Turkey wreaking havoc with political Islam, Saudi researcher says
Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
is using the ideology of political Islam to conceal the country’s political
economic losses, as it spreads chaos from the Eastern Mediterranean to the
Caucuses, wrote Saudi researcher Abdullah bin Bijad Al-Otaibi in Al Arabiya.
Turkey’s chaos has spread from Azerbaijan to Libya,
through to Syria, whose oil Turkey was exploiting, Al-Otaibi wrote, in addition
to the Black Sea region, where the country has experimented with the Russian
S-400 missile system above the sea.
Ankara’s aggression in the region has resulted in
both U.S and European sanctions looming over Turkey, the Saudi researcher said.
Ankara has stood strongly behind Azerbaijan in its
recently flared-up conflict with Armenia over the disputed region of
Nagorno-Karabakh and allegedly transported Syrian mercenaries to help its ally.
The country is also involved in the conflict in
Libya, backing the internationally recognised Government of National Accord
(GNA) and recently signed a maritime deal with the GNA in a bid to strengthen
its hand in negotiations with Greece.
Meanwhile, Turkey maintains military presence in
Syria and Iraq, citing Kurdish armed groups operating in the embattled Middle
Eastern countries.
"The transformation of Turkey, from a
stabilizing state to one that promotes and spreads havoc, is part of a complex
and long historical context,’’ according to Al-Otaibi, who maintains that
Turkey has come a long way from the vision of its modern founder, Mustafa Kemal
Atatürk.
Turkey's strongman, Al-Otaibi said, has ruled the
state "with one objective in mind:
realizing his personal dreams and delusions of reviving the ‘Ottoman
Caliphate’.’’
Erdoğan is spreading
chaos in pursuit of economic interests in pipelines, Al-Otaibi wrote, "through drawing bloodlines on the
civilian map of those disaster-stricken areas.’’



