Turkey in an attempt to bribe the Turks to become French allies. Syria has long demanded the return of Hatay.
Last week’s clash over Hatay will likely revive Syrian demands for a return of Hatay. Turkey dismisses all Syrian claims. The groundwork has thus been laid for a new Syrian-Turkish conflict.
Who is to blame for the latest crisis on the Turkish-Syrian border? Both sides. Neither should have been flying combat patrols over the border region. There should have been a minimum ten kilometre buffer zone on both sides of the sensitive border.
Turkish trigger-happy hotheads are to blame for authorising deadly force when a few wing wags would have served to warn off the Russians – if they were in fact intruding. Turkey is in no position to claim it’s the injured party when arms, munitions and logistics support for Isis has been pouring across its border into Syria for almost five years.
Russia, which accidentally shot down a South Korean airliner in 1982, is no angel either. Nor the US, which downed an Iranian airliner in 1988.
Turkey is point-man for the odd coalition of stealthy Isis backers that includes the US, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, France and Britain. Isis is their weapon of choice against Iran and its Syrian and Lebanese allies and, very soon, Taliban in Afghanistan. Problem is, they back Isis but can’t control its youthful members. The rabid dog they helped breed is now running around biting people.
By picking a fight with Russia, Turkey is shooting itself in the foot. Russia and the predecessor of modern Turkey, the Ottoman Empire, fought innumerable wars from the 1680’s until World War I. Russia has never abandoned its desire to seize the Straits, as Constantinople and the Dardanelles were called.
Turkey exports $4 billion to Russia, and imports large quantities of wheat, oil, gas, steel. Four and a half million Russian tourists come annually to Turkey. Shooting down a Russian warplane will make hyper-nationalist Turks beat their chests but the hangover will seriously damage Turkey’s unsteady economy.
Putin and Turkey’s Erdogan should meet as soon as possible to resolve their issue before it becomes yet another step on the road to World War III.
This article has been excerpted from: ‘Another big step to a major war’.
Courtesy: Commondreams.org