Erdogan turns Trump's Gaza deal into a power play for Turkey
By Samia Nakhoul, Tuvan Gumrukcu and Ece Toksabay
ANKARA/DUBAI, Oct 21 (Reuters) - Turkey’s ties to Hamas, once
a liability in Washington, have turned into a geopolitical asset. By
persuading Hamas to accept Donald Trump’s Gaza deal, Ankara
has reasserted itself on the Middle East chessboard, to the dismay of Israel and Arab rivals.
Initially resistant to the U.S. president's ultimatum -- free the
Israeli hostages or face continued devastation -- Hamas leaders
relented only when Turkey, a country they view as a political
patron, urged them to agree to the American plan.
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Two regional sources and two Hamas officials told Reuters that
Ankara's message was unequivocal: The time had come to
accept.
"This gentleman from a place called Turkey is one of the most
powerful in the world,” Trump said last week, referring to Turkish
“
"He's a reliable ally. He's always there when I need him."
Erdogan’s signature on the Gaza document supercharged
Turkey's push for a central role in the Middle East, a status
Erdogan has increasingly sought to reclaim, often invoking
Ottoman-era ties and leadership.
Now, after the deal, Turkey is seeking to reap dividends, including
in bilateral issues with the U.S., the sources said.
Sinan Ulgen, director of the Istanbul-based think tank EDAM and
a senior fellow at Carnegie Europe, said Ankara’s success in
delivering Hamas’s acceptance of Trump’s Gaza deal has given it
new diplomatic leverage at home and abroad.
Turkey, he said, is likely to use its renewed goodwill in Washington to push for progress on stalled F-35 fighter jet sales,
an easing of U.S. sanctions and U.S. help in advancing
“If those laudatory statements from Trump translate into lasting
goodwill, Ankara could use that momentum to resolve some of the
long-standing disagreements,” Ulgen told Reuters.
AT TRUMP-ERDOGAN MEETING, A REVAMP OF TIES BEGAN
The diplomatic recalibration between Ankara and Washington,
officials said, began during Erdogan’s September visit to the White House, his first in six years.
The meeting addressed unresolved flashpoints, including Turkey's push to lift U.S. sanctions imposed in 2020 over its
purchase of Russian S-400 missile systems, a move that angered
Washington and also led to its removal from the F-35 program.
Syria was another key topic. Turkey wants to pressure the U.S.-
backed Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to merge into
the Syrian army. Ankara views the SDF as a threat due to its ties
That push appears to be gaining ground. SDF commander
Mazloum Abdi confirmed a mechanism to merge with the Syrian
army, an outcome Turkey sees as a strategic win.
The Gaza deal follows other boosts to Turkish prestige. Trump
praised Erdogan for hosting Russia-Ukraine talks earlier this year,
and Ankara’s influence grew after Bashar al-Assad’s fall in Syria in
2024, where Turkey backed opposition forces.
Turkey’s ambition to reclaim a dominant Middle East role recalls
for some sceptics the legacy of the Ottoman empire, which once
ruled much of the region. Its collapse a century ago left modern
Turkey inward-looking as it built a secular republic and somewhat
sidelined from regional diplomacy.
For years, Ankara was not part of high-level efforts to solve the
Israeli-Palestinian dispute, a core source of regional instability.
Turkey's support for Islamist movements -- including political and
diplomatic backing for Hamas, whose leaders it has hosted --
strained ties with Israel and several Arab states, and its perceived
drift under Erdogan from NATO norms further distanced it from
peacemaking.
But to break the deadlock in Gaza ceasefire talks, Trump turned to Erdogan, betting on the Turkish leader's sway over Hamas. Turkish officials, led by spy chief Ibrahim Kalin, assured Hamas the ceasefire had regional and U.S. backing, including Trump’s personal guarantee.
By enlisting Erdogan, Trump handed Ankara the role it craved
as a dominant regional Sunni power. The move unsettled Israel and rival Arab states, including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE,
long wary of Erdogan’s Islamist ambitions, two diplomats said.
"Erdogan is a master in expanding his influence, seizing opportunities, taking advantage of events, turning them to his own interest and taking credit for them,” said Arab political commentator Ayman Abdel Nour. “Obviously the Gulf countries were not happy about Turkey taking a leading role on Gaza but at the same time they wanted this conflict to end, to see an agreement and to see Hamas sidelined."
While Arab states shared an interest with Turkey in ending the war, said Lebanese analyst Sarkis Naoum, the larger role given to Ankara was worrisome for them, recalling the history of Ottoman imperial rule over many countries in the region.
Turkey's Foreign Ministry and MIT intelligence agency did not respond to Reuters requests for comment. The U.S. State Department did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
For Hamas, the main concern was that Israel might renege on
the deal and resume military operations. Deep distrust nearly derailed the process, regional sources said.
“The only real guarantee,” a senior Hamas official told Reuters, “came from four parties: Turkey, Qatar, Egypt, and the Americans. Trump personally gave his word. The U.S. message was:
‘release the hostages, hand over the bodies, and I guarantee there will be no return to war.’”
CRUSHING PRESSURE ON HAMAS
Turkey’s entry into the talks was initially vetoed by Israel, but Trump intervened, pressuring Israel to allow Ankara’s involvement, two diplomats said.
There was no immediate comment from Israel's foreign ministry.
A senior Hamas official said Gaza’s military leaders accepted
the truce not as surrender, but under the crushing pressure of relentless mediation, a collapsing humanitarian situation, and
a war-weary public.
The deal won the release of Israeli hostages taken during Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack, which killed 1,200 people,
and triggered an Israeli offensive that has since left over 67,000 Palestinians dead, according to Gaza health authorities.
Whether the Gaza deal will eventually open a way toward a Palestinian state remains unclear. Turkey and Arab states including Qatar and Egypt say the plan lacks a roadmap toward a two-state solution, a historic Palestinian demand.
Asked about a potential Turkish troop deployment to Gaza in a post-war scenario and ways to ensure the enclave's security, Erdogan said on October 8 the ceasefire talks were critical for discussing the issue in detail, but the priority was achieving a
full ceasefire, aid deliveries and rebuilding Gaza.
(This story has been refiled to add an additional reporting credit and fix the style for the reference to Israel in paragraph 25)
Additional reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu, Ece Toksabay in
Ankara, Maya Gebeily in Beirut and Tamar Uriel Beeri in Jerusalem; Writing by Samia Nakhoul, Editing by William
Maclean
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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