Turkey using dubious deals to infiltrate Africa
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has endless ambitions in Africa. He infiltrates the continent by hammering out arms deals and defense pacts.
Infiltration engineer
Adnan
Tanrıverdi, a retired general who worked as an advisor to Erdoğan, is the
architect of Turkey's Africa infiltration and the dubious deals Turkey
finalizes with the countries of the continent.
Tanrıverdi owns an export company that is totally financed by the
Turkish government. He advises the Turkish president on military matters, even
as he left his advisory post in January this year.
This man believes that Turkey should share its military
capabilities with friendly countries through special training programs for the
security forces of these countries.
Export companies have been Turkey's tool for infiltrating 35
African countries since 2013. Turkey implements military training programs
south of the Sahara. It trains police and security forces from African
countries.
Turkey offers all these services to these countries for free.
Suspicious cooperation
Turkey has signed a large number of joint defense pacts with
African countries. Its joint defense pact with Chad, for example, opens the
door for the exchange of visits and technical expertise among defense and
security institutions in the two states.
The
pacts with Sudan, Uganda, the Ivory Coast and other African states allow the
same thing.
Such
deals give Turkey the chance to interfere in African countries like it does in
Libya now.
Erdoğan justifies
his country's interference in Libya by citing a security cooperation deal it
signed with the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord (GNA).
Turkey
and the GNA signed the deal in November 2019. It allows Turkey to offer
consultancy and expertise for the militias allied with the GNA.




