Thursday, October 11, 2012 The events from last week hardly constitute Turkey’s first involvement in the ongoing conflict in Syria. In June of this year, Syria shot down a Turkish jet, claiming it had violated Syrian airspace. The incident, which resulted in the death of the two Turkish pilots flying the plane, led to a round of recriminations between Ankara and Damascus, as well as between Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party and the opposition Republican People’s Party, which has sharply criticized Erdogan’s handling of the crisis that has been unfolding to the south of Turkey’s border over the past eighteen months. Garnering fewer headlines, meanwhile, has been Turkey’s support for Syria’s opposition. Since fighting broke out in Syria last year, Istanbul has emerged as a hub for Syrian opposition figures as well as for British and American officials funneling aid to them.Within Turkey, people are divided on the wisdom of Erdogan’s approach to Syria. Erdogan, whose political career has been marked by efforts to bring Sunni Islamic religiosity back into the public sphere of secular Turkey, has been accused of exploiting the Syrian crisis in order to topple the Shiite-dominated (but secular-nationalist) Assad regime. The goal, it is argued, is to replace the Assads with a Sunni-dominated government in Syria which shares Erdogan’s religious convictions and which would support, presumably, the efforts of Turkey’s Prime Minister to play a larger role in the politics of the Middle East more generally. Others, meanwhile, point to the mini-Cold War that has been developing between Russia and the United States over the Syrian crisis, and fear that Erdogan will be only too eager to make common cause with the United States in playing an active, military role in dislodging Assad. The stakes are high. The specter of the country’s national interests being sacrificed, through war, to the political machinations of outside powers is one which resonates deeply in Turkey, where the catastrophic end to the Ottoman Empire has long been presented as an object lesson regarding the dangers of getting involved in foreign-sponsored military entanglements in the region. By creating safe zones in Syria, Erdogan would make great headway towards his real goal, which is to dislodge the Syrian crisis from Turkey’s borders. Not only has the ongoing violence thus far sent an estimated 100,000 Syrians into refugee camps in Turkey, but the opening of Turkey’s border with Syria may also have provided opportunities for Syrian-based PKK fighters, who wish to carve a Kurdish state out of Turkey’s southeastern borderlands. In the past, the Syrian government has provided material support to the PKK, and the possibility that Assad would play the PKK card against Ankara has got to form part of Erdogan’s policymaking calculus right now. *** More links, commentary and analysis can be found poolside in the Borderlands Lounge. ***Like the Borderlands? You'll love the book! Order your copy now at the OUP website. |
Turkey-Syria Conflict
Labels:
Syria,
Turkey,
US/World Politics
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