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Commentary
Hoover Institution

Mr. Magoo In Turkey

michael_doran
michael_doran
Senior Fellow and Director, Center for Peace and Security in the Middle East
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech following a cabinet meeting, in Ankara, on June 9, 2020
Caption
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech following a cabinet meeting, in Ankara, on June 9, 2020

Even a kerfuffle can reveal a strategic blunder. In December 2019, the New York Times editorial board taped an interview with former Vice President Joe Biden. A segment dealing with US-Turkish relations did not make the final cut, but eight months later, on August 15, 2020, it surfaced on the internet and sparked outrage in Turkey. Biden was especially critical of Turkey鈥檚 policies towards the Kurds and Russia, for which, he insisted, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo臒an must 鈥減ay a price.鈥� The United States, he continued, should cultivate 鈥渆lements of the Turkish leadership鈥� in order to 鈥渆mbolden them鈥o take on and defeat Erdo臒an.鈥� Biden鈥檚 words evoked images of an American-sponsored coup d鈥檈tat, though he hastened to clarify that he was calling for the Turks to remove their president through an 鈥渆lectoral process.鈥�

陌brahim Kal谋n, Erdo臒an鈥檚 spokesman, responded to Biden directly. 鈥淭he days of ordering Turkey around are over,鈥� he wrote on social media. 鈥淏ut if you still think you can try, be our guest. You will pay the price.鈥� Prominent opposition figures echoed Kal谋n鈥檚 sentiments. These included, most notably, Ekrem 陌mamo臒lu, the mayor of Istanbul, whom Biden had singled out as the kind of rival to Erdo臒an that America should 鈥渆mbolden.鈥� The era of foreign meddling in Turkey鈥檚 democracy had ended, 陌mamo臒lu said. 鈥淲e condemn it.鈥�

Lining up Erdo臒an鈥檚 greatest rivals in support of him is no mean feat. Turkey is as polarized as America, and Erdo臒an鈥檚 approval rating is low, hovering just above thirty percent. Still, Biden鈥檚 achievement, though impressive, is not unprecedented. Time and again over the last five years, American leaders have demonstrated a talent for unifying the Turks in opposition to the United States while remaining blissfully unaware of the impact of their words. What accounts for this Magoo-like obliviousness?

The answer: a pervasive misdiagnosis of the problem. For years now, the national security community in Washington has told itself a story that, by exaggerating the personal responsibility of Erdo臒an for the crisis in US-Turkish relations, blinds it to the truly important factors. The story is laden with moralizing buzzwords: Erdo臒an is the new 鈥渃aliph,鈥� and his 鈥渘eo-Ottoman鈥� and 鈥淚slamist鈥� ambitions, to say nothing of his 鈥渁uthoritarian鈥� and 鈥渒leptocratic鈥� character, have set Turkey on a collision course with the United States. Regardless of what one thinks of Erdo臒an, his policies that have most enraged Washington鈥攕uch as launching a military offensive last fall to drive American forces away from the Turkish border or buying the S-400 anti-aircraft system from Russia鈥攈ave enjoyed very broad domestic support, precisely because the Turkish public reviles the policies of the United States.

In short, America does not have an Erdo臒an problem; it has a Turkey problem. And that is a problem largely of its own making.

The prolonged crisis in US-Turkish relations intensified significantly in the fall of 2015, against the backdrop of the Russian-Iranian military offensive in Syria. The primary aim of the campaign was to retake Aleppo, located just forty miles south of the Turkish border. Standing between the Russian-Iranian alliance and its strategic target was Erdo臒an, the main foreign backer of the anti-Assad rebels. Which side was the United States on?

Without admitting it publicly, President Obama had long been tilting toward Russia and Iran. Negotiations over the Iran nuclear deal ended in July 2015. 鈥淚mplementation Day,鈥� on which the agreement came into full effect, was scheduled for January 16, 2016. Obama regarded this deal as a dramatic new opening to Moscow and Tehran, an initiative that he hoped would grow into a broad strategic accommodation, including cooperation on regional security matters. He intended Syria to be the proving ground of his new style of diplomacy. Turkey鈥檚 support for the anti-Assad rebels, however, was pulling the United States in the direction of enmity with the Russian-Iranian alliance. In Syria, Biden had said in 2014 to a group of Harvard students, 鈥渙ur biggest problem [is] our allies.鈥� He explicitly identified Turkey as a problematic actor.

