Erdoğan playing with fire
 
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
insists on keeping up his well-known nationalist rhetoric to which we have
grown accustomed. He does not hide his neo-Ottoman dreams and visions and
continues his provocative actions not only against Greece and Cyprus, but also
a number of other countries, including France, as evidenced not only by his
verbal attacks against Emmanuel Macron, but also by the recent incident between
the two countries’ naval forces.
The Turkish president behaves as if he were leading
a superpower, but one wonders whether the man who wants to replace the founder
of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, in the Turkish subconscious, really
understands his and his country’s limitations.
We hear statements about a “Blue Homeland,” about
the “borders of our hearts,” but nothing about the difficulties facing the
Turkish economy and the enormous dangers that lurk for the stability and course
of this populous and large country, which is not far from an economic collapse.
International organisations are sounding the alarm, the markets are sending out
messages, but the Turkish ruler continues unfazed.
One cannot conquer the world - not even one’s region
- if there is no healthy economy reflecting real power to back the political
declarations and military moves. Economic might is a prerequisite for any
authoritarian ruler to make these kinds of cynical announcements and direct threats.
Greece does not have Turkey’s military strength; however, it has sufficient
deterrent firepower, while it acts effectively in a number of regional and
international alliances. In this light, it has the potential to deal a severe
blow to Turkey, something that no sensible and responsible leader in Ankara
should minimise.
Erdoğan chooses to
magnify his country’s
potential and ignore the dangers it faces. Turkey is not as powerful as he
thinks it is, and Erdoğan's aggressive
unilateral behaviour in the wider eastern Mediterranean is totally unjustified.
As for Turkey’s
confrontation with Greece, the equation is a complicated one as Ankara also has
another front in its southeast permanently open. It is clear that Athens wants
a peaceful settlement of the situation and seeks de-escalation, but it insists
that if Ankara chooses to behave irresponsibly and cross its red lines, it will
do what its national interest demands.
It is strange that while Erdoğan
himself took an action a few months ago that most countries describe not only
as provocative but also legally unsound (he signed an agreement with a country
in a state of civil war, and with a government that rules only part of the
country, while the agreement has not been ratified by the parliament which does
not recognise it), he opposes the recent partial demarcation of an exclusive
economic zone between Greece and Egypt – i.e. an agreement between two
governments whose legal status is not disputed by anyone.
And he used this development as the reason for
cancelling the agreed exploratory dialogue with Greece before it even started.
The Turkish president sees enemies everywhere. He attacks all the countries in
the region - Greece, Cyprus, Israel, Egypt - which he even describes as an
“alliance of evil”. If he is not careful, he may pay dearly for this.
Greece is on the alert, taking advantage of its
alliance with the United States - on Friday Greek Foreign Minister Nikos
Dendias will meet with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (on Thursday he
visited Israel) - while it has military, but more importantly political and
economic capabilities through the European Union, which will not remain
inactive. Trapped in his nationalist rhetoric, instead of producing glorious
victories, as he may be fantasising, Erdoğan
may eventually cause significant damage to his country. And the responsibility
will lie exclusively with him.
          
     
                               
 
 


