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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, August 3, 2015
What’s Behind Turkey’s U-Turn on the Islamic State?
Hint: It’s more about Washington and the Kurds than it is about Syria’s dangerous Islamists.

After years of disagreement, the United States and Turkey are preparing
to fight together in Syria. In a major turnabout last week, the Turkish
government announced that it would open its southern air bases to the
U.S. Air Force in the war against the Islamic State (IS). The Turkish
Air Force has also begun attacking IS targets, launching an attack on Friday that struck three of the group’s positions inside Syria. Washington and Ankaraaim to eliminate the Islamic State from a 60-mile strip of land it still holds along the border with Turkey, and Turkish officials told the New York Timesthat they envision a “safe zone” for displaced Syrians in that territory.
This represents a stark turnabout for Ankara, which has long been a very
reluctant partner, if not openly hostile, to the Obama administration’s
policies in Syria. Turks and Americans differed strongly over what was
the main threat: For Washington, it is the Islamic State, whereas for
Ankara it is President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Damascus.
Although the impetus for the change appeared to be the devastating July
20 suicide attack in the southern town of Suruc, which killed at least
32 people, mostly young activists, the fact of the matter is that
Turkish authorities appear to have reluctantly come to the conclusion
that they had no choice but to join the coalition even before the
bombing. Turkish authorities launched coordinated raids arresting
Islamist radicals and shut down some of their social media sites in
early July, before the bombing. The decision to formally agree to join
the coalition was probably finalized during a visit to Ankara by Under
Secretary of Defense Christine Wormuth and the U.S. special envoy for
the anti-IS coalition, retired Gen. John Allen, in early July.
There are three broad reasons for Ankara’s change of heart. The first is
Turkey’s deteriorating relations with the United States. Second, Ankara
was alarmed by increasing U.S. cooperation with Syrian Kurds, which was
growing deeper with every day that Turkey refused to cooperate with
Washington. And finally, the Turks realized that IS had become a
formidable entity potentially representing a threat to them as well.
Prior to this decision, U.S.-Turkish relations had reached a rare low.
President Barack Obama, among other officials in Washington, was publicly complaining of
Turkey’s lack of resolve in the fight against IS, and was especially
critical of Turkey’s open-door policy that allowed jihadists from all
over the world to transit Turkey with ease on the way to Syria. By
refusing the anti-IS coalition access to the mammoth Incirlik Air Base
in southern Turkey, only some 60 miles from the Syrian border, the U.S.
Air Force had to fly in from bases in the Persian Gulf or from carriers
in the Mediterranean, making it difficult to respond quickly against a
nimble and unconventional adversary.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and elements of the Turkish press
closely aligned with him, meanwhile, have long heaped scorn on Obama’s
policies in Syria.When in October 2014 the United States decided to come
to the aid of Syrian Kurds besieged by IS in the town of Kobani,
Erdoganthundered, “What’s in Kobani, oil? Gold? Diamonds?” — as if lucre was the only motivator of U.S. foreign policy.
In fact, it is this U.S. decision to support Syrian Kurds — and
subsequently to openly partner with them in the fight against IS — that
really caused the Turks to rethink their policy of noncooperation with
United States. In fact, the Syrian Kurds have been the sole military
force that, with significant U.S air support, could inflict serious
blows against IS. The Turks, however, see this growing partnership
through the prism of their own three-decade-long struggle against
Kurdish insurgents.
The Democratic Union Party (PYD) leads Syrian Kurds, who represent some
10 to 12 percent of the population and whose ancestral lands lay near
the Turkish border. The PYD is an offshoot of the Turkish-Kurdish
insurgent group, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). The PKK, deemed a
terrorist organization by both Ankara and Washington, has been fighting
the Turkish state since 1984. By contrast, only Turkey considers the PYD
to be a terrorist group — as Washington openly cooperates with it,
Ankarareportedly shelled a northern Syrian village held by the group.
Paradoxically, this Turkish government had gone the furthest to seek a
peaceful solution to the Kurdish issue at home. However, the combination
of developments in Syria, Turkey’s initial refusal to aid Syrian Kurds
in Kobani, and a bitterly fought election campaign this past June have
undermined peace talks. The PKK made matters much worse by executing two
police officers in a revenge attack for the Suruc bombing, for which it
blamed Erdogan’s government. The resulting escalation has allowed the
government to launch a campaign detaining hundreds of Kurdish activists
around the country. The conflict reached a climax on July 28, when
Erdogan essentiallycalled off the “peace process” with the PKK, saying it was “impossible” to continue amidst the ongoing attacks.
The Turks, ever so worried about their own domestic problem with their
Kurdish minority, feel threatened by PYD gains in northern Syria and its
aim to create an autonomous region bordering Turkish territory. For
them, it is just one more sign that the Kurdish genie is out of the
bottle.
U.S cooperation with the Syrian Kurds went much further than Turkey had
ever envisioned. Not only did the United States begin to act as the
PYD’s air force, the U.S. military also incorporated PYD fighters as
spotters for its air campaign against IS and even invited a PYD official
to sit in the operations room in the northern Iraqi city of Erbil. No
other group of Syrian insurgents enjoyed such privileges. Turkey, in
other words, had become an observer in its most important ally’s Syria
strategy.
Finally, the free hand that IS and other Syrian jihadist insurgent
groups have had over the years means that the jihadist group has now
developed a deep infrastructure in Turkey. Foreigners arriving in
Istanbul hoping to join the Syrian jihad were whisked to the border
through a network of safe houses, while IS sympathizers gathered with
impunity in public — making no secret of their aims and ambitions.
Turks, too, joined the IS ranks and have come back across the border to
blow themselves up, with devastating consequences. These developments
have made IS a new and dangerous threat to Turkey.
But the change in Turkish policy is first and foremost aimed at
Washington. It is designed to stop the hemorrhaging in U.S.-Turkish
relations, and prevent any further deepening in U.S.-PYD cooperation.
Following its return to the fold, Turkey may be counting on Washington
to calculate that Ankara is far more important than the Syrian Kurds.
Both Syria and the Kurdish issue spark a great deal of opposition in
Turkey. The country now faces the risk of attacks by the Islamic State,
which could retaliate for the government’s latest assault, and also
unrest among its own Kurdish population. Erdogan’s complex strategy of
engaging the United States while also undermining the Kurds in Syria and
at home is sure to be tested, perhaps violently, in the days ahead.
Photo credit: Erikan/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

