Gulf support for Turkey’s Erdogan is about more than economics.
By James M.
Dorsey
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When jailed
Turkish politician Selahattin Demirtas apologized for his pro-Kurdish
party’s poor performance in recent Turkish elections, he did more than take responsibility.
Mr. Demirtas
implicitly questioned the notion that Turks vote primarily along ideological
and identity lines rather than based on assessing which party will best further
their economic and social interests. However, the reality is that all the above
shape how Turks vote.
Mr.
Demirtas’ Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), running under another party banner
due to a potential ban over alleged militant ties, won 8.79 percent in last
month’s parliamentary election compared to 11.7 per cent in 2018. Even so, it
remains the third-largest party in parliament.
At first
glance, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s economic performance suggested that
Turks would choose change. Inflation hovers around 44 per cent; the Turkish lira has lost 90 per cent of its value over the last decade and hit a new
low a day after Mr. Erdogan’s electoral victory.
In addition,
many blame corruption and a failure to enforce building standards for the
degree of devastation caused by earthquakes in February in eastern Turkey,
parts of which are predominantly Kurdish.
Stunning as
those statistics and allegations may be, they tell only part of the story.
Counterintuitively,
Mr. Erdogan likely benefitted not only from skills that best come to the fore
when he is in a political fight but also from his religiosity, religious lacing
of politics, and promotion of greater freedom for public expressions of piety
in a country that long sought to restrict them to the private sphere.
Conservative
religious women were one major constituency that
benefitted economically and socially from Mr. Erdogan’s rollback of Kemalist restrictions that
barred women from wearing headscarves in government offices and universities.
"Erdogan
is loved that much because he changed people's lives," said Ozlem Zengin,
a female member of parliament for the president’s Justice and Development Party
(AKP).
Similarly,
religion may have been one reason voters in earthquake-hit areas favoured the
AKP above Mr. Demirtas’ HDP.
Economist
Jeanet Sinding Bentzen notes that “individuals become more religious if
an earthquake recently hit close by. Even though the effect decreases after a while, data on
children of immigrants reveal a persistent effect across generations.”
Economics in
mind, some voters questioned whether opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu with
his vow to reintegrate Turkey into the Western fold, would have been able to
secure badly needed support from Gulf states like Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates.
After years
of strained relations, Saudi and Emirati support for Mr. Erdogan was displayed
within days of the Turkish leader's electoral success.
The UAE
ratified a five-year, US$40 billion trade deal with Turkey three days after the
vote. ‘This deal marks a new era of cooperation in our long-standing friendship,” said
UAE Minister of State for Foreign Trade Thani al-Zeyoudi.
Meanwhile,
Saudi Aramco, the kingdom’s national oil company, met in Ankara with some 80 Turkish
contractors this
week to discuss US$50 billion worth of potential projects.
“Aramco
wants to see as many Turkish contractors as possible in its projects. They are
planning refinery, pipeline, management buildings, and other infrastructure
construction that will be worth $50 billion in investment,” said Erdal Eren,
head of the Turkish Contractors Association.
In a bow to
foreign investors, including Gulf states that increasingly tie aid to recipients’
economic reform policies, Mr. Erdogan on Saturday named Mehmet Simsek, a widely respected former banker
and deputy prime minister and finance minister, as his new treasury and finance
minister.
Foreign
investors and analysts saw the appointment of Mr. Simsek, an advocate of
conventional economic policies, as a sign that Mr. Erdogan may shift away from
his unorthodox refusal to raise interest rates that fueled inflation and an
exodus of foreign money.
In addition
to stabilizing the economy, Mr. Erdogan faces challenges funding reconstruction
in earthquake-hit areas as well as northern Syria as part of an effort to
facilitate the return of refugees.
With 3.7
million registered refugees, Turkey is home to the largest Syrian exile
community. Anti-migrant sentiment and pledges to return refugees were important
in last month's election campaigns. Refugee return is also part of the Gulf states’ renewed engagement
with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
In a twist
of irony, Gulf support for Mr. Erdogan, despite his Islamist leanings, may be
driven as much by economics as geopolitics.
