Turkey: America’s new key ally in the Middle East?
Relations between the US and Turkey have soared during Obama's first term
Topics: Syria, GlobalPost, Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, barak obama, Pew Research Institute, Politics News
ISTANBUL, Turkey — It’s probably a matter of geography. But the Turkish government has been masterful in recent years at keeping friends in both the Middle East and the West, despite all the conflicts in between.
Turkey has carefully calibrated relations with countries in its neighborhood — which include perennial thorns like Iran, Syria, Iraq and Russia — and with the United States, which is so engaged in the region some there feel they should be able to vote in the US presidential election.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sought to expand trade with its immediate neighbors, irking the West but never alienating it — no easy task.
But with the Arab Spring and the Syrian conflict, things are changing in the region, and it might be the administration of US President Barack Obama that wins out in the end.
Since Obama took office, relations with Turkey are perhaps the best they’ve ever been.
“Turkey-US relations reached almost its peak under Obama,” said Sinan Ulgen, chairman of the Center for Economic and Foreign Policy Studies, a think tank in Istanbul. “[It] is obviously the consequence of the Arab revolts where Turkey and the US are very much standing side by side.”
Turkey and the United States also both support the Syrian opposition. And there are other factors too. Tensions between Turkey and Iran recently heightened in part because of Iran’s support for the Syrian regime. Turkey had previously tried to engage Iran, worrying its NATO allies, including the United States.
“Now that’s over. Now Turkey’s relationship with Iran and a number of other countries in Turkey’s neighborhood is very different, much more antagonistic,” Ulgen said.
Turkey’s increasing alienation from Europe has also brought the importance of its alliance with the United States to the fore. “Europe’s ineffectiveness as a regional policy actor, bogged down and mired in its own economic crisis, in a way accentuates the role of the US for Turkey policymakers,” he said.
From the US perspective, Turkey’s importance as a regional ally has grown as the Arab Spring remakes the politics of the region. Egypt, for decades an all-important ally to the United States, for example, is now charting a new path that isn’t necessarily in its interests.





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