Biden’s new national security roster knows how to deal with Turkey
On Friday,
U.S. President-elect Joe Biden officially announced a handful of upcoming
appointments to key national security positions. The names continue the
transition’s theme of selecting experienced former government officials who
worked with Biden under former President Barak Obama.
The
expected appointees signal the incoming administration’s intentions to counter
Russian and Iranian actions, but several individuals on the emerging roster of
officials are also well known by their counterparts in Ankara. Many possess
extensive expertise on Turkey, but some hold policy views that are diametrically
opposed to Turkey’s ruling coalition, particularly regarding the Syrian civil
war.
Biden’s
nominee for undersecretary of state for political affairs, the third-ranked
official at the State Department, Victoria Nuland, is a retired career diplomat
who managed U.S. relations with dozens of European and Eurasia countries as
well as NATO and the European Union while Assistant Secretary of State for
European and Eurasian Affairs during the Obama administration.
For the
National Security Council’s (NSC) senior director for European affairs, Biden
will nominate Dr. Amanda Sloat, who was responsible for U.S. relations with
Turkey, Cyprus, and Greece, as well as European engagement on Middle East
issues as deputy assistant secretary of state for southeast Europe and eastern
Mediterranean affairs under Obama.
Tensions
between Turkey and its transatlantic allies will remain a challenge for the
Biden administration across a variety of regional issues. Nuland and Sloat are
not only well-versed on Turkey, but also have extensive experience in
coordinating U.S. foreign policy with European partners.
While the
U.S. and European positions broadly converge on Turkey-related issues, they
diverge on where their priorities lie. In this context, Biden will need to rely
on officials like Nuland and Sloat to develop shared concerns into meaningful
action.
They,
along with others on the national security team, likely share Biden’s general
assessment of Turkey’s policies in recent years, and how best to approach
Ankara going forward. In a New York Times interview on the campaign trail,
Biden labelled Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan an “autocrat”, said the
United States needs to support opposition parties to challenge Erdoğan
electorally, and said he will support the United States’ Kurdish partners in
Syria vis-à-vis Turkish aggression.
Under the
leadership of another Biden nominee, retired General Lloyd Austin, the U.S.
Central Command (CENTCOM) formed an effective partnership with the Kurdish-led
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in its campaign against the Islamic State (ISIS)
following the failure of earlier attempts to train and equip other Syrian
factions. After leading the U.S. combatant command responsible for the Middle
East, Austin - whose nomination for Secretary of Defence has drawn criticism
from experts in civil-military relations - is well informed of Turkey’s role in
the region.
Speaking
with local Turkish outlet Medyascope recently, Dr. Ömer Taşpınar from the
Brookings Institution, said Austin was seriously disturbed by Turkey’s handling
of ISIS militants while simultaneously doing everything it could to marginalise
Syrian Kurds working with CENTCOM. Taşpınar, who also teaches at the National
War College and has briefed the general in the past, said Austin did not see
the Syrian Kurds as a real threat to Turkey’s national security.
In October
2019, President Donald Trump gave Erdoğan the green light to invade territory
in northeastern Syria held by the SDF. Turkey has longstanding concerns that
the SDF’s core military arm, the People’s Protection Units (YPG), which is
intimately associated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). The PKK has
waged a decades-long insurgency in southeastern Turkey, relying on safe havens
in Syria and Iraq to sustain its efforts.
In an
interview at the time of the Turkish operation, Nuland called the development a
“strategic tragedy, and noted that, “when Trump made his decision, we were in
the middle of a very intense negotiation with Turkey about how it could
establish a buffer zone to protect its own territory without the U.S. having to
leave and in a manner that would ensure that neither the Russians nor Assad nor
ISIS regain that territory.”
Of all the
Biden appointees, the choice of Brett McGurk to be the NSC’s senior director
for the Middle East and North Africa will cause the most concern in Ankara,
primarily due to his vocal criticism of Turkish actions in Syria. Like Nuland,
he opposes Turkey’s push to shift control of the region to Russia and the Assad
regime at the expense of Kurdish self-governance.
“McGurk’s in-depth and nuanced understanding of the
dynamics of Syria and Islamist militancy in all its forms makes him a suspect
figure in Ankara, since the Erdoğan government has an acute awareness that
their usual talking points will be ineffective against a U.S. official who can
see right through them,” Erdemir concluded.
As a
director at the NSC, McGurk will be a chief advisor to the White House on Syria
policy, but he will not resume a direct diplomatic role like the one he held as
the U.S. special envoy for the global coalition against the Islamic State
during the Obama and Trump administrations. Instead, Turkey will fall under
Sloat’s portfolio at the NSC, and she has expressed more empathetic awareness
of the Erdoğan administration’s legitimate and partially legitimate concerns,
including connections between the YPG and PKK.
That being
said, Sloat is a strong proponent of principled engagement with Turkey that,
congruent with Biden’s instinct to support opposition parties and democratic electoral
processes in the country, takes a long view beyond the country’s current era of
democratic backsliding.
As a
senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in 2018, Sloat wrote that, “what
makes Turkey such a policy conundrum is that its problematic leadership faces
real threats, a fact that often seems lost on the West”.
“At the same time, Turkey’s leadership is growing more
authoritarian and moving the country away from democratic standards,” she
continued. “In addition, Erdoğan’s anti-Western rhetoric and objectionable
international moves have led some in the United States and Europe to question
whether he takes seriously the trans-Atlantic alliance.”
Sloat
views addressing Turkish security needs as a starting point for engagement.
While recognising the motivators for Ankara’s Syria policy, she calls for
renewed negotiations with the PKK and emphasises the destabilising effects of
Erdoğan’s decisions both domestically and in Syria.
On the
economic front, Sloat is also supportive of the need to revise the outdated
EU-Turkey Customs Union that disadvantages Turkey. A successful effort to
upgrade the customs union would not only be beneficial in terms of Turkish economic
growth, but also require reforms that improve governance in Turkey. Should they
prioritise such a goal, both Sloat and Nuland have the experience working with
European partners to facilitate economic negotiations.
While
cognisant of the need for the humility in American attempts to promote
democracy abroad, Sloat says that principled U.S. engagement with Turkey will
further entail “widening the aperture of government outreach to more officials
on a broader range of shared interests; using the prospect of deeper trade and
investment links to encourage better governance; expanding people-to-people
ties and supporting civil society; and staying true to Western values by
speaking out about rule of law and human rights abuses”.
The
emerging Biden national security team will take a drastically different
approach to Turkey than Trump, but any improvement in the bilateral
relationship will also require the Erdoğan administration to adjust its
orientation to the United States and to be open to compromises on difficult
foreign policy issues.



