NATO options in the face of the Turkish regime’s regional threats
A case of controversy
raised by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan regarding the blackmailing of
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) with the card of refugees, ISIS
terrorist elements, and the military intervention in Libya. So will NATO, which
includes Ankara, take a firm stance towards these actions that threaten
everyone in light of the possibility of an attack on another NATO member, such
as Greece?
"Turkey in the era
of Erdogan is among the most important difficulties facing the alliance,"
said Ro Khanna, a Democrat in the US Congress, in a report published by the
International Policy Digest.
He explained this by
Erdogan’s recent military actions, stressing that this "entails a review
of Ankara's status as a member of NATO."
Erdogan's mistakes with
NATO
At the forefront of the
Turkish regime’s mistakes is the threat to NATO interests through Ankara’s
rapprochement with Russia as part of its military interventions in northern
Syria, where Erdogan used the Russian S-400 missile system, which angered
members of the alliance. The West fears that Moscow will use the S-400 missile
radar technology to acquire confidential information on NATO, which has
prepared defense plans to protect the Baltic states and Poland Russia’s
aspirations to expand.
The serious matter is
Ankara's exploitation of this vision based on its geographical location and
proximity to Russia, as well as its control of European crossings, especially
Russian gas lines. During the NATO summit in London, Ankara insisted upon satisfaction
with its military intervention in Syria, Operation Peace Spring, which some
members of NATO have classified as "illegal".
Ankara also stipulated
the designation of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) as a terrorist
organization, threatening to return ISIS elements to Europe, which clearly
reveals that Erdogan is controlling the distribution map of these terrorist
elements and that Europe is within the range of ISIS lone wolves operating
under Turkish sponsorship.
Syrian refugee card
Another issue that
Ankara is exploiting is the refugee card, which he uses to blackmail Europe.
The latest incident occurred on September 13, 2019, when Erdogan issued a
threat to open the doors for refugees to travel to Europe unless more aid and
support is provided for the Turkish "safe zone". He said in an
interview with Reuters, "If you are not able to accept this, we will open
the doors."
European reactions
The Turkish regime is
exploiting the provisions of the treaty that established the NATO alliance,
which is free of any decisive sanctions or membership suspension. This was
expressed by a member of the US Congress in the report published by the
International Policy Digest, in which he explained, “To be fair, there is no
provision in NATO’s founding treaty that regulates the suspension of membership
rights, let alone expulsion, which makes this move truly historic,” hinting at
the possibility of taking this step.
Despite the difficulty
of NATO's abandonment of Turkey, there have been a number of decisions taken by
a number of member states against the alliance’s troublesome member (Turkey),
including the suspension of aid and the cessation of arms sales.
On October 12, 2019,
France announced the suspension of all arms sales to Turkey, warning Ankara
that its attack on northern Syria threatens European security. Spain, Austria
and Belgium joined Germany and France two days later, and Switzerland, Norway
and Finland had previously announced the suspension any shipments of new
weapons to Turkey and the cessation of all arms agreements with Ankara.
On October 31, 2019,
Denmark joined the list of European countries that banned arms exports to
Turkey in order to prevent any future plans for arms deals with Ankara, against
the background of its recent military operation east of the Euphrates in
northern Syria.