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Turkey Fears Russia Too Much to Intervene in Syria

Rostam

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Turkey Fears Russia Too Much to Intervene in Syria

Ankara won't step into the conflict because it's terrified Moscow will retaliate -- again.

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Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu (R) reach out to shake hands following a joint news conference at Ciragan Palace in Istanbul on April 17, 2013. (Murad Sezer/Reuters)


Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov visited Ankara on April 17th, but the event went almost unnoticed. Despite deep differences between Ankara and Moscow over Syria, Turkey has refrained from rebuking Moscow. That's because Turkey fears no country more than it fears Russia.

Ankara has nearly a dozen neighbors if you include its maritime neighbors across the Black Sea and the Mediterranean. Emboldened by its phenomenal economic growth in the past decade and rising political power, Turkey appears willing to square-off against any of them; Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has publicly chided the leaders of Syria, Iran, and Iraq. In fact, none of the country's neighbors can feel safe from Ankara's wrath -- with the exception of Russia, that is.

"The Russians can make life miserable for us, they are good at this."

The Turks suffer from a deep-rooted, historic reluctance to confront the Russians. The humming Turkish economy is woefully dependent on Russian energy exports: More than half of Turkey's natural gas consumption comes from Russia. Consequently, Turkey is unlikely to confront Moscow even when Russia undermines Turkey's interests, such as in Syria where Russia is supporting the Assad regime, even as Ankara tries to depose it.

Historically, the Turks have always feared the Russians. Between 1568, when the Ottomans and Russians first clashed, to the end of the Russian Empire in 1917, the Turks and Russians fought 17 wars. In each encounter, Russia was the instigator and the victor. In these defeats, the Ottomans lost vast, and often solidly Turkish and Muslim, territories spanning from the Crimea to Circassia to the Russians. The Russians killed many inhabitants of these Ottoman lands and expelled the rest to Turkey. So many Turks descend from refugees from Russia that the adage in Turkey is: "If you scratch a Turk, you find a Circassian persecuted by Russians underneath."

Having suffered at the hands of the Russians for centuries, the Turks now have a deeply engrained fear of the Russians. This explains why Turkey dived for the safety of NATO and the United States when Stalin demanded territory from Turkey and a base on the Bosporus in 1945. Fear of the Russians made Turkey one of the most committed Cold-War allies to the United States.

Recently, Turkish-Russian ties have improved measurably. Russia is Turkey's number-one trading partner, and nearly four million Russians vacation in Turkey annually. At the same time, Turkey's construction, retail, and manufacturing businesses are thriving in Russia. Turkish Airlines, the country's flag carrier, offers daily flights from Istanbul to eight Russian cities.

Still, none of this has erased the Turks' subconscious Russophobia. In 2012, I asked a policymaker in Ankara whether Turkey would take unilateral military action to depose the Assad regime in Damascus. "Not against the wishes of Moscow" my interlocutor said. Adding: "The Russians can make life miserable for us, they are good at this."

At least some of the Turkish fear of Russia appears grounded in reality. Turkey is dependent on Russia more than any other country for its energy needs. Despite being a large economy, Turkey has neither significant natural gas and oil deposits, nor nuclear power stations of its own. Ankara is therefore bound to Moscow, which has often used natural gas supplies as a means to punish countries, such as Ukraine, that cross its foreign policy goals.

There is also a security component: Russia helped set up the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), a group that led a terror campaign against Turkey for decades, causing over 30,000 casualties. The PKK emerged under Russian tutelage in Lebanon's then-Syrian occupied Bekaa Valley during the 1980s, and it has enjoyed intermittent Russian support even after the collapse of Communism.

Turkey recently entered peace talks with the PKK, and many in the group are likely to heed the advice of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan and lay down their weapons. Yet, a pervasive fear in Ankara is that some rogue elements and hardliners could emerge from the PKK, denouncing the talks and continuing to fight Turkey.

