How to Save the
U.S.-Turkey Relationship
For the Sake of the Alliance, Erdogan Must Fold
By Amanda Sloat
The tense relationship between the United States and
Turkey is reaching an inflection point. As the Turkish government has taken an
increasingly authoritarian turn and
made questionable foreign policy choices in
recent years, Washington has tried to exercise strategic patience and engage
Turkish leadership to resolve differences between the two countries. But that
patience is wearing thin, as Ankara has repeatedly failed to respond to
Washington’s concerns—chief among them right now the imprisonment of Andrew
Brunson, a Christian pastor from North Carolina, on specious terrorism charges.
The handling of the Brunson case, which came to a head last week when he was
moved to house arrest rather than released, will affect the future of bilateral
ties. If negotiations fail, the United States may feel compelled to shift its
approach away from diplomacy and toward economic leverage. In this game of
foreign policy poker, Turkey’s struggling economy may force President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan to fold first.
The United States and Turkey have collected long lists
of grievances against each other over the last few years. On one side, the
Turkish government feels that the United States has failed to take seriously
its security challenges. It has been frustrated with U.S. support for a faction
of Syrian Kurds (People’s Protection Units, YPG) in the fight against the
Islamic State (ISIS). Given the group’s links to a domestic Kurdish terrorist
organization (Kurdistan Workers’ Party, PKK), Ankara’s primary goal in Syria
has been preventing the YPG from creating an autonomous Kurdish region along
the Turkish border, which it fears could lead to an independence bid or be used
to stage attacks on Turkey. Ankara pressed the point by launching military
action against YPG forces in January 2018, which diverted some fighters away
from U.S.-led operations against remaining ISIS elements.
Many Turks remain hurt by the perceived failure of
Western leaders to comprehend the trauma of the July 2016 coup attempt and to
express immediate support for the country’s democratically elected leader.
Despite opposition to Erdogan within the electorate, there was rare consensus
across the political spectrum that a military overthrow was not the solution.
There is further consternation that the accused mastermind, Islamic
cleric Fethullah Gulen, is residing legally in
Pennsylvania. Ankara has provided boxes of documents to the U.S. Justice
Department in an attempt to prove his guilt. Washington has not found the
evidence sufficiently compelling to persuade a federal judge of probable cause
meriting extradition. In an effort to address this impasse, U.S. officials have
held several technical meetings with their Turkish counterparts to discuss the
evidence presented. They have also continued separate investigations, which
predate the coup, into U.S.-based charter schools run by Gulen’s followers.
For its part, the United States has begun questioning
whether Turkey is still a reliable ally. Americans are troubled by the Turkish
government’s overzealous response to the attempted putsch: initial efforts to
detain suspected coup plotters turned into a maximalist purge of affiliated
Gulenists and a witch-hunt against political opponents. A three-month state of
emergency was imposed immediately following the coup, extended repeatedly, and
only allowed to lapse in mid-July when parliament introduced anti-terrorism legislation
that enshrines many emergency measures in Turkish law. Fluid definitions of
terrorism under the state of emergency led to the imprisonment of several
American citizens, as well as Turkish employees of two U.S. consulates, on
baseless charges of links to the PKK and Gulen. Brunson’s case has provoked the
loudest outcry in the United States and received high-level attention across
the government. Turkish officials insist that the case is solely within the
competence of the independent judiciary, but Erdogan’s remarks have suggested
otherwise. He has engaged in hostage diplomacy, stating publicly last September
that he would hand over one cleric in exchange for another: Brunson for
Gulen.
The United States is also concerned about Ankara’s
plans to purchase the S-400 missile defense system from Russia. This system
would not be interoperable with NATO and could compromise the security of F-35
stealth fighter jets, which the United States is selling to Turkey as part of a
European consortium. These plans have raised broader questions about whether
Turkey is shifting its strategic orientation away from the alliance.
TOO LITTLE TOO LATE
When Trump took office, Erdogan hoped he would rectify
Obama-era grievances by taking steps such as extraditing Gulen and ceasing
cooperation with the YPG. However, the new administration did not deviate
significantly from existing U.S. policies on Turkey. (This is notwithstanding
the improprieties of Michael Flynn, former Trump campaign adviser and briefly
U.S. national security adviser, who was allegedly offered $15 million by
representatives of the Turkish government to return Gulen to Turkey, among
other favors.)
