“I think that it won’t be long before Turkey stops listening to Washington and starts working closer with Russia and establishing contacts with Damascus to end the war in Syria and from this point of view President Putin’s visit to Ankara will signal a very important change in our policy in Syria,” İsmail Hakkı Pekin said.
Mentioning a recent interview by Bashar Assad where the Syrian president talked about the possibility of engaging in direct talks with Turkey, he said it was a good sign of Ankara being “ready to reconsider its policy in Syria.”
“Ankara should coordinate its actions with Syria, Russia, Iran and Iraq. The US wants to carve up Syria and if Ankara keeps toeing Washington’s line, this could eventually lead to the breakup of Turkey itself, which is something neither the West nor Russia would like to happen,” he continued.
Speaking about the current chill in Turkey’s relations with Iraq, İsmail Pekin said that the US wants to keep Turkey away from the operation to liberate Mosul because it sees it as a threat to the political order America wants to establish in Iraq.
He added that by distancing itself from the Iraqi government Turkey was playing right into Washington’s hands.
“We need to strengthen our positions in neighboring Iraq where PKK fighters stationed in Qandil pose a constant threat to us. We also need to ensure the security of Iraqi Turkmens and put an end to the conflict near our border,” İsmail Pekin emphasized.
He also said that Turkey should give up on the so-called “neo-Ottomanic doctrine” as the groundwork of its foreign policy.
“This does not mean keeping aloof from the problems now facing the Middle East. Turkey is a major regional player, and it should contrubute to the ongoing efforts to resolve these problems,” Pekin noted, adding that Turkey simply had no resources to pursue the neo-Ottomanic policy that will lead to the breakup of Turkey, Iraq and Syria and will add strength to Washington’s pet project of a Greater Middle East.