Secrets of the Turkish support to Tamim after Sudan crisis
Thursday 30/January/2020 - 03:06 PM
Mahmoud al-Batakoshi
Turkey's support for Qatar's malicious plans in
Sudan does not stop, as they both carry the same agenda, especially after removing
former Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir.
The Sudanese people did not retreat after isolating
Al-Bashir, and the Brotherhood in Sudan.
Turkey and Qatar's attempts to stir up discord and support the counter-revolution in Sudan have not ended, and the fingers point to support for the demonstrations that broke out on December 14, 2019.
Turkey and Qatar are trying to enhance their role in Sudan, to achieve their goals in Sudan, in particular, and the African continent; in general, through two basic factors, the “religious and economic”, and through them, Ankara aims to maximize their political and military benefits.
The Turkish-Qatari role, which started during the era of Al-Bashir, and is trying to continue, in light of the many regional powers that oppose him and his presence, and then new old conflict axes emerged, but more so, after Turkey's control of the island and port of Suakin, and on the other side, the Qatari presence in Port Sudan Port, and its development, to become the largest container port on the Red Sea, thus controlling the most pivotal passage in the Red Sea region, from the Egyptian border, to Bab Al-Mandab in Yemen.
The presence of the Turkish military base in Qatar allows concealed arms deals, which Doha invests well to penetrate Africa, especially since Ankara also has political and economic interests in the countries of the continent, and also depends on solid military power.
Qatar has resorted to the development of military tools, and the intensification of investments and humanitarian interventions, as pressure tools on African regimes, as well as employing the alliance with Turkey to transfer it from its Middle Eastern to African context.
It is noticeable that there is an escalating Qatari trend after the Arab boycott of Qatar to settle some military industries, investing in this regard its alliance with Turkey, as the two countries agreed to construct the first military hardware factory to enhance defense cooperation, as Ankara has a military base in Doha, other than arms deals Hidden, flowing into Qatar, and includes armored vehicles and drones, which come to it from Turkey.
The Qatari tendency to sell arms to African countries has several basic goals, more related to the re-attack of the continent's offensive penetration, most notably the washing up of the reputation of Qatar's foreign policy in Africa, which has been eroded by accusations from within and outside the continent, of feeding Doha instability.
From behind its support to Qatar, Turkey aims to highlight its military and political role in the Gulf region by increasing the size of its military presence in Doha, and to use its money to support terrorist movements; to play a regional role that exceeds its political, military and population potentials, as the Qatari regime has spent 550 billion riyals on For two decades to support the Brotherhood’s terrorist projects and provide extremist groups, such as Al Qaeda and ISIS, with money, arms, and foreign fighters from all sides, to harbor them, in order to divide the region and fragment it, in order to create a greater role for the emirate, instead of spending this huge money in projects.