Source: MOSCOWTIMES
Moscow is sanctioning Turkish goods and holidays, something
that will have a distinct impact on an economy which earns $6.5 billion
a year from Russian tourists, but is this enough to assuage President
Vladimir Putin's evident fury at the shooting down of one of his
bombers? And if it is not, what else can he do short of direct —
and hopefully unthinkable — military action against a NATO member with
an army not that much smaller that Russia's? The temptation may be,
to strike from the shadows.
Turkey and Russia have, after all, a long and bloody history
not just of outright war, but of border, indirect, covert and political
struggles. From proxy wars in the Caucasus khanates and Ukraine in the
17th century, through to political tussles over Poland in the 18th,
and cultural-religious ones in the Balkans which lasted through into the
20th, these are two countries with a long tradition of underhand
conflict.
Today, Moscow's capacities to blend political, intelligence,
information and even criminal assets into multi-vectored campaigns is
greater than ever. For a president eager to extract a pound of flesh,
this may seem a tempting option.
For a start, Turkey — ever volatile — is going through a particularly
violent and turbulent time. This year has seem presumed Islamic State
bomb attacks, others against Kurdish rallies, and a spate of other
killings including last week's which saw a prominent Kurdish human
rights lawyer killed. Against this backdrop, Russian agents
and hirelings might be able to launch attacks of their own (and how many
more would it take to ensure other tourists, for example, stay away,
further hitting the economy?) without it obviously being a Muscovite
maneuver.
Indeed, part of the value of such incidents might also be to provoke
further violence between Turkish factions themselves. Stirring up
trouble between Kurds, ultra-leftist terrorists like the DHKC/P,
criminals, and a government also prone to sanctioned and unsanctioned
violence and then sitting back to enjoy the show might suit the Kremlin
well.
The presence of an organized and active Kurdish movement is also
a potential asset. With the Kurds having in effect established a state
for themselves in Iraq, and being one of the more effective militias
in Syria (much to Ankara's chagrin), renewed pressures for their
independence or autonomy within Turkey is inevitable. In this case,
the Russians — who have supported the Kurds in the past when it was
expedient — could be useful friends to them. This could just mean
political support in international fora, but could also involve funding
or even arming the more radical groups.
Given that Turkish President Recep Erdogan is engaged in an ambitious
effort to re-establish Turkey as a regional power, one could also see
Russia responding by more aggressively countering this. From Azerbaijan
to Turkish-controlled Northern Cyprus (whose president is increasingly
at odds with Ankara), through to Israel (an important trading partner,
despite the obvious personal antagonism between Erdogan and Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu), there is a wealth of areas in which
to introduce problems, from a judicious smear or leak here, to an
outright assassination or staged provocation there.
And yet Putin should think thrice before striking once. The chances
of his strategy becoming clear in the end are great and this would anger
Ankara and worry the West. Besides, Turkey is no soft target, Erdogan
doubly so. The irony is that Turkey is in many ways similar to Russia,
from its revisionist plans and the aggressiveness of its intelligence
agencies, to the character of its ambitious autocrat-presidents. It may
lack the excitement of a war in the shadows, but ultimately Putin would
be best served sticking to the humdrum world of the boycott and the
diplomatic rebuke.
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