With his ambition to restores the Ottoman Empire...Erdogan to dispatch troops to Libya
Just months after mounting a third military
incursion into Syria, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey is preparing
another military intervention abroad, this time to dispatch troops to Libya.
He has arranged a special session of Parliament,
where his party holds a majority, for Thursday to approve the plan, which will
almost certainly pass.
The Libya gambit is no doubt the latest example of
Turkey’s growing self-confidence as a regional power, analysts say. But some
have begun to wonder why Mr. Erdogan is looking to get involved more deeply
there now, pointing out that domestic politics are never far from Mr. Erdogan’s
calculations.
Mr. Erdogan has also long held an ambition for a
kind of restoration of the Ottoman Empire, re-establishing Turkey’s position of
leadership in the Muslim world with an expansive foreign policy. That
aspiration is popular at home, and the mission in Libya, part of the former
Ottoman domain, fits nearly into that vision.
His assertive foreign policy has given Mr. Erdogan a
handy slate of challengers that he can point to abroad, helping him nurture
nationalism and maintain his support at home, even as he aggressively pursues
Turkish interests.
Six months after the loss of Istanbul in local
elections — his most significant electoral setback in a 25-year political
career — Mr. Erdogan, 65, is pondering holding general elections in 2020,
according to some political analysts.
Although his term runs until 2023, his own slide in
the polls and the splintering of his party are making him consider calling a
snap election in the fall, Mehmet Ali Kulat, a political consultant and
pollster in Ankara, said.
A faltering Turkish economy — anemic growth, a
weakening currency and worrying inflation and joblessness — may only add
urgency to the president’s considerations.
A speech Mr. Erdogan made to the Turkish diaspora in
London in December sounded much like a campaign speech.
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“Turkey is in
reliable hands,” he told the gathering. “Today there is a much more powerful
Turkey than 17 years ago. It is not a country that can be easily played. There
is this determined Turkey now, setting the rules of the game in its region and
also preventing plots.”
That assertive posturing has helped Mr. Erdogan stir
up nationalist feelings over foreign enemies and rally his core supporters, Ali
Bayramoglu, who was close to Mr. Erdogan’s party in its early years, said. It
is also typical of the combative style that Mr. Erdogan is known for.
“Our right-wing parties did not used to act like
they did not care about the United States,” Mr. Bayramoglu said. “This
independence, this challenging is a new thing. Turkish right-wing voters love
it.”
With some justification Mr. Erdogan has argued that
he has security interests in both Iraq and Syria, since Turkey shares a long
border with both and has suffered from instability spilling over from their
conflicts. With Libya he has made similar arguments, as well as historical ones.
Mr. Erdogan himself pointed out last week that Libya
was the last of the Ottoman territories to be lost and that Turkey’s founder,
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, fought and was wounded there as a young officer.
“It’s not difficult to convince Turkish public about
the need for an intervention in Libya in part because of the Ottoman legacy,”
Asli Aydintasbas, a senior fellow of the European Council for Human Rights,
said in written comments.
But there are Turkish interests at stake, too.
Beneath Mr. Erdogan’s agreement with Libya is a desire to position Turkey to
explore for oil and gas exploration in the eastern Mediterranean, off the coast
of Cyprus, in competition with Greece, Cyprus, Egypt and Israel, analysts say.
“Turkey does not want to be frozen out of the great
game which revolves around the hydrocarbon deposits in the Eastern
Mediterranean,” Ms. Aydintasbas said.
As in Syria, Turkey wants to have troops on the
ground in Libya in order to gain a place at the table, she said.
Turkish-backed Syrian proxy fighters have already
arrived in Libya, and more have assembled in training camps in Turkey ahead of
deployment, according the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an independent
monitoring organization.
The moves follow increased support this summer by
Mr. Erdogan to Libya’s Government of National Accord, or G.N.A., headed by
Prime Minister Fayez Al-Sarraj.
Turkey sent military advisers, arms and a fleet of
20 drones to defend Tripoli from attack by the forces of Gen. Khalifa Hifter,
who controls much of eastern Libya and is backed by Saudi Arabia, the United
Arab Emirates and Egypt.
