Soft power: Erdogan seeks hidden ways to hijack the Balkans
During recent years, Turkey’s policy towards the Balkan
countries has been characterized by soft power of a colonial nature and an
expansionist desire that expands and appears under several forms, in contrast
to what it shows, through the economic and cultural policy that allows it to
penetrate into the internal affairs of those countries, especially Bosnia and
Kosovo. The cumulative economic crises left by the neglect of European
countries allowed an opportunity for the Turkish colonizer to infiltrate.
Erdogan's influence
History was an important factor, as the Balkans occupy a
special importance to the Turks. In the past, the region was a large part of
the Ottoman Empire, not only in terms of geographical area, but in terms of its
cadres with Balkan origins, as well as the waves of Muslim immigration to
Anatolia in the late 19th century, which continued until the early decades of
the Turkish Republic.
Turkish policies have exploited the history factor between
them and the Balkans and have led to irreversible entanglements, which were
evident in Turkey's desire to return the Ottoman legacy in the region, with
Turkish social institutions and economic benefits, and to make it a political
card in Eastern Europe, which gives Erdogan the opportunity to use all this to
put pressure on European countries under a religious slogan or what is
described as “neo-Ottomanism”.
These policies towards the Balkan countries resulted in a
favorable climate for friendly countries to play a similar role within the
framework of the international agenda in support of political Islamist
currents. The most prominent of these countries was Qatar, which exploits its
charitable and economic programs to exist in the region.
Exploiting religion
Turkey has sought for a long period of time to restore what
it calls “Ottoman ties between Muslims” in the Balkans. The ruling Justice and
Development Party (AKP), since 2002, has adopted major policies in dealing with
Islamic countries, in pursuit of the religious tendency of Muslim peoples in
the service of its expansionist colonial goals, which prompted various leaders
to issue warnings of the expansion of Turkish influence.
Ankara has played on the exploitation of the social,
educational and cultural aspects, and it has been interested in building many
mosques and restoring what is considered their heritage. In May 2019, Bosnia
reopened the Aladza Mosque with a huge Turkish financial contribution, after 30
years following its destruction during the war of secession from Yugoslavia. In
2015, the Turkish president opened a huge mosque in Tirana, Albania, which cost
nearly $30 million to construct.
A great controversy arose in Kosovo among the citizens
caused by the huge Turkish funding for mosques, which prompted them to threaten
to kill the country's mufti if the government continued to build mosques in the
Ottoman style with Turkish help, considering it a new invasion, but the
government turned away from that anger and continued to bring in Turkish money
to religious institutions as a state that supports political Islamism.
Imposing influence on education and health
The Turkish president did not lose sight of imposing his
control over the educational sector in the Balkans, especially in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, by expanding the teaching of the Turkish language in schools and
institutes, where the language penetrated the country to be the first among the
foreign languages that students learn.
On the health sector side, Turkey has invested in the Covid-19
crisis to seek more rapprochement and penetration by using the Turkish
Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA) to provide health benefits in the
form of urgent medical supplies in several countries such as Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Kosovo and Macedonia, as well as receiving patients from the
Balkans for treatment in Ankara.
According to the official Anadolu Agency, TIKA announced on
January 9, 2020, that it had implemented 900 projects in Bosnia since the end
of the war.
Joint political relations
The political relations between Turkey and the Balkans
became clearer with the establishment of the South-East European Cooperation
Process (SEECP) in 1996, which included cooperation relations between Turkey,
Albania, Kosovo, Bosnia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Bulgaria, Serbia and other
countries in the region.
In 2008, SEECP was able to develop a regional cooperation
council partially funded by the European Union to support these countries and
improve their economies, and it aspired to improve the neighborhood between
Turkey and the Balkans, as well as the European Union.



