Airport attack another reason for Turkey to ditch its 'precious loneliness': Brian Stewart - Action News
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Airport attack another reason for Turkey to ditch its 'precious loneliness': Brian Stewart

The attack on the Istanbul airport is but the latest trauma in a nightmare couple of years for Turkey. It has been battered by terrorism, overflows of foreign refugees, political turmoil, and even a headlong descent into friendless international isolation.

Ankara seems convinced it needs a strategic rethink that involves rebuilding friendships

There are signs Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan may see the value in rebuilding Turkey's international friendships. (Adem Altan/AFP/Getty Images)

The attack on the Istanbul airport is but the latest trauma in a nightmare couple of years for Turkey. It has been battered by terrorism, overflows of refugees, political turmoil, and even a headlong descent into friendless international isolation.

The latest bloodshed is expected to persuade Ankara to engage in the fight against ISIS far more forcefully, and lessen its often standoffish attitude towardother nations.

The West has had chilly relations with what many consider the iron-fisted and thin-skinned government of PresidentRecepErdogan. The U.S. has been exasperated at times with Turkey's sluggish role incombatingISIS, including its only belated attempts to block the movement of ISIS fighters who cross its highly porous borders into Syria and Iraq.

The European Union also frequently complains of human rights abuses in Turkey and has made it embarrassingly clear that the EU membership Turkey was expecting now faces extraordinarily difficult hurdles.

As for Moscow, after years of deteriorating relations, it slapped punishing economic sanctions on Turkey last November after Turkish fighter jets shot down a Russian warplane along the Turkish-Syrian border. The apology the Kremlin demanded was refused until just this week.
A relative of Gulsen Bahadir, a victim of Tuesday's attack on Ataturk airport, mourns at her flag-draped coffin during her funeral ceremony in Istanbul on Wednesday. (Osman Orsal/Reuters)

Turkey's role in Middle East politics, often seen as both aloof and overbearing, has had mixed resultsandalienated many of its neighbours,including Iraq, Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

But Turkey certainly doesn't deserve all the blame. Relations in the region are notoriously unstable and the conflicts engulfing both Syria and Iraq inevitably leadto competition and friction between the outside partiesinvolved. Turkey's campaign to try to deposeBasharal-Assad in Syria has produced enemies over the years.

'Precious loneliness'

Its economic success in recent years has also created suspicion in the Islamic world that it harbours ambitions of reviving the Ottoman Empire it ruled until its collapse in the First World War.

Still, there's an attitude. Turkey's loss of international friends and cooling relations with allies has been greeted with a perverse sense of stand-alone pride. AnErdoganadviser even boasted about this aloofness, calling it "precious loneliness."

Turkey has been particularly slow to accommodate the security priorities of others in the separate fights againstAssad's regime in Syria and against ISIS.At the core, Turkey saw the toppling of theAssadregime