Tensions spiked in the fall of 2017 when, in response
to the arrests of its local staff, the U.S. embassy suspended non-immigrant
visa services. Turkey promptly took reciprocal action. The United States lifted
the suspension after Ankara assured it that no additional local employees were
under investigation, staff would not be arrested for performing official duties,
and advance notice would be given before any future arrests. But Ankara failed
to release the jailed employees and even placed a third staffer under house
arrest. The bilateral relationship faced additional strain in January 2018,
when the Turkish military drove Russian-backed YPG fighters from the Afrin
region of northwestern Syria. Ankara’s threats to expand this operation 60
miles east to Manbij, where U.S.-backed YPG fighters and U.S. Special Forces
were based, raised the worrying prospect of Turkish and American soldiers
pointing guns at one another.
The Trump administration has sought to improve
relations through diplomatic engagement. During the same week in February 2018,
the national security adviser, secretary of defense, and secretary of state all
met with their Turkish counterparts. A lengthy conversation between former
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Erdogan in Ankara led to the creation of
several working groups to resolve bilateral irritants. One group has been
quietly discussing judicial issues, including American political prisoners. It
was later announced that prior to Tillerson’s visit the U.S. attorney’s office
had dropped charges due to insufficient evidence against 11 of 15 presidential
bodyguards indicted after brawling with protesters during Erdogan’s May 2017
visit to Washington.
Another group has focused on military issues. In order
to dissuade Ankara from purchasing Russian S-400s, the Trump administration has
improved the long-standing offer to sell Turkey the U.S.-made Patriot missile
defense system by addressing the Turkish desire for more technology transfer
and co-production capabilities. The two sides also developed a road map to
address the continued presence of YPG forces in Manbij, Syria, which violated
an Obama Administration promise that they would withdraw after eliminating ISIS
fighters. Although Tillerson’s firing caused delays, his successor Mike Pompeo
has continued these efforts.
In keeping with his admiration for strongmen leaders,
Trump has refrained from criticizing Turkey’s democratic backsliding or
imprisonment of its own citizens on dubious charges. He called Erdogan to
congratulate him on winning a controversial constitutional referendum in April
2017 that created a highly centralized presidential system, and again to
congratulate him on his re-election as president in June 2018. The one
exception to Trump’s silence on rule of law issues has been the case of Andrew
Brunson, which he and Vice President Mike Pence have raised repeatedly. Their
advocacy seems driven in large part by the outcry of Christian evangelicals in
the Republican base, as well as Pence’s shared Christian faith. Trump
administration officials stress they are also working to resolve the cases of
wrongfully imprisoned dual nationals and the Turkish employees of the
consulates.
In the U.S. Congress, a growing litany of grievances
against Turkey has heightened calls for punitive actions. Some members of
Congress have introduced measures targeting the Turkish economy, Erdogan’s
greatest domestic vulnerability. But they have also exercised strategic
patience, deferring to diplomatic solutions and playing bad cop alongside the
Trump administration’s outreach. For example, Senators Jeanne Shaheen and James
Paul Lankford co-sponsored visa bans on Turkish officials responsible for
unlawfully detaining U.S. citizens. In March, the senators dropped the
sanctions when the administration requested that they allow time for
Tillerson’s new diplomatic effort. On June 29, Senators Shaheen and Lindsey
Graham visited Turkey and told Erdogan directly their concerns and the
consequences for failing to address them. Two weeks later, when Brunson
remained imprisoned after a scheduled court hearing, a bipartisan group of
senators introduced a bill that would restrict loans from
international financial institutions to Turkey until it releases U.S. citizens.
In addition, concerns about the S-400 purchase prompted the inclusion of
a provision in the National Defense
Authorization bill that creates a way for the administration to remove Turkey
from the F-35 consortium and potentially to block the transfer of the aircraft.
When the Turkish government moved Brunson to house
arrest on July 25, Washington viewed the gesture as too little too late. The
next day, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee passed the bill on loan
restrictions, while Trump and Pence issued tweets calling for sanctions.
