Alphen, Netherlands. 30
November. Power politics has and always will be about exploiting space and
people over time and distance, to exert the influence of the strategically strong, over the politically weak.
Look at a map of Eastern
Europe and Western Asia from north to south. For the Russia Black Seas Fleet to
sail from its base at Sevastopol via the Black Sea and into the Mediterranean
it must first pass through the Bosporus directly in front of Istanbul, then sail
south through the small Sea of Marmara, and finally on past Cernak into the
Dardanelles straits before it can enter the Mediterranean. The distance between the Black Sea and the
Mediterranean is some 60 miles or 85 kilometres, all of which is under firm
Turkish control. In other words without Turkey’s approval Russia’s Black Seas
Fleet and Sevastopol, Russia’s only south facing warm water European fleet
naval base, is rendered useless.
Consequently, if Turkey
turns against Russia in the wake of last week’s downing of a Russian SU-24,
much of the strategic rationale behind President Putin’s illegal seizure of
Crimea is threatened. That is why for all Moscow’s bluster Putin knows all too
well it is the Turks not the Russians who hold most (not all) of the strategic
cards. Indeed, the Russian Black Seas Fleet is vital to wider Russian ambitions
across and around the Mediterranean basin.
This is not the first
time in history the Dardanelles and the Bosporus have been a grand strategic flashpoint.
A century ago in December 1915 Allies forces were about to be withdrawn in the
face of heroic Turkish resistance after Churchill’s failed attempt to force the
Dardanelles with the Royal and French navies, and to take the Gallipoli
Peninsula with an Allied Expeditionary Force of mainly British, Australian and
New Zealand troops. The aim was to push Istanbul (Constantinople became
Istanbul in 1453) out of its alliance with Wilhelmine Germany, and thus out of
the First World War. The expedition was a spectacular failure as I saw for
myself on a visit to Gallipoli as a guest of the Turkish Government.
In fact, Russia and
Turkey (or more precisely the Ottoman Empire) have been fighting over the
Dardanelles and the Bosporus ever since Moscow decided an all-year round warm
water port was an essential Russian interest. In 1807, during the Napoleonic wars, British
and Russian forces blockaded the Dardanelles. When
Istanbul lost the 1828-1829 Russo-Turkish war Moscow forced the Ottomans to
close the straits to all non-Russian (i.e. British) forces. European powers became
alarmed by Russia’s de facto control of the straits and Moscow’s ambitions to
extend its influence into the Mediterranean and the wider Middle East. Nothing
new there then.
In 1841 at the London
Straits Convention Austria-Hungary, Britain, France and Prussia, using the
precedent set by the 1815 Congress of Vienna, forced Russia to agree that in
peacetime only Ottoman warships could traverse the straits. During the 1853-1856
Crimean War the Royal and French navies actually traversed the straits into the
Black Sea to blockade Sevastopol with the aim of denying Russia the very same
warm water port that is deemed vital to Moscow’s twenty-first century grand strategy.
Indeed, the 1856 Congress of Paris which
reaffirmed the 1841 convention is still in legal force today!
So, President Putin might
make much play of deploying highly-advanced S400 anti-aircraft missiles to the
Russian Air Force base at Latakia in Syria, and yes those missiles can reach
deep into Turkish air space. He might also escort his SU-24 fighter-bombers
with fighters, and hit Turkey with limited sanctions. However, implicit in Turkish
President Erdogan’s warning to Russia “…not to play with fire” over the downing
of the SU-24 is the inference that it is Istanbul not Moscow that has the strategic
upper hand.
Now, turn aforesaid map
around and look at it from west to east. All the Syrian and other refugees using
the northern route from the Middle East to Europe have to cross the self-same Bosporus.
Yesterday Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davotoglu met with EU leaders in
Brussels at an EU-Turkey summit. Again, Istanbul not Brussels (or the real power
capitals of Europe) held most of the cards. Ankara is using the migration
crisis as a means to exert pressure on fellow Europeans (Turkey is both a European
and an Asian country) by turning migration flows on and off like a tap. Greek
officials reported in October that in the wake of a previous high-level meeting
with the Turks the migration flow suddenly eased.
So what does Turkey want?
On 12 December, 1999 Turkey was
officially recognised by the EU as an official candidate state. Ever since then
the EU has pretended to negotiate Turkish membership, and the Turks have
pretended to believe them. No more! President Erdogan’s mandate was markedly
strengthen in Turkey’s June 2015 presidential elections. In return for
controlling the migration flows into Europe President Erdogan is determined to
force the EU to take Turkey’s membership far more seriously, and force visa-free
travel for Turks upon a reluctant EU. At yesterday’s Brussels EU-Turkey Summit desperate
EU leaders were willing to give President Erdogan pretty much all he wants.
Scratch the surface of European
politics and one finds history. European fears (for that is what they now are)
of such a huge wave of mainly Muslim migrants runs deep in the DNA of Europe’s
collective historic memory. Between 1529 and 1683 the Ottomans made repeated
incursions into Europe, culminating in the 1683 Battle of Vienna. Inter-mingled
with the fear of migrants is that historic fear of Ottoman conquest, even if
many Europeans do not realise it. It is a fear that runs deep in contemporary
politics.
Presidents Erdogan and
Putin also understand each other, and indeed power politics far better than
Europe’s many little leaders. Power
politically both the downing of the Russian plane and the migrant crisis
demonstrate Turkey’s ‘strong’ grand tactical position. However, Turkey must be careful
not to confuse a strong grand tactical position with a strong grand strategic
position. Indeed, being so close to Syria and the wider Middle East it is also
evident that strong NATO allies and EU partners will be vital to Turkey’s
long-term security. Consensual (not
forced) Turkish EU membership will also be vital to this pivotal power’s future
stability and prosperity.
Critically, Ankara does
not want to spend too much strategic energy looking over its shoulder north at
an aggrieved Russia. Just look at a map, watch
this space and indeed twenty-first century power politics at work!
Julian Lindley-French