by Eze Eluchie,
When the
survival of an individual becomes the fulcrum of a country’s foreign policy, such
country’s foreign policy and interests become tumultuous and oddities become
the norm. The foregoing statement fully captures the situation of Turkey under
Tayyip Erdogan.
At a time
‘the sovereign’ felt that Islamic State terrorists will help him decimate his
sworn enemies (the Kurds), he conveniently turns the other way as ISIS
descended on Kobani right on the Turkish border, at times chipping in some
support to the terrorists in the form of free-passage of aspiring terrorists
and provision of slush funds in the form of payment for ‘blood crude oil’; and
when that ploy fails, he without any qualms, makes a 180 degree turn-around,
develops a sudden phobia for ISIS, invades portions of Syria, under the guise
of ensuring that ISIS is kept far away from Turkish borders.
Under
different circumstances when ‘the sovereign’ again felt like drawing NATO into
the Syrian war against Russian forces to ensure that whatsoever efforts being
made to defeat ISIS and stabilize and sustain the Al Bashir regime failed,
there was no hesitation in gunning down a Russian military jet, in the process
killing some Russian airmen. The West saw through the scam and refused to be
dragged into a conflict they were least prepared for. ‘The sovereign’ responded
with some public grandstanding whilst in private reaching out to appease the
Russians; On the converse, when it was clear that Western leaders tacitly hoped
for the success of the 2016 coup in Turkey, there was no hesitation in ‘the
sovereign’ grovelling back to Moscow, to create a semblance of rapprochement
with the Russian leader, who certainly had not forgotten how 2 of his airmen
were wasted whilst in Syrian airspace.
As ‘the
sovereign’ now prepares to bamboozle his countrymen, via a referendum scheduled
for April 2017, to hand over Turkish sovereignty to his personal whims and
caprices, nothing is being spared, inclusive of vulgar abuses to Turkey’s
allies in NATO, deprecating erstwhile friendly states in Europe, rubbishing any
hopes of Turkey joining the European Union in the near future and infantile
threats against equally endowed states in Europe (particularly The Netherlands
and Germany). It is clear that in the
view of ‘the sovereign’, no cost is too great for Turkey to bear in the pursuit
of ‘the sovereign’s’ self-aggrandizement.
Predictably,
as he did with efforts at making peace with Russia after the murder of 2
Russian military pilots deliberately and provocatively shot down over Syrian
airspace, it can be expected that Turkey’s sovereign, Tayyip Erdogan, will soon
after he has succeeded in badgering his fellow Turks into surrendering their
sovereignty to him (Erdogan) in the April referendum, embark upon
‘fence-mending’ visits to The Netherlands and other European countries,
countries ‘the sovereign’ is currently taking personal delight in castigating –
urging European countries, who appear to be eternally mesmerized by his
Othoman-charm and a near-fatalistic desire to retain Turkeys within the NATO
fold to have access to her strategic geographical position for military
purposes.
Has anyone
bothered to wonder why, of the 3 countries which denied Erdogan’s appointees
access to address political rallies on their soil (Germany, Austria and The
Netherlands), The Netherlands is the current recipient of ‘the sovereigns’
verbal assaults? Well, the Dutch are having election first, today, to be exact.
What better way to influence the outcomes of Dutch elections and the Turkish
referendum than to stir up a spat that will stoke up ethnic/nationalistic fervour.
Focus will subsequently be shifted to other western Euroean countries as their
respective elections draw near.
As they ponder
ways to tackle their new nightmare, one thought that will continue to plague European
leaders as they roll on their lonely beds in Presidential palaces, be it in Den
Hague, Berlin, Paris or wheresoever, is was there anything they could have done to differently
on the 15th July 2016? Is there something that can be done to prevent
the descent of Turkey into a dictatorship with the capacity to threaten European
peace and stability?
Clearly, the
times have changed. Unlike in the past when it was the sole preserve of Western
countries to influence and determine the outcomes of elections in other parts
of the world, elections in the West, hitherto, was purely an internal affair of
the individual country concerned, are now routinely influenced by external
forces. The US elections were successfully influenced by Russia; the Dutch election
holding today is being influenced by Turkeys sovereign. Who will influence the
forthcoming French and German elections scheduled for later in the year?
Picture: Turkeys sovereign, Tayyip Erdogan.
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