Additional flashpoints are looming. Implementation of the Manbij road map is
still in the honeymoon phase, and challenging negotiations on governance and security
arrangements lie ahead. If Turkey does purchase the S-400s, it could be liable
to existing sanctions under the Countering America's Adversaries Through
Sanctions Act (CAATSA) that prohibit transactions with Russian defense entities
and possible removal from the F-35 program. Pending actions by the Treasury
Department could further hurt the Turkish economy. For example, Treasury may
decide to fine state-owned Halkbank for fraud and conspiracy to violate
Obama-era Iran sanctions, and impose new sanctions on countries that do not
cease all imports of Iranian oil (which is difficult for Turkey given the lack
of alternative suppliers).
ERDOGAN’S WEAK HAND
Where do bilateral relations go from here? If
Washington fails to reach a negotiated agreement with Ankara on the political
prisoners, it will feel compelled to assume a tougher stance. At the same time,
Turkey’s strategic geography, NATO membership, and centrality to several U.S.
regional objectives make the relationship one worth preserving. As Russia and
other U.S. rivals benefit from the rift with Turkey, it is ultimately not in
the interest of the United States to turn away from its challenging ally. Any
policy response to the current diplomatic crises should take care to prioritize
the longer-term potential of the relationship.
The United States can take a page from Germany’s
playbook; Germany experienced a similarly strained relationship with Turkey in
recent years. Erdogan accused German authorities of “Nazi practices” after they
blocked Turkish ministers from holding rallies targeting diaspora voters during
the referendum campaign. The Turkish government refused to allow a Bundestag
delegation to visit troops at a Turkish air base. It also arrested several
German citizens on baseless charges. Berlin responded by implementing policies
with economic costs while preserving lines of communication with Ankara, a
strategy that has proved successful so far. It updated its travel advice to
warn German nationals of the risk of arbitrary detention and its limited
capacity to help; announced a review of German state guarantees for financing
exports to Turkey and said it could no longer guarantee German corporate
exports; and withdrew its support for near-term upgrade of the EU-Turkey
customs union. Following Turkey’s release of German political prisoners earlier
this year (including journalist Deniz Yucel) and its recent
decision to lift the state of emergency, Berlin announced that it was relaxing
its travel advice and lifting sanctions.
Russia, too, has
achieved results in its relationship with Turkey using economic measures. After
the Turkish military shot down a Russian jet that violated its airspace in
November 2015, Moscow issued sanctions and travel restrictions that ultimately
led to an apology from Erdogan the following summer.
The Turkish economy is even more vulnerable to
external shocks now than it was then, making it an important potential leverage
point for the United States. In early July, inflation reached 15 percent, a
nearly 15-year high. The Turkish lira has lost a third of its value against the
dollar since the start of emergency rule in July 2016 and dropped 20 percent
since the beginning of this year. Foreign policy developments have caused
further fluctuations. The Turkish economy has been sustained by cheap credit,
which increases consumption and government spending. Many big holding companies
are on the verge of bankruptcy, while banks would suffer from a series of
defaults. There are structural weaknesses, including a current accounts
deficit, external debt stock, and growing unemployment (averaging 11 percent,
with youth unemployment at 25 percent). The unpredictable political environment—including
deteriorating rule of law, weakened due process, and limited judicial
independence—has scared off investors. The president’s new cabinet, which
rewards loyalty over knowledge amid efforts to centralize power, lacks
financial expertise, as evidenced by Erdogan’s appointment of his son-in-law to
manage the economic portfolio.
Given Turkey’s serious economic challenges, Erdogan
has overplayed a weak hand with the United States. The American government has
been quietly sitting on a straight flush amid a year of painstaking efforts to
improve relations, offering diplomatic carrots rather than economic sticks. The
movement of Brunson to house arrest, a half measure seemingly intended to
appease the U.S. without upsetting his own base, was Erdogan’s attempt to make
Washington fold. Trump’s tweets threatening sanctions signal his intent to
double down on his own hand, backed by congressional support for strong
measures. Both the Trump administration and Congress have exhausted their
strategic patience; they are now postured to change their approach and take
steps intended to inflict economic pain on a NATO ally of 66 years. There is
still time for a diplomatic solution if both sides return to quiet talks rather
than angry rhetoric. If not, there is a real risk of ruptured relations, which
could have a devastating effect on the Turkish economy, complicate the pursuit
of U.S. objectives in the region, and embolden those who do not want to see
Turkey facing west.
No comments:
Post a Comment