Toby on Tuesday
'Train wrecks and Turkeys'
Today, I’d like to talk Turkey. Rather, I’d like to talk about
how Britain can avoid being taken for a turkey or, put another way, how we need
some cold turkey to wean us off our addiction to the whole toxic EU
project. I thought of these old sayings recently when reading a
sobering report entitled “Is Turkey becoming another Pakistan” by the impressive
Mark Almond. Now, Mark Almond is a former lecturer in Modern History
at Oriel College, Oxford and visiting professor at Turkey’s Bilkent
University. He is now writing “Secular Turkey: A Short
History”. He also has his own blog on markalmondoxford.blogspot.com,
which is well worth a visit. He is someone who knows his subject all
too well.
And what his report says is, “...over the last few years a slow-motion
train wreck in Turkey has become increasingly apparent...Like his allies in
Nato, Erdogan (Turkey’s President) had expected the Assad regime to implode as
quickly as other Arab dictatorships in 2011. But unlike the rest of
the West, Erdogan took sides in the sectarian politics of Syria.
Turkey’s sympathy for jihadists there and its blind eye to weapons supplies to
Isil have bitterly divided the Turkish public...The Turkish state’s failure to
forestall such terrorism and its army’s response to an Isil attack on the
Kurdish town of Kobani last year are works of malign indifference.
This fuels suspicions among Erdogan’s opponents that his government is behind
terrorist violence that so often has Kurds as victims. It is all
horribly reminiscent of how Pakistan’s Inter-Services Institute intelligence
agency played a double game with the Taliban and al-Qaeda in
Afghanistan...Intensifying internal divisions while playing politics in a
neighbour’s civil war is a recipe for recreating Pakistan’s problems on Europe’s
doorstep. That would be a disaster for us as well as the
Turks.”
Now, this is the background against which we need to view the continuing
negotiations between the EU, led by Germany, and Turkey’s government over the
growing migration crisis. The Turks are a very tough people who can
be relied upon to seek maximum leverage over what they justifiably see as an
enfeebled and decaying West. They will play hardball, using threats of
unlimited migration flows as their pawns in this particular game.
The deal now being brokered by Germany on behalf of the EU, is based on
fast-track Turkish accession to EU membership and several billions of Euros of
subsidy in return for Turkey providing some brake on the migrant flow to
Europe. Britain’s role in these negotiations is precisely zero, but
we will bear the consequences in terms of cost and migration whatever the
outcome. And the way in which our own Foreign and Commonwealth
Office is continuing to push for Turkish membership of the EU in the face of the
evidence of serious academics like Mark Almond represents an astonishing
dereliction of duty.
So if you are seeking an allegory for our weakened defences and myopia on
the subject of Turkey, then look no further than the Turkish scrapyard Leyal
Gemi Sokum. That is where HMS York has recently followed HMS
Southampton, HMS Newcastle, HMS Cardiff, HMS Glasgow, HMS Exeter, HMS
Nottingham, HMS Plymouth, HMS Brilliant, HMS Invincible, HMS Ark Royal, HMS
Oakleaf, HMS Edinburgh and HMS Gloucester to be scrapped on an open
beach. This is how our new “European Armed Forces” are taking
shape. The bean-counters in Whitehall have found a low-cost
alternative to the specialist facility at Swansea Drydocks where just one Royal
Navy ship, HMS Cornwall, has gone to be recycled. No doubt, someone
in Whitehall thought that this would help to “create goodwill” with Turkey, but
in truth it represents yet another threat to our country on a par with Turkey’s
planned EU accession. In other words, the time has come to stop
dancing the Turkey Trot and start protecting our own safety as a nation once
more, however much this inconveniences Berlin and Brussels!
Until next Tuesday!
Toby