Turkey and Pakistan consolidate alliance to exploit Islam
Relations between Pakistan and Turkey have been expanding to
witness major strategic developments over the past few years, as Ankara sees
Islamabad and its regional neighbors as a haven to promote its pseudo-religious
political project.
Consolidating the alliance
For its part, Pakistan is working to consolidate that
alliance with Ankara, Tehran, Doha and Malaysia to create an international
alignment of entities that support the model of political Islamism, contrary to
the countries that oppose it. On August 6, Pakistani Foreign Minister of
Pakistan, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, made a hostile speech against Riyadh,
threatening to withdraw from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).
While this is a shift in Pakistani foreign policy towards
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, it is a clear indication of the desirability among
the other allies to consolidate the foundations of the coalition that they
began to establish last year when Malaysia hosted a summit on Muslims that
included only its government and the governments of Turkey, Qatar, Iran and
Indonesia.
Fallout from Kuala Lumpur Summit
Although Pakistan was invited to attend the Kuala Lumpur
Summit that was held on December 19, 2020, it apologized for not attending
hours before it began, which means that the current threat is joining the
Turkey-Iran alliance, while these countries may also be bent on a repeat of the
summit.
Isolation
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan suffers from
political isolation within his geographical and Islamic surroundings, as his
problems with the Gulf countries are numerous and he is fighting with his
European neighbors with the desire of obtaining their economic wealth, in
addition to his adoption of an ideological agenda aimed at geographic expansion
and restoration of the old Ottoman legacy. Iran shares a similar attitude, as
it is also suffering political isolation and has major problems with the Gulf
states, while tense relations between it and Washington have raged to the
fullest extent since Donald Trump came to power. Tehran has also adopted an
expansionist ideology that relies on religious propaganda to restore its
ancient empire.
Both countries are associated with political Islamist
movements, which they use as military arms to achieve their ambitions in the
countries of the region and to form parallel armies in their countries to
support their regimes and pave the way for their expansion.
Thus, the new alliance must be understood in the context of
the Turkish-Iranian attempt to get out of the international isolation imposed
on them due to their aggressive behavior and to succeed in gaining support for
their expansionist policies.
Common interests and ideological alliance
This alliance is based on common interests and religion as a
variable for popular promotion, as countries have chosen to announce their
alliance through a summit that they called Islamic, aiming to discuss the
situation of Muslims around the world and the developments of pending issues.
Meanwhile, Pakistan is currently threatening to withdraw
from the OIC, using religion as a reason, as it claims that Muslim countries
should support it on the issue of Kashmir, which the country considers a
religious dispute despite it being a political issue.
Islamabad believes that the OIC has not provided sufficient
support for the Kashmir issue, so it is looking forward to Ankara playing a
supportive role regarding this issue. Based on the fact that Erdogan claims to
be the protector of Muslims around the world, he has also exploited the Kashmir
issue on several occasions, claiming to support Pakistan’s right over the
disputed region.
It is clear that the relations between Pakistan and Turkey
are based on military support and arms trade between them. Islamabad, with its
nuclear power and Ankara's military aid, is working to build a strong naval
fleet for Pakistan, paving the way for broader relations between the two
countries.
Moreover, this emerging alliance in Asia will play an
effective role in supporting the international Brotherhood, serving as a
mouthpiece in Europe, Washington and North African countries, which carries
with it a threat to other global powers and alliances.
Ottoman legacy
Commenting on this rapprochement, a study on the relations
between Turkey and the Muslim-majority countries of Asia indicates that the
Ottoman legacy of Erdogan's imagination in conjunction with the spread of
terrorist groups in the region makes religious propaganda easier to use. This
in turn makes cooperating with the Turkish president accepted at the popular
level in those countries, along with their political and strategic relations.