After Russia recently became involved, sending
contract forces to support General Hifter’s offensive, Mr. Erdogan upped the
ante.
Turkish assistance under the new agreement will
stretch to training and capacity building, a recent paper by the European
Council for Foreign Relations reported.
“It now appears that Turkey will not only defend the
G.N.A. but influence their future security setup,” it said.
Turkey has already signed an agreement for an
exclusive economic area with the Tripoli government. If the Libyan government
falls, the agreement would fall with it.
So Mr. Erdogan is trying to protect that agreement,
said Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, director in Ankara of the German Marshall Fund of
the United States.
Turkey has already started its own exploration
drilling off northern Cyprus, which was punished with sanctions last year from
the European Union.
Even if it found gas, Turkey would struggle to
exploit any discoveries because of the threat of further European sanctions,
Mr. Unluhisarcikli said.
So Mr. Erdogan’s actions were for now mostly aimed at
disrupting the activities of his opponents, he added.
But Mr. Erdogan’s ever more aggressive angling has
unnerved his neighbors, especially in Greece, who now openly worry about
confrontation.
Diplomats in Athens and Brussels said that the
situation was the most tense it has been in more than two decades, since 1996
when the two neighbors exchanged fire in the Aegean.
Under pressure, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis
of Greece is poised to change decades of foreign policy, announcing on Sunday
that he was prepared to take Turkey to international arbitration at the
International Court of Justice in The Hague.
But diplomats in Brussels readily admit that there
is only so far they can press Turkey, considering how desperately they depend
on Mr. Erdogan to control the flow of migrants to Europe, which was
destabilized by the arrival of more than a million asylum seekers in 2015.
Now, Mr. Erdogan faces the possibility of a new
refugee crisis coming from Syria, where Russian and Syrian government forces
have redoubled their offensive in Idlib, the last rebel-held province.
Seeking leverage from the potential for a crisis as
German Chancellor Angel Merkel prepares to visit Turkey this month, Mr. Erdogan
has warned that he will be forced to open the gates for the refugees to enter
Europe again.
Elsewhere, Mr. Erdogan’s flirtation with Russia has
stirred American and European ire. So has his foray into Syria, despite
President Trump’s apparent green light for it. Typically, Mr. Erdogan is having
none of it.
“Of course, everyone is giving advice to us: ‘What
are you doing in Syria?’ they say. ‘When will you leave Syria?’” Mr. Erdogan
said in London.
“We have only one answer to them: ‘What are you
doing in Syria? Do you have a border there? No. And, what are you doing there?
You go there from a distance of 10,000 kilometers, 3,000, 5,000. But we have a
911 kilometer-long border.’”
Mr. Trump has so far not acted upon attempts by
Congress to punish Turkey for its purchase of the Russian S400 missile system
and for violating United States sanctions against Iran.
That has not stopped Mr. Erdogan from threatening to
close off United States access to Turkish bases, including Incirlik Air Base,
which houses roughly 50 American tactical nuclear weapons.
Mr. Erdogan has also remained loyal to the Arab
Spring uprisings since they began in 2011, placing him at odds with
longstanding dictators in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya, as well as the United
States.
Even as other Western nations ceased support when
extremists took over the uprisings or, as in the case of Egypt, a
counterrevolution ousted the elected Islamist government, Turkey supported the
Islamist-leaning groups that emerged from the uprisings.
In Libya, Turkey backed rebel groups based out of
Tripoli and Misurata from the start of the uprising.
Turkey-backed rebel groups based out of Tripoli and
Misurata from the start of the uprising in Libya.
That support has developed into a regional stance,
in alliance with the wealthy Gulf state of Qatar, against Saudi Arabia, Egypt
and the United Arab Emirates.
Those groupings back opposing proxy forces in Libya
and Syria and represent a new fault-line in the Middle East. Mr. Erdogan is
determined to lead his camp.
“Today there is a Turkey with an independent foreign
policy, making operations for its own national security without looking for
permission from anyone,” he said in London.