Turkey pivots to the center
of The New Great Game
December 28, 2020
https://thesaker.is/turkey-pivots-to-the-center-of-the-new-great-game/
by Pepe Escobar with permission and first posted at Asia Times
When it comes to
sowing – and profiting – from division, Erdogan’s Turkey is quite the
superstar.
Under the
delightfully named Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act
(CAATSA), the Trump administration duly slapped sanctions on Ankara for daring
to buy Russian S-400 surface-to-air missile defense systems. The sanctions
focused on Turkey’s defense procurement agency, the SSB.
Turkish Foreign
Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu’s response was swift: Ankara won’t back down – and it
is in fact mulling how to respond.
The European
poodles inevitably had to provide the follow-up. So after the proverbial,
interminable debate in Brussels, they settled for “limited” sanctions – adding
a further list for a summit in March 2021. Yet these sanctions actually focus
on as-yet-unidentified individuals involved in offshore drilling in Cyprus
and Greece. They have nothing to do with S-400s.
What the EU has
come up with is in fact a very ambitious, global human-rights sanctions regime
modeled after the US’s Magnitsky Act. That implies travel bans and
asset freezes of people unilaterally considered responsible for genocide,
torture, extrajudicial killings, and crimes against humanity.
Turkey, in this
case is just a guinea pig. The EU always hesitates mightily when it comes to
sanctioning a NATO member. What the Eurocrats in Brussels really want is an
extra, powerful tool to harass mostly China and Russia.
Our jihadis, sorry, “moderate rebels”
What’s fascinating
is that Ankara under Erdogan always seems to be exhibiting a sort of “devil may
care” attitude.
Take the seemingly
insoluble situation in the Idlib cauldron in northwest Syria. Jabhat al-Nusra –
a.k.a. al-Qaeda in Syria – honchos are now involved in “secret” negotiations
with Turkish-backed armed gangs, such as Ahrar al-Sharqiya, right in front of
Turkish officials. The objective: to boost the number of jihadis concentrated
in certain key areas. The bottom line: a large number of these will come from
Jabhat al-Nusra.
So Ankara for all
practical purposes remains fully behind hardcore jihadis in northwest Syria –
disguised under the “innocent” brand Hayat Tahrir al-Sham. Ankara has
absolutely no interest in letting these people disappear. Moscow, of course, is
fully aware of these shenanigans, but wily Kremlin and Defence Ministry
strategists prefer to let it roll, for the time being, assuming the Astana
process shared by Russia, Iran, and Turkey can be somewhat fruitful.
Erdogan, at the
same time, masterfully plays the impression that he’s totally involved in
pivoting towards Moscow. He’s effusive that “his Russian colleague Vladimir
Putin” supports the idea – initially tabled by Azerbaijan – of a regional
security platform uniting Russia, Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Georgia and
Armenia. Erdogan even said that if Yerevan is part of this mechanism, “a new
page may be opened” in so far intractable Turkey-Armenia relations.
It will help, of
course, that even under Putin's pre-eminence, Erdogan will have a very important
seat at the table of this putative security organization.
The Big Picture is
even more fascinating – because it lays out various aspects of Putin’s Eurasia
balancing strategy, which involves as main players Russia, China, Iran, Turkey, and Pakistan.
On the eve of the
first anniversary of the assassination of Gen Soleimani, Tehran is far from
cowed and “isolated”. For all practical purposes, it is slowly but surely forcing
the US out of Iraq. Iran’s diplomatic and military links to Iraq, Syria and
Lebanon remains solid.
And with fewer US
troops in Afghanistan, the fact is Iran for the first time since the “axis of
evil” era will be less surrounded by the Pentagon. Both Russia and China – the
key nodes of Eurasia integration – fully approve it.
Of course the
Iranian rial has collapsed against the US dollar, and oil income has fallen
from over $100 billion a year to something like $7 billion. But non-oil exports
are going well over $30 billion a year.
All is about to
change for the better. Iran is building an ultra-strategic pipeline from the
eastern part of the Persian Gulf to the port of Jask in the Gulf of Oman –
bypassing the Strait of Hormuz, and ready to export up to 1 million barrels of
oil a day. China will be the top customer.
President Rouhani
said the pipeline will be ready by the summer of 2021, adding that Iran plans
to be selling over 2.3 million barrels of oil a day next year – with or without the US sanctions alleviated by Biden-Harris.
Watch the Golden Ring
Iran is well linked
to Turkey to the West and Central Asia to the east. An extra important element
in the chessboard is the entrance of freight trains directly linking Turkey to
China via Central Asia -bypassing Russia.
Earlier this month,
the first freight train left Istanbul for an 8,693 km, 12-day trip, crossing
below the Bosphorus via the brand new Marmary tunnel, inaugurated a year ago,
then along the East-West Middle Corridor via the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars (BTK)
railway, across Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Kazakhstan.
In Turkey, this is
known as the Silk Railway. It was the BTK that reduced freight transport from
Turkey to China from one month to only 12 days. The whole route from East Asia
to Western Europe can now be traveled in only 18 days. BTK is the key node of
the so-called Middle Corridor from Beijing to London and the Iron Silk Road
from Kazakhstan to Turkey.
All of the above
totally fits the EU’s agenda – especially Germany’s: implementing a strategic
trade corridor linking the EU to China, bypassing Russia.
This would
eventually, lead to one of the key alliances to be consolidated in the Raging
Twenties: Berlin-Beijing.
To speed up this
putative alliance, the talk in Brussels is that Eurocrats would profit from
Turkmen nationalism, pan-Turkism, and the recent entente cordiale between
Erdogan and Xi when it comes to the Uighurs. But there’s a problem: many a
turcophone tribe prefers an alliance with Russia.
Moreover, Russia is
inescapable when it comes to other corridors. Take, for instance, a flow of
Japanese goods going to Vladivostok and then via the Trans-Siberian to Moscow
and onwards to the EU.
The bypass-Russia
EU strategy was not exactly a hit in Armenia-Azerbaijan: what we had was a
relative Turkey retreat and a de facto Russian victory, with Moscow reinforcing
its military position in the Caucasus.
Enter an even more
interesting gambit: the Azerbaijan-Pakistan strategic partnership, now on
overdrive in trade, defense, energy, science and technology, and agriculture.
Islamabad, incidentally, supported Baku on Nagorno-Karabakh.
Both Azerbaijan and
Pakistan has very good relations with Turkey: a matter of very complex,
interlocking Turk-Persian cultural heritage.
And they may get
even closer, with the International North-South Transportation Corridor (INTSC)
increasingly connecting not only Islamabad to Baku but also both to Moscow.
Thus the extra
dimension of the new security mechanism proposed by Baku uniting Russia,
Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Armenia: all the Top Four here want
closer ties with Pakistan.
Analyst Andrew
Korybko has neatly dubbed it the “Golden Ring” – a new dimension to Central
Eurasian integration featuring Russia, China, Iran, Pakistan, Turkey,
Azerbaijan and the central Asian “stans”. So this all goes way beyond a
possible Triple Entente: Berlin-Ankara-Beijing.
What’s certain as
it stands is that the all-important Berlin-Moscow relationship is bound to
remain as cold as ice. Norwegian analyst Glenn Diesen summed it all up: “The German-Russian
partnership for Greater Europe was replaced with the Chinese-Russian
partnership for Greater Eurasia”.
What’s also certain
is that Erdogan, a master of pivoting, will find ways to simultaneously profit
from both Germany and Russia.
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