Obama zealously avoided any action that would impede the march of the Russians and the Iranians on Aleppo. Thus, when a Turkish pilot downed a Russian fighter bomber on November 25, Obama did not support Turkey as a NATO ally struggling to contain Russia. Instead, he adopted the pose of a neutral mediator, seeking to help third parties sort out their differences. This impartiality contrasted sharply with the unwavering support that Russian leader Vladimir Putin was giving to his Syrian ally.

At the same time, Washington began to pressure Ankara to seal Turkey鈥檚 border with Syria, a step that would cut the supply lines to the rebels in Aleppo. The horrific terrorist attacks carried out by the Islamic State in Paris on November 13 offered Obama an opportunity to twist Erdo臒an鈥檚 arm. The attacks, which killed some 130 people, generated outrage throughout Europe. In an interview for the Wall Street Journal two weeks after the Paris attack, a senior American official described the message that Obama鈥檚 team was sending to the Turkish government. 鈥淭he game has changed. Enough is enough,鈥� the official said. 鈥淭he border needs to be sealed. This is an international threat, and it鈥檚 all coming out of Syria and it鈥檚 coming through Turkish territory.鈥� The official publicly warned Ankara of 鈥渟ignificant blowback鈥� from European powers if Turkey failed to close its border entirely.

This public shaming of Turkey helped fix in the European and American mind the image of Erdo臒an as a stealthy patron of the Islamic State. To be sure, Erdo臒an did not regard the defeat of the Islamic State as a top priority, but that was a mistake that many other leaders had also made鈥攊ncluding Obama himself, who once famously dismissed the terrorist organization as 鈥渢he JV team.鈥� Nevertheless, for Erdo臒an and the entire Turkish national-security community in Ankara, Turkey had a different overriding priority in the Syrian civil war: namely, to prevent the rise of Rojava, an autonomous Kurdish statelet run by the Kurdistan Worker鈥檚 Party (PKK).

Abdullah 脰calan founded the PKK in 1978. Six years later, he launched a terrorist insurgency with the goal of turning Eastern Turkey into an independent Kurdish state. In the 1980s, 脰calan partnered with the Soviet Union and Syria, which offered him sanctuary and a base from which to harass Turkey. In the late 1990s, the Turks captured and imprisoned 脰calan, who, thanks to the cultish reverence that his followers accord him, continues to function even from his prison cell as the PKK鈥檚 ideological guide. The character of 脰calan鈥檚 movement has shifted over the years, but in one form or another his war has continued down to this day. In total, approximately 40,000 people have died in the conflict.

The disintegration of the Syrian state offered the PKK a new opportunity. Throughout 2013 and 2014, the PKK鈥檚 Syrian arm, 鈥渢he Peoples Protection Units,鈥� or YPG, established control of the Kurdish cantons all along the Turkish border, proclaiming an autonomous political unit with its capital in Qamishli. Ankara, for its part, regarded this development as profoundly threatening to the territorial integrity of Turkey鈥攁nd with good reason. The PKK openly presents Rojava as the southern part of a much larger polity that will encompass all of Eastern Turkey. As Kurdish autonomous regions sprang up in Syria, a number of Kurdish towns in Turkey also proclaimed their autonomy.

Historically, the United States has respected the Turkish assessment of the threat. But as Obama negotiated his way through the labyrinth of the Syrian civil war, he broke with precedent and allied the United States with the PKK, by selecting the YPG has as its main partner for combating the Islamic State. American airstrikes in support of YPG operations began in Fall 2014; by early 2015, American special forces were embedded with YPG units. This choice enraged virtually all Turks and sowed the seeds of a future Turkish-PKK conflict.

To understand how and why Obama did this, a brief examination of relations between the PKK and the Assad regime is warranted. By the end of 2011, the civil war in Syria had generated conditions favoring a renewal and updating of the historical partnership between the PKK and Damascus. As the power of Damascus swiftly deteriorated, Bashar al-Assad sought to marshal all available forces to preserve his positions of strength in what his supporters were now calling 鈥渧ital Syria,鈥� the spine of Sunni Arab cities in the western part of the country: Aleppo, Homs, Hama, Damascus, and Deraa.

Saving vital Syria required abandoning all other areas鈥攁 strategy that risked losing the north and east of the country to the anti-Assad rebels and to Turkey. But the PKK鈥檚 Rojava project offered an alternative. What if Assad were instead to facilitate PKK dominance over them? In principle, he was no lover of Kurdish autonomy schemes, but he was weak and desperate, and the PKK had several attractive characteristics: it was anti-Turkish; it did not seek the total destruction of his regime; and it would prevent territory under its control from serving as a safe haven for anti-regime rebels.

Sometime at the end of 2011, Assad reached an agreement with the PKK over a loose alliance. According to some sources, Qassem Soleimani, the former head of the Qods Force of Iran鈥檚 Revolutionary Guards, played a role in brokering the deal. However it came about, the PKK created a Syrian militia, the aforementioned 鈥淧eoples Protection Units,鈥� or YPG, in order to carry it out on the ground. In sum, the PKK entered the Syrian civil war in alignment with Damascus鈥攁nd by extension, with Tehran and Moscow. In late 2015 and early 2016, Russia and Iran worked with the YPG, operating out of Afrin, northwest of Aleppo, to cut the rebels鈥� lifeline to Turkey. Aleppo was now besieged on all sides.

For Ankara, this was a double blow. Not only did it presage the ultimate fall of Aleppo, but it raised the prospect that the Kurdish cantons in Eastern Syria might link up, in a geographically contiguous fashion, with the cantons in the West. That prospect grew all the more real because, while the Russians and Iranians were working with the YPG in the West, the Americans were expanding its power and geographic reach in the East.

Obama鈥檚 embrace of the Syrian arm of the PKK had all the makings of a major political scandal, not least because the United States government designates the PKK as a terrorist organization. To cover its tracks, Washington rebranded the YPG, calling it now the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). To be sure, the SDF also included Arab elements, but its hardcore fighting units came directly from the YPG, as did its leadership. The commander of the SDF goes by the alias of General Mazloum Abdi. His real name is Ferhat Abdi 艦ahin: a lifelong member of the PKK and a close personal associate of Abdullah 脰calan. In the Kurdish areas under his control, he uses the SDF to impose a PKK monopoly over Kurdish political life.

By giving the PKK a fake identity, Obama successfully fostered the impression in the United States that the American-led campaign against the Islamic State was completely independent of the Russian-Iranian campaign to shore up Assad. In truth, however, a key attraction of the YPG was its status as a Russian-Iranian proxy. Obama鈥檚 partnership with it assured Moscow and Tehran that the United States was solely interested in destroying the Islamic State and harbored no intention to support those, like Turkey, who sought to block the Russian-Iranian march on Aleppo. Even more, Obama was effectively shutting the Turks out of the Syrian game, thus giving Russia and Iran a free hand.

Seen from Ankara, therefore, Obama鈥檚 embrace of the YPG was ominous. Who would ever have predicted that Washington would assist, in parallel with Tehran and Moscow, the PKK鈥檚 Rojava project? The Turks complained often and loudly to the Americans, who fobbed them off with the meaningless assurance that America鈥檚 relationship with the YPG was 鈥渢emporary, tactical, and transactional.鈥�

But the permanent consequences were obvious to the Turks. Ankara was particularly concerned lest the United States assist the YPG in establishing a presence west of the Euphrates, where it could establish a land bridge between the Kurdish cantons of Eastern and Western Syria, which are otherwise separated by long distances and significant Arab areas of settlement. The United States first promised not to deploy the YPG west of the Euphrates, then broke the promise in the spring of 2016, by facilitating the YPG conquest of Manbij. To assuage Turkish anger, Vice President Joe Biden flew to Ankara and delivered a public guarantee that YPG forces would not remain in Manbij. 鈥淲e have made it clear to Kurdish forces that they must move back across the river,鈥� Biden said. 鈥淭hey cannot and will not get American support if they do not keep that commitment. Period.鈥�

