision. The list contained 2,549 religious
sites of which 200 were monasteries while 1,600 were
churches. A survey in 1974 showed that only 916
Armenian churches could be identified within
Turkey’s borders, half of which were almost
completely destroyed and among the rest only ruins
of 252 items remained. The authorities have also
renamed almost all villages, towns, mountains, and
rivers in Armenia and changed their historical
Armenian name to Turkish ones. This policy continues
even in our days when, for example, the Turkish
Interior Ministry announced in 2005 that it would
rename certain animal Latin names since they had
“separatist tendencies”. Armeniana Ovis (sheep)
would be renamed Ovis orientalis Anatolicus, while
Capreolus Capreolus Armenus (deer) would be called
Capreolus Capreolus capreolus. Even Vulpes Vulpes
Kurdistanica (red fox) was to be renamed Vulpes
Vulpes. The proposal was rejected by UNESCO, the UN
agency in charge of these data, referring to the
unfounded the Turkish reasons for the changes
(source)
And then
there is Cyprus, which the Turks still illegally
occupy. Again, such levels of violence in and around
artificial and illegitimate countries is something
normal and not a temporary fluke (see: the Ukraine
and Israel).
What this
all means for Russia is that while the Kremlin will
warmly welcome Erdogan’s latest “zag” and while
efforts will be made to return to a more or less
situation, the only possible long term goal for
Russia is to support either the break-up or the
federalization of Turkey into some kind of more or
less civilized country. The good news for Russia is
that she really need not make any special efforts
towards that goal as the Turks, just like the
Israelis and the Ukrainians, are doing a splendid
job making sure that their political project never
becomes viable. The best thing Russia can do at this
point in time is to brace for the likely flare-up of
violence in Turkey and try to protect herself, and
her allies, from the inevitable fallout.
As for
Turkey – the future looks very grim. The latest move
to court Russia and Israel will not meaningfully
improve the strategic situation for Turkey. At best,
it will give the *appearance* of a pseudo-regional
détente. But nothing else will change unless the
Turkish state itself changes and that is something
that the Turkish people do not seem to be willing to
accept, at least not in the foreseeable future. |