Turkey signals sweeping regional ambitions
By James M.
Dorsey
A nationalist Turkish television station with close ties to
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has dug up a 12-year-old map that projects Turkey’s sphere of
influence in 2050 as stretching from South-eastern Europe on the northern coast
of the Mediterranean and Libya on its southern shore across North Africa, the
Gulf and the Levant into the Caucasus and Central Asia.
Buoyed by last year’s Azerbaijani
defeat of Armenia, TGRT, a subsidiary of Ihlas Holding, a media and
construction conglomerate that has won major government tenders, used the map
to advance a policy that has long constituted the agenda of some of Mr.
Erdogan’s closest advisors.
The broadcasting of the map, first
published in a book authored by George Freidman, the founder of Stratfor, an influential
American corporate intelligence group, followed calls by pan-Turkic daily Turkiye, Ihlas’ daily newspaper that has the
fourth-largest circulation in Turkey, to leverage the Azerbaijani victory to
create a military alliance of Turkic states.
In a country that ranks only second
to China as the world’s foremost jailer of journalists, Ihlas Holding media
would not be pushing a pan-Turkic, Islam-laced Turkish regional policy without
tacit government approval at the very least.
The media group’s push reflects
Turkish efforts to capitalize on the fact that Turkey’s latest geopolitical
triumph with Azerbaijan’s Turkish-backed victory is already producing tangible
results. The military victory has positioned Azerbaijan, and by extension
Turkey, as an alternative transportation route westwards that would allow Central Asian nations to bypass corridors dominated by
either Russia or Iran.
Turkmenistan, recognizing the
changing geopolitical map, rushed in January to end a long-standing dispute
with Azerbaijan and agree on the joint exploitation of Caspian Sea oil
deposits. The agreement came on the heels of a deal in December for the
purchase from ENI Turkmenistan of up to 40,000 tonnes of petroleum a month by
the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR).
The agreement could boost the completion
of a Trans-Caspian natural gas pipeline (TPC) that would feed into the recently operational Southern Gas Corridor (SGC),
bypass Russia and Iran, and supply Greece and Bulgaria via the former Soviet
republic.
Last month, Azerbaijan agreed with
Turkmenistan and Afghanistan to develop the Lapis Lazuli transport corridor that
would link the war-ravaged country to Turkey. At about the same time, Kazakhstan began exporting copper cathodes
to Turkey via Azerbaijan in a first step intended to capitalize on the
Caucasian nation’s position as a transit hub.
Azerbaijan and Turkey’s newly found advantage
has rung alarm bells among Russian and Iranian analysts with close ties to
their respective governments even though the TGRT broadcast may have been
primarily intended to whip up nationalist fervour at home and test regional
responses.
Russian and Iranian politicians and
analysts appeared to take the broadcast in that vein. Nonetheless, they were
quick to note that Friedman’s projection includes Russia’s soft underbelly in
the northern Caucasus as well as Crimea while Iranians took stock of the fact
that the Turkish sphere of influence would border on Iran to the north, south
and west.
Turkey and Ukraine have in recent
months agreed to cooperate in the development of technologies with military applications related to engines, avionics, drones, anti-ship and cruise missiles,
radar and surveillance systems, robotics, space, and satellites. Turkey has
refused to recognize Russia’s annexation of Crimea, home to Crimean Tartars,
and criticized Russian support for Ukrainian rebels.
Most Russian commentators sought to
downplay the significance of the map, leaving Andrei Krasov, deputy chairman of the defence
committee of the Russian parliament’s lower house to warn that “if they (the
Turks) want to test the strength of the Russian spirit and our weapons, let
them try.”
With Iran excluded from TGRT and Stratfor’s
projection of Turkey’s emerging sphere of influence, Iranian officials and
analysts have largely not responded to the revival of the map.
Yet, Iran’s actions on the ground
suggest that the Islamic republic has long anticipated Turkish moves even
though it was caught off guard by last year’s Azerbaijani-Armenian war.
For one, Iran has in the past year
sought to bolster its military presence in the Caspian Sea and forge close naval ties with the
basin’s other littoral states - Russia, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, and
Kazakhstan.
Viewed from Tehran, TGRT’s
broadcasting of the Stratfor map was the latest in a series of provocative Turkish moves.
They include Mr. Erdogan’s recital of
a nationalist poem while attending a military parade in Azerbaijan that calls
for reuniting two Iranian ethnic Azeri provinces with the former Soviet
republic and publication by state-run Turkish Radio and Television’s Arabic
service of a map on Instagram, depicting Iran’s oil-rich province of Khuzestan
with its large population of ethnic Arabs as separate from Iran.
The Instagram posting came days after
the disclosure that Habib Chaab, a leader of the Arab Struggle Movement for the
Liberation of Ahvaz, or ASMLA, had been kidnapped in Istanbul by an Iraqi
Kurdish drug baron in cooperation with Iranian intelligence and transported to
Iran.
While senior Iranian officials talked
down the Turkish provocations, Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency left little doubt about what Iran’s
true sentiments were.
“Those who
have greedy eyes on the territories this side of the Aras River had better
study history and see that Azerbaijan, specifically the people of Tabriz, have
always pioneered in defending Iran. If Iran had not helped you on the night of
the coup, you would have had a fate like that of former Egyptian President
Mohammed Morsi,’ protesters chanted in front of the Turkish consulate in
Tabriz, the capital of Iran’s East Azerbaijan province.
The protesters
were responding to Mr. Erdogan’s poem recital and referring to the failed
military coup against him in 2016 as well as the toppling of Mr. Morsi in 2013
in a takeover by the Egyptian armed forces.
A podcast
version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore and the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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