Meanwhile, Ankara has been confronting the Assad regime in Damascus since late 2011 by supporting the Syrian opposition. This had led to a spike in PKK attacks against Turkey, most coming from Iran, which apparently has allowed the PKK freedom of movement in its territory to punish Ankara for its stance against Assad.

The fear in Ankara is that Russia might just do the same if Turkey were to invade Syria, propping up rogue PKK elements inside that country to lead an insurgency against Turkish troops. Together with other concerns, such as the risk of the conflict in Syria spilling over into Turkey, the Turkish fear of Russia has led Ankara to avoid direct intervention in Syria.

Such fears have also led Turkey to pivot further toward the United States, once again seeking protection under the NATO umbrella against the looming Russian giant. Taking into consideration Turkey's fear of Russia, any Turkish military action against the Assad regime will have to be predicated on full NATO support and involvement.

For the Turks, history repeats itself every day when it comes to Moscow: don't stand in Russia's way lest it torment you, again.


Turkey Fears Russia Too Much to Intervene in Syria - Soner Cagaptay - The Atlantic
 
Although there is a little exaggeration but i wouldn't say it is an inaccurate article.
 
Fanboy article here is the reality check :

-We don't fear Russia's support to PKK because Assad regime and Iran already tried that last year and Turkiye didn't back off from supporting FSA , now thanks to peace process talks PKK neutralized.

-We don't fear Russia's gas leverage(that they will cut off our gas in the middle of winter) because the moment they tried that **** we will trap all Russian ships to Blacksea and cut off their contact from the rest of the world.

-We don't fear Russia's huge nuclear arsenal because 90 gravity bombs under Incirlik AB exist for a reason.

-We don't fear Russia will dare to invade us because 90 gravity bombs under Incirlik AB exist for a reason.

Anyone here want to continue this "Allmighty Russian bear will come down and crush Turks!!!" bullshit?
 
@Rostam At least, they don't bark about sth that they can't do. Even if yes, go ahead...
 
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Soner Cagatay, our liberal intellectual(!!), is on it again...That low life was nothing, but after he started to bash Turkey on his articles, he became famous...What a self serving load of crap that article is..He could have just written Turkey fears to lose her #1 oil/gas supplier, but no, he did what he always does, just to point out a simple fact, he bashes Turkey all over..Pathetic piece of crap
 
@Rostam

Ahahahahahahahaha

Must Turkey intervenes Syria ? They already Send Agents and they have done their Job or why Syria needs help from Iran to stop the Rebels ?
 
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why so harsh comments from some Turks against iran? what's related to iran, It's an article that doesn't belong to iranian source and news.

Russia will never let syria go down, unless They get good and huge gift from the west and US.
 
As far as I remember, the last time Turks and Russians faced each other in a war (1917), Turks soundly and clearly defeated the Russians...

Also, the struggle b/w Ottomans and Russians was a stalmate. Ottomans did not have capability to go deep into cold Russian lands (Europeans tried it and got destroyed!)..and similarly, Russians didn't have capacity to challenge Ottoman's supremacy in E.Mediterranean, North Africa, Europe, and Arabia....

Ottoman Empire, over-all, was a super-power that was much stronger; It was way more influential in shaping history in 15th,16th,17th century etc than the Russians...

Today, Turkey and Russia are two of the greatest powers competing in Central Asia, Black-Sea, Mediterranean regions...

In the long run, Turks seem to be coming on the top..since they have better support base in Middle-East, North Africa (one end of Mediterranean), Europe than Russians...Turks will have to compete hard to counter Russia's influence in central Asia...but even here, Turkish Islamic Identity and linguistic commonality can help Turks out-competing the Russians...

Interesting...very interesting
 
The article says : Between 1568, when the Ottomans and Russians first clashed, to the end of the Russian Empire in 1917, the Turks and Russians fought 17 wars. In each encounter, Russia was the instigator and the victor.

Has the writer of this article ever opened a history book?
 
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