Posted on 09/26/2014 5:17:22 PM PDT by markomalley
Turkish reluctance to take part in the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) was largely explained by fears over the fate of 49 citizens abducted by the group.
Now that the hostages are free, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Friday said Turkeys position has changed, and what follows will be much different.
However, he stopped short of saying whether Ankara would join the coalition against ISIS, which has captured large swathes of neighboring Iraq and Syria.
Some experts say Turkeys lacklustre response to the U.S.-led campaign goes beyond the fate of the hostages.
Turkey is backing moderate rebel groups, and doesnt want to see itself engaged heavily in threatening ISIS, said George Joffe, a research fellow at the Centre of International Studies at Cambridge University.
Sinan Ülgen, chairman of the Istanbul-based Center for Economics and Foreign Policy, said the number one reason" is that ISIS can retaliate against Turkey, given that Turkey has a very long border with Iraq and Syria.
Several hundred Turks are suspected to be fighting alongside ISIS in Syria. The group is also feared to have sleeper cells in Turkey.
Ülgen said ISIS was able to infiltrate into Turkey due to Ankara allowing more Syrian rebel groups to use its territory, believing this will accelerate regime change in Syria. Thats why ISIS couldve established cells in Turkey. Ankara fears retaliation.
He added: Turkeys strategic aim of this [U.S.-led] coalition should be to address the failures of the governments in Syria and Iraq. Turkey views ISIS more of a symptom and the result of the failure of these two regimes, rather than a totally independent threat.
While ISIS is more of a threat to Turkey than the United States, the Turkish point of view is that the international community must now seize the occasion to become more aggressive to force the exit of [Syrian President Bashar] al-Assad, and ensure the end of the sectarian policies of [Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri] al-Malikis era.
Joffe said as ISIS is fighting the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), considered by Ankara a terrorist group, Turkey doesnt want to be seen as in bed with the PKK.
Joffe said if there was full-fledged Turkish participation in the coalition, there would likely be an agreement in allowing the Americans to supply the Kurds in Iraq with weaponry and training, in the hope that the [Turkish] PKK will be marginalized.
Regarding a change in Ankaras stance, one has to wait and see, Joffe said, but the suggestion is Turkey is now prepared to come in as NATO member and American ally fully on the side of the coalition.
The doubts are well founded in my view.
Turkey is complicated regarding the use of military force.
Their executive branch has to wait for legal authorization from their parliament before engaging a foreign country.
Their current authorization for for military action in Syria expires in October and they are working out the details for a reauthorization now.
Turkey is shady and cannot be trusted, nor should any other predominately Muslim country. Islam is a wicked scourge and, unfortunately, there is a reluctance among American politicians to identify it as such. Political correctness can be dangerous.
The Turkish leader Erdogan is disavowing Kemalist secularism & moving the country toward what he jokingly calls “Shariah Lite”.
When the Ataturk mausoleum is closed to the public, & Hagia Sophia is transformed into a mosque, & the fez pops up on every male head while women are engulfed in niqab, & the peace treaty with Israel is abrogated, then the West will finally wake up to resurgent Islamic supremacism in Asia Minor.
Sure they will.........
Sleeping in plain sight at all the Mosques in Ankara and other major cities in fact.Comfortable, well provided for, friendly with all the right people, and no one has any idea who they are. Right?
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