Biden made that promise in August 2016. A year and a half later, the New York Times reported that the local governing body in Manbij, which was established with the indispensable aid of American military power, 鈥渋s modeled on principles of the Kurdish separatist leader, Abdullah 脰calan,鈥� whose photograph is prominently displayed in the office of the council鈥檚 spokesman. Under Washington鈥檚 鈥渢emporary鈥� protective umbrella, the PKK has increased its military might and expanded its geographical reach beyond its wildest imagination.

And it has also gained in international legitimacy. For the first time ever, the PKK now enjoys, through its YPG and SDF personas, support both in the American military and in Congress. As a result, each of the several Turkish military interventions in Syria have been met with a chorus of condemnation on Capitol Hill based on the absurd notion that the bogeyman Erdo臒an is pursuing an 鈥淚slamist鈥� and 鈥渘eo-Ottoman鈥� agenda characterized by hatred of 鈥渢he Kurds.鈥� In fact, these Turkish military operations have been limited in scope, designed purely to prevent the PKK from establishing a contiguous statelet, and have enjoyed the support of a broad spectrum of Turkish public opinion, including secularists.

Biden鈥檚 December 2019 remarks to the New York Times editorial board signalled that the bogeyman analysis of Turkish foreign policy has now found its way into the domestic American debate during this season鈥檚 contest for the presidency. The exaggerated focus on Erdo臒an is politically useful to Democrats because it places Erdo臒an alongside Hungary鈥檚 Victor Orban, Brazil鈥檚 Jair Bolsanaro, and Israel鈥檚 Benjamin Netanyahu as a member in a fictive coalition of dangerous authoritarian leaders supposedly led by President Donald Trump.

This development is regrettable. When Biden talked of encouraging 鈥渆lements鈥� to unseat Erdo臒an, Turks immediately recalled that the last such attempt was led from a command center in the Pocono mountains of Pennsylvania, where Fethullah G眉len, the guru-like leader of a religious movement, has been residing since 1999. A majority of Turks hold G眉len responsible for the July 2016 coup attempt that killed 251 people. Before taking up his current position as the State Department鈥檚 point man on Syria, Ambassador James Jeffrey stated that it is 鈥渆mbarrassing鈥� that Mr. G眉len 鈥渋s sitting here in the United States.鈥� Is it an accident, many Turks ask, that the United States both supports the PKK and refuses to extradite a coup plotter whose cultish followers were embedded in the Turkish military? Is the United States secretly seeking to crack Turkey apart?

Biden鈥檚 remarks validate such queries. They sow deep distrust of American motives and set the United States at odds with the sentiments of most if not all of Turkey鈥檚 national security experts, to say nothing of public opinion, thereby imperilling the search for a strategic accommodation with Ankara. But arriving at such an accommodation should be seen instead as a top priority of American foreign policy鈥攁s the key to managing the central contradiction in American policy toward the Middle East. On the one hand, talk of withdrawing from the Middle East is rife on both sides of the political aisle, and the American public has no tolerance for significant military commitments. On the other hand, if the United States leaves the region, Russia, China and Iran will fill the ensuing vacuum. America is thus betwixt and between.

Obama鈥檚 answer to this dilemma was to attempt to co-opt Russia and Iran鈥攐n the theory that Tehran and Moscow shared with the United States a large number of interests, first and foremost being the desire to contain radical Islamic movements like al-Qaeda and the Islamic State. That effort, however, was misguided, because both Russia and Iran are opposed to the American security system.

If America is to build an order that will safeguard its interests on the ground, it must work with countries that are stable, self-confident, and capable of projecting power. Turkey is at the top of the very short list of states that meet those criteria. Working with it productively requires respecting its own understanding of its greatest security threat, the PKK. America鈥檚 failure to do so has done untold damage to the US-Turkey partnership, with adverse consequence that extend far beyond Syria.

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