Turkey has shifted attention to US warplanes from Koran-burning in endless bargaining on Sweden’sNato entry.
It looked like a done deal on 11 July, when Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan shook hands withthe Swedish prime minister at a Nato summit in Vilnius.
He also put his signature on a written promise to “transmit the accession protocol for Sweden to theGrand National Assembly [Turkish parliament], and work closely with the assembly to ensureratification”.
In return, Sweden pledged to crack down on anti-Turkish “terrorists” and help Turkey to get EUcustoms perks and visa-free travel, but declined to ban Koran-burning due to free-speech laws.
And the deal “made history” said Nato secretary general Jens Stoltenberg at the time.
But as the Turkish parliament prepares to resume work after summer, Erdoğan has spotlightedanother demand — for the US to first sell Turkey high-tech F-16 fighter jets.
Erdoğan told press on Sunday (10 September) he had spoken to US president Joe Biden about thepurchase in the margins of a G20 summit in India.
In his view, it was the US that was making untoward demands. Biden had linked the F-16 deal toSweden’s Nato bid and “this approach seriously upsets us”, Erdoğan said, according to Reuters.
But in another view, it was Turkey that wanted to lock the F-16s into a grand bargain on Sweden.
“It [the F-16 deal] is apparently largely contingent upon agreeing on a sequencing that everyone trusts.Congress is reluctant to approve the sale until Turkey has ratified, whereas Ankara doesn’t want to giveup its leverage [Sweden] without first getting the sale,” said Paul Levin, the director of StockholmUniversity’s Institute for Turkish Studies.
“Both sides [Turkey and the US] publicly deny that there is a linkage between the F-16 deal and Natoenlargement, but my sense is that the former is the key to the latter,” Levin added.
Turkey-US defence ties soured four years ago, when Turkey bought an anti-aircraft system from Russiainstead of its Nato ally America.
The Turkish foreign ministry didn’t reply to EUobserver.
But one Istanbul-based international relations expert and asset manager, Alp Sevimlisoy, gave aninsight into feeling in the country.
Turkey should get the F-16s because it “is now the supreme military power in its region” and “the only[Nato] partner with the necessary prowess capable of containing both Russia and China,” in the BlackSea area, he told EUobserver.
Meanwhile, Erdoğan’s demands on EU customs perks and visa-free travel are less likely to delaySweden ratification.
The European Commission told EUobserver Nato issues had nothing to do with its technical talks on”resolving trade irritants”.
Any breakthrough on visas is also likely to take months, with six out of 72 onerous benchmarks still tomeet, instead of coming before Turkey’s parliament reconvenes.
But for Levin, Erdoğan wouldn’t burn any more goodwill in Nato for the sake of his EU demands alone.
“If, for other reasons, he [Erdoğan] is not ready to drop his [Sweden] veto, he might use that as anexcuse. Otherwise no, I don’t think those things are important enough to him,” Levin said.
“The Swedes and the rest of Nato have the belief that Erdoğan made a firm commitment in Vilnius andthat it is only the long summer vacation of the Turkish Grand Assembly that is holding ratification up,”said Jamie Shea, a former senior Nato official who now teaches war studies at Exeter University in theUK.
“When the assembly reconvenes in October there will be strong expectations that ratification will moveahead. But expect Erdoğan to talk tough and raise doubts to the end,” he added.
Orbán factor
The careful “sequencing” of trust is being further complicated by Hungary, the only other Nato statestill to ratify Sweden’s bid.
A few days after Erdoğan shook hands on things at the Nato summit in July, Hungarian foreign ministerPéter Szijjártó also pledged, via a Facebook post: “If there’s movement there [in Turkey’s stance], thenof course we’ll keep the promise that Hungary won’t delay any country in terms of [Nato] membership”.
The Hungarian parliament is to resume work on 25 September, but opposition MPs don’t expect primeminister Viktor Orbán to leave his friend Erdoğan on his own in negotiations just yet.
“Orbán is watching Erdoğan and I don’t think Hungary will be the last one [Nato state] to ratify,” saidÁgnes Vadai from the opposition Democratic Coalition party. “Probably they’ll arrange it so that theHungarian parliament votes first, but nobody knows when,” she said.
And all that leaves behind the issue of Koran-burning in Sweden, which enraged Erdoğan so muchbefore the summer that he said Swedish police must ban it if Sweden wanted to join Nato.
Korans
Various people have kept burning the Muslim holy book in Sweden in separate anti-Islam protests inAugust.
For Sevimlisoy in Istanbul: “Sweden will answer to Ankara’s will”.
And if it won’t, he said: “It may be time for Turkey to view Finland’s already agreed entry into Nato as asatisfactory already achieved, stand-alone in the interim”.
“New Koran-burnings and pro-PKK [Kurdish group] demonstrations in Sweden might stir up enoughtrouble to stall the [Nato] process,” Stockholm University’s Levin added.
But for the Swedish Institute, a government body which monitors foreign media coverage, Erdoğan isn’tpushing that button any more.
“We can see that there has been a lot less coverage in news media as well as in social media during thelast Koran burnings, compared to the coverage after the Koran burning on 28 June,” it said.
“This goes for the coverage in Turkish and a number of other contexts,” it added, with Hungarianlanguagemedia also declining to report on the latest burning cases.
Alp Sevimlisoy originally featured as per: Euobserver