At a time
when the UAE and Saudi Arabia adopt positions at odds with the policies of the
United States, the region's security guarantor, they may see Mr. Erdogan as an
increasingly important partner irrespective of whether the Gulf states’ moves
constitute a genuine policy shift or merely a pressure tactic to persuade the
US to be more attentive to their concerns.
Like the two
Gulf states, Mr. Erdogan, despite Turkey's NATO membership, has pursued an independent
foreign policy involving close ties to Russia and a military intervention in
Syria that impacts Gulf efforts to drive a wedge between Syria and Iran.
In its
latest charting of an independent course, the UAE said it was pulling out of a US-led maritime
security force, the
Combined Maritime Forces (CMF).
Led by a US
admiral, the CMF groups 38 countries, including Saudi Arabia, in a bid to halt
Iranian attacks on commercial ships, weapons smuggling, and piracy.
The UAE said
its withdrawal was part of an assessment of “effective security cooperation” in
the Middle East.
However, US
National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and his Emirati counterpart, Tahnoon
bin Zayed Al Nahyan, did not mention a UAE withdrawal in a joint statement on Friday after
talks in Washington.
"Sheikh
Tahnoon praised the United States' strong security and defense partnership with
the UAE. Mr. Sullivan confirmed the US commitment to deterring threats against
the UAE and other US partners while also working diplomatically to de-escalate
conflicts and reduce tensions in the region," the statement said.
Moreover, US
Secretary of State Anthony Blinken will meet in Saudi Arabia this week with
his Gulf Cooperation Council counterparts, including the UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed
al Nahyan.
At the same
time, various Iranian and other media quoted a Qatari news website, Al Jadid, saying
that China was facilitating talks between the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Iran
to create a joint naval force to enhance maritime security in the Gulf.
The report
did not clarify whether China would play an active role in the force or whether
participation would be limited to Middle Eastern states.
Iranian
naval commander Rear Admiral Shahram Irani discussed
plans for a joint
maritime force on local television but did not mention Chinese involvement.
In a first
response, CMS and US Fifth Fleet spokesman Commander Tim Hawkins dismissed the notion of maritime
forces that includes Iran. ““It defies reason that Iran, the number one cause of regional
instability, claims it wants to form a naval security alliance to protect the
very waters it threatens,” Mr. Hawkins said.
Nevertheless,
the force, if created, could cast a different light on Emirati and Saudi
efforts to boost Mr. Erdogan.
Taken
together, the UAE’s alleged withdrawal from the US-led CMF, the creation of a
China-associated alternative force, and support for Mr. Erdogan would signal a
Gulf willingness to take greater responsibility for the region’s security.
It would
also indicate a qualitative change in Chinese engagement in the Middle East
following the China-mediated agreement in March between Saudi Arabia and Iran
that restored diplomatic relations.
Turkey has
been conspicuously absent in discussions about Gulf security even though it is
a regional powerhouse with a battle-hardened military, an expanding homegrown
defence industry, and regional ambitions. The UAE and Saudi Arabia account for 40 per cent of Turkish arms exports.
Turkey first
proposed establishing a military base in Saudi
Arabia in 2015, two
years before the kingdom and the UAE initiated a 3.5-year-long diplomatic and
economic boycott of Qatar that was lifted in 2021. The Gulf states demanded,
among others, that Qatar halt military cooperation with Turkey and shut down a
Turkish military base populated by Turkish forces at the beginning of the
boycott.
“If the
current trend of US detachment from the region continues, and Turkey’s rising
regional posture keeps moving in a forward direction, Ankara may have an opportunity to
fortify its position in the Gulf,” said Middle East scholar Ali Bakir.
Thank you for joining me today. I hope you enjoyed today’s
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you, take care and best wishes.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological
University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and the author of the
syndicated column and podcast, The
Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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