“Heroes who shed their blood and lost
their lives! You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore
rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and Mehmets to us
where they lie side by side here in this country of ours. You, the mothers, who
sent their sons from far away countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now
lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land
they have become our sons as well.”
President Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
Alphen,
Netherlands. 7 February. How should Europe deal with a changing Turkey? I say ‘Europe’,
on matters strategic Europe is increasingly coming to mean a mix of great
powers and great institutions acting in as much unison as they can generate
over any one issue, at any one time. One of the many issues faced by what is
now a hard liberal European establishment is how to deal with legitimised
illiberal regimes that are important to Europe. The tendency of late has been
for Europe to become a whining city on a molehill; offering judgement without
influence. This tendency is particularly evident in the ‘hold one’s nose’ way
European leaders deal with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Turkey. Consequently, Europe is in danger of losing
Turkey for the first time since President Mustafa Kemal Ataturk aligned his
secular regime with the European West a century ago.
The need for a
new Turkey policy is pressing. In a forthcoming referendum it is likely more
power will be ‘granted’ to the presidency. If so President Erdogan’s Turkey
First policy will be bolstered, and Europe’s Turkey dilemma will become even
more acute. Therefore, like it or not, in this new age of Realpolitik President Erdogan is vital to the security and
stability of Europe and Europeans must recognise that. Unfortunately, Europe’s
strategic partnership with Ankara looks ever more like a fractious frozen
alliance.
Writing my
latest book The New Geopolitics of
Terror: Demons and Dragons (Routledge 2017), which is of course brilliant
and very reasonably-priced, one theme ran through the research; the vital
importance of Turkey to the security and stability of Europe, the Middle East,
and much of Western Asia. Turkey is also a vital member of NATO, and Ankara’s
co-operation remains critical if Europe is not to see a large portion of the 3
million refugees Turkey currently hosts moving rapidly towards Schengenland.
Why is Europe
losing Turkey? Europe’s relationship with Turkey is certainly deteriorating. Last
week tensions flared with Greece over disputed islands and, of course, the
future of Turkish Cyprus remains a constant source of friction between the EU
and Turkey. However, it is Turkey’s burgeoning
Realpolitik relationship with Russia that
is of great concern to many in Europe.
Turkey First
also reflects both Erdogan’s ambitions for and concerns about his country at a
time or regional and global flux. Last week, in a sign of the shifting power
balance, both Germany’s Merkel and Britain’s May went to Ankara, partly to
reassure President Erdogan, partly to influence him. My sources tell me May’s
visit was a success, Merkel’s visit less so. Put simply, President Erdogan’s Turkey First
policy reflects his feeling of abandonment, and at times betrayal by the West over
Syria. Above all, President Erdogan feels deeply offended by what he saw as European
fence-sitting during the failed July 2016 military coup attempt. And yet, whilst
Europe is in danger of losing Turkey it has not as yet lost Turkey. It is clear
Ankara is of a similar view. For example, Ankara’s attitude within NATO has
been as constructive as at any time over recent years. In other words, there is
still much to play for.
Much of Europe’s
Turkish problem is, as so often, in Europe. Europeans tend to think that once a
country is a member of a Western-leaning institution there is no need for policy
towards it. The Obama administration had no policy worthy of the name towards
Turkey, whilst a Europe embroiled in its endless self-obsession simply took came
to take Turkey for granted. Now, President Erdogan is reminding Europeans just
how mistaken such indifference is. Henceforth, like Europe’s relationship with
President Trump, its relationship with President Erdogan is also likely to become
far more transactional in nature. This
is particularly so now that the fantasy/pretence of forever in the future Turkish
EU membership has been by and large buried.
What would a
Turkey policy look like? It would certainly need to include more trade access,
more development aid, and more free movement of Turks into the EU. Indeed, it will
be interesting to see the impact and implications of the eventual Brexit deal
for Turkey. However, the crux of Turkey’s relationship with Europe will pivot
on Turkey’s own strategic neighbourhood. It is this neighbourhood which presents
both the need for, and challenge to, a new European policy towards Turkey.
In alliances policy,
strategy, and structure must be constantly re-aligned. Most of that process is
enacted through incremental adjustments over time. However, at times hard reality
must be confronted, not finessed away, and it is precisely hard reality
Europeans find so hard to either confront or manage. For Turkey that means a
Europe that finally takes a position on the status of the Kurds. Ankara is
deeply concerned that the instrumentalisation by the West of the Kurds in the
struggle against Islamic State implies some future pay-off for the Kurds in
their aspirations for a state that would straddle much of what is today
northern Iraq and Syria, and which would border Turkey. Turkey would never
accept the existence of such a state given the implications for its own eastern
provinces.
The profound challenge
for European policy-makers is thus; how can President Erdogan be reassured
about Western policy towards the Kurds without at the same time (once again) abandoning
the Kurds? Now, I am too much the historian to pretend there are easy solutions
to what is an acute policy and strategy conundrum. However, having no policy at
all on what is a key issue for a key ally at a key moment is also no option. Therefore,
if Turkey is to be convinced that continued investment in its alliances and partnerships
with the West is worth it then the West, Europe in particular, will need to engage
on this most sensitive of issues.
The Trump
Administration may well take a purely Realpolitik
position on this issue if Ankara supports US attacks on Islamic State. That
would leave a dangerous policy vacuum. Particularly so, given that beyond
gestures Europe has by and large retreated from any meaningful engagement in
Turkey’s strategic neighbourhood. Therefore, if Europeans really want themselves
and their sacred values to be taken seriously it is Europe (with Britain) which
should now embark on the diplomatic challenge of assisting Turks and Kurds
alike in the search for an enduring political settlement. The Turkish-Kurdish
relationship is probably as important to regional peace and stability as the
Israeli-Palestinian relationship. However, if, as usual, Europe bottles the
challenge, issues yet more meaningless declarations or offers yet more inactive
joint actions, then Turkey First could well come in time to mean Europe last.
To understand the
strategic importance of Turkey to Europe, just look at a map. This importance
was reinforced in my mind a few years ago in Ankara when as Acting Head of
Delegation I had the honour to formally lay a wreath at the memorial tomb of
President Ataturk. A few days later I was standing in General Ataturk’s World
War One command position high above ANZAC Cove and Suvla Bay, where Allied
troops landed in 1915, and from which they were bloodily evicted. History was,
as ever, as eloquent about the present as it was about the past.
Turkey is a
European power and should be treated as such. It is my firm belief that the
best future for Turkey remains in a strong alliance with its Western partners.
However, such alliance is also in the interests the West, particularly Europe.
Therefore, Europe must stop seeing Turkey as a frozen alliance, and work far
harder to convince President Erdogan that it is both friend and ally.
To do that Europeans
must accord the same respect to Turkey as President Ataturk accorded other Europeans.
Julian
Lindley-French
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.