Turkey, Pressing E.U. for Help in Syria, Threatens to Open Borders to Refugees
Time and again, when President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
of Turkey wants something from the Europeans, he has reminded them that he is
the gatekeeper to tens of thousands of refugees he could send their way.
Friday was much the same, as Turkey demanded help
from NATO after a deadly clash in Syria. But this time, Mr. Erdogan not only
threatened to let refugees enter Greece. Local officials bought several
thousands of them tickets, helped them onto shiny Mercedes-Benz buses and drove
them to the border.
The mini-exodus was accompanied step by step by
state-run Turkish media, which live-streamed scenes of harried families pushing
off shore for Greek islands in scenes reminiscent of the 2015 migrant crisis
that Europe was able to solve only with Turkish help.
The echoes of that crisis were no doubt deliberate
on the part of Mr. Erdogan, who knew he could count on the desperation of
refugees eager to make their way to Europe to make his point. Friday’s events
were widely seen as his attempt to weaponize both the desperation of migrants
and the xenophobia of Europe.It was the ninth time, in fact, that the Turkish
president has promised to send a new surge of refugees Europe’s way. Whether
Mr. Erdogan was merely dangling the threat again, or will unleash a full-blown
crisis remains to be seen.
If Turkey’s leader does mean business, he will open
not only the border to Greece but also the border with Syria, where he has
blocked several hundred thousand would-be refugees as fighting has intensified
in the area of Idlib.
“He’s trying to say, ‘What happens in Idlib doesn’t
stay in Idlib,’” said Aaron Stein, a Turkey expert at the Foreign Policy
Research Institute, an American think tank. “‘You Europeans have been free
riding on our backs for years now, and as the situation grows more serious, our
problem is now your problem.’”
“I think this
is mostly for show,’’ Mr. Stein added, ‘‘but I don’t know when the show ends.”
Turkish actions throughout Friday suggested that Mr.
Erdogan’s latest threat could be his most credible.
All day, his government shuttled hundreds of
migrants from the center of Istanbul to the Turkish land border with Greece —
for free. Overnight, migrants were told to gather outside the headquarters of
Istanbul’s migration authority, down the road from the city’s main police
station.
In broad daylight, officials then helped herd more than
600 migrants onto at least 12 buses sent to the Turkish-Greek land border, some
150 miles to the northwest.
The coaches were provided by local municipalities,
according to three coach drivers who spoke on condition of anonymity. Police
officers battled to keep order as migrants laden with snacks, backpacks,
strollers, suitcases and diapers jostled for space on the coaches.
As many as 3,000 more migrants were sent from other
towns and cities in the country, a refugee at the border estimated. Internal legal
restrictions on migrants’ movements seemed to have been temporarily rescinded,
as taxi drivers and private car owners were allowed to drive Syrians and other
foreigners directly to the border, in full view of the police.
The display was an act of facilitation not seen even
during the 2015-16 crisis, when Turkey turned a blind eye to the movement of
refugees without ever physically organizing it.
The brazenness of the operation spoke of Mr.
Erdogan’s desperation and diplomatic isolation as Turkish forces have become
ever more embroiled in the Syrian war.
In recent years, Turkish troops have created an
informal protectorate in parts of northern Syria, sheltering Syrian rebels and
displaced civilians from the Syrian government and the. government’s Russian
allies.
But that strategy collapsed in recent weeks, as the
Syrian government, backed by Russian air power, retook vast tracts of land,
increasingly drawing Turkish troops into the conflict.
This growing threat suddenly morphed into a
full-blown crisis on Thursday night, when dozens of Turkish troops were killed
in an airstrike — prompting Mr. Erdogan to demand help from his NATO allies in
North America and Europe.
Against that backdrop, Mr. Erdogan’s government
began ferrying migrants to the border on Friday, seemingly in an attempt to
cajole European politicians into giving him more support.
Mr. Erdogan believes the West should give his
military more air support in Syria, and his civil ministries more aid inside
Turkey, where his government looks after more than 3 million Syrian refugees —
more than any other country.
To underscore Mr. Erdogan’s threat, the state-run
news agency, Anadolu, released a steady drip of footage of migrants approaching
the Greek land border.