by Gregg Roman
McMaster's speech highlighted an emerging recognition among Trump administration officials that Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's Turkey poses a pernicious threat to US interests in the Near East.
Originally published under the title, "Navigating the U.S. Collision Course with Turkey."
Erdoğan has been repositioning Turkey as an adversary of the United States for years.
|
No more silence. No more favors. No more trust. No more second chances.
|
That
Erdoğan was secretly weakening U.S. sanctions right when Iran was
feeling the pinch should come as no surprise. He has been repositioning
Turkey as an adversary of the United States for years — covertly aiding
ISIS in Syria (before switching sides on a dime to align with Russian
forces), overtly embracing Hamas terrorists, flooding Europe with
migrants, and hosting an international summit condemning U.S.
recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, to name just a few of
the lowlights. While wishful thinkers still hold out hope that
U.S.-Turkish relations are strained by short-term concerns and
eventually will rebound, a growing chorus of voices led by Daniel Pipes
contends that "Erdoğan's hostile dictatorship" has passed the point of
no return and cannot be reconciled with American interests and values.
Erdoğan's increasingly brutal methods of governance, particularly since a
July 2016 failed coup against his regime, is wholly unbecoming of a
NATO ally. In late December, he issued an emergency decree that
effectively legalizes politically-motivated lynching.
Why
does the United States continue to allow Erdoğan's malign behavior in
the region? And, more importantly, what should policymakers do about it?
For
Washington, it is time both to up the ante in seeking a course
correction from Erdoğan and to prepare for the worst. This path forward
should be guided by the following basic principles.
No more silence
Since
Erdoğan goes out of his way to lambast the United States at every turn,
Washington should make a practice of not holding back when it censures
his behavior.
The
United States should speak out against Erdoğan's continuing oppression
of minority Kurds, in Turkey and in neighboring Syria and Iraq. In
particular, it should call for the release of Kurdish political leaders
jailed by Erdoğan, such as Selahattin Demirtaş, co-chair of the
Kurdish-dominated Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP). The US should invite
Kurdish representatives to visit Washington for high-profile meetings at
the White House, the State Department and the Pentagon.
No more favors
Last
June, the United States International Trade Commission issued a report
finding that Turkey has been subsidizing the sale of steel reinforcing
bars (rebars) in the United States, a judgment that ordinarily leads to
the imposition of anti-dumping tariffs. As of yet, this hasn't happened.
But it must.
More
serious penalties should await Turkey for purchasing the S-400 missile
system from Russia last year, which clearly ran afoul of new U.S.
sanctions on Russia (the manufacturer of the S-400 has been explicitly
blacklisted by the State Department). The White House should immediately
put to rest speculation that it intends to waive these penalties.
No more trust
Whichever
direction Erdoğan's ambitions take Turkey, one thing is certain — his
regime cannot be trusted with sensitive military technology and
intelligence. The United States should expel Turkey from the nine-nation
consortium producing the next-generation F-35 fighter jet. The risk
that the plane's technological secrets will find their way from Turkey
to Russia or Iran is too great.
The
United States should remove dozens of nuclear weapons presently stored
at Incirlik air base in southern Turkey. Although adequate safeguards
are in place, these weapons serve no practical purpose (aircraft
stationed at the base cannot load them) and their continued presence
might be misconstrued as a U.S. endorsement of Erdoğan's reliability as
an ally.
No more second chances
Erdoğan's
government arrested more than a dozen American citizens of Turkish
descent — including a NASA scientist who happened to be visiting
family—in the wake of the July 2016 coup attempt. These arrests, as well
as those of tens of thousands of Turkey's own subjects, are based on
unspecified allegations concerning these individuals' involvement in the
coup. Most incarcerated Americans were denied consular access until
recently. At least seven are still being held in Turkish prisons— more
or less as hostages. Erdoğan has offered to trade them for the
extradition of a political rival living in the United States. While on a
May 2017 visit to Washington, Erdoğan ordered his security detail to
viciously attack peaceful protesters outside the Turkish ambassador's
residence. A similar, equally appalling episode happened when he visited
in 2016.
Washington
must make it crystal clear to Erdoğan that any further egregious
violations of the laws of the United States, the sanctity of its soil,
or the rights of its citizens will result in immediate sanctions banning
him and his lieutenants from stepping foot in this country (or inside
one of its embassies) ever again.
In
conclusion, while Turkey's relative political stability, economic
strength and military power make it a desirable ally, they also make it a
formidable enemy. Now is the time to make it clear to Erdoğan and his
subjects that America no longer plays nice with its enemies.Gregg Roman is director of the Middle East Forum.
Source: http://www.meforum.org/7239/crafting-a-us-response-to-turkish-intransigence
Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment