Professor Henry Srebrnik

Professor Henry Srebrnik

Monday, September 17, 2018

Can the American-Turkish Relationship be Saved


by Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Pioneer Journal

Turkish-American relations have been on a downward curve for some time now. Disputes over Ankara’s role in Syria, its policy towards its Kurdish population, and its growing hostility towards Israel, have been among the major irritants. 

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s increasing authoritarianism and Islamization of the country’s political system have worried Washington for some time.

On July 24, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Çavuşoglu said Turkey will not implemen U.S. sanctions on Iran. Erdogan called Iran “a neighbor and a strategic partner.”

He also appears determined to deploy the Russian-made S-400 air and anti-missile defense system on Turkish soil.

Now, there’s a new issue. As far as Erdogan is concerned, the United States is intentionally sabotaging Turkey’s economy. Remember, this is a man who sees conspiracies around every corner.

There’s no doubt, though, that the Turkish economy is in dire straits, at the same time as relations with Washington have continued to deteriorate.

The growing diplomatic crisis with the administration of President Donald Trump has now pushed the country’s economy into a full-fledged currency crisis. 

The Turkish lira has lost about 40 per cent of its value over the last 12 months. And, because Turkish banks and firms have borrowed heavily in foreign currency, the lira’s freefall threatens to bring much of the private sector down with it.

Economic growth had become dependent on a steady flow of foreign capital to finance domestic consumption and investments in housing, roads, bridges, and airports.

But these good times have come to an end, with the Trump administration’s decision to use sanctions to press Turkey to release Andrew Brunson, an Izmir-based American evangelical pastor arrested during the purges that followed the failed coup against Erdogan two years ago.

National Security Adviser John Bolton indicated in an Aug. 21 interview with Reuters that Turkey could end the crisis with the United States “immediately” if Brunson were freed. 

But a Turkish court has rejected an appeal for Brunson’s release, drawing stiff rebuke from President Trump, who said the U.S. would not take the detention “sitting down.”

Washington considers Brunson a political hostage while Ankara insists he’s a suspected terrorist and spy.

It also hasn’t helped that Erdogan has put his son-in-law, Berat Albayrak, in charge of the treasury and finance, and that Erdogan would personally appoint the Central Bank governor as well as Central Bank deputies and monetary policy committee members.

It’s so bad that the International Monetary Fund may have to be called in for temporary financial assistance.

Erdogan on Aug. 25 insisted that the unity of the Turkish nation against the attacks targeting their political and economic independence would prevail.

“As we tackle attacks against the Turkish economy today, our biggest guarantee is the commitment and determination of every member of our people to take hold of their independence, nation, and future,” he declared.

The Turkish government also thinks Trump and Vice President Mike Pence are using Brunson, a member of the conservative Evangelical Presbyterian Church of America, to shore up the Republicans’ Protestant evangelical base in advance of the November mid-term Congressional elections.

How has it come to this?  President Erdogan has fostered an authoritarian political culture over the past few years, as he marshalled ever more power while destroying most organs of civil society, a free press, and the education system.

Erdogan has overseen historic change in Turkey since his ruling party first came to power in 2002 after years of secular domination, by trampling on civil liberties and of autocratic behaviour.

His election victory in June has accelerated this process, as he quickly transformed Turkey’s parliamentary system into an executive presidential system with almost no checks and balances.

His glorification, appearance of infallibility, and ultimately political survival are portrayed as Turkey’s supreme goals. Every other objective is only undertaken in order to strengthen his rule. 

In this political structure, he feels entitled to be above all laws and to enrich himself and his close associates. He has become a modern Ottoman sultan.

Sooner or later economic pressures will force Turkey to adopt fixes that will stabilize its currency and financial markets. 

But that will not revive long-term private investment, bring back talent that is leaving the country in droves, or foster a climate of freedom that will allow Turkey to thrive, unless there is fundamental change in the country.

In 2017, according to the Pew Research Center, 79 per cent of Turks polled said they had an unfavorable opinion of the U.S. It’s probably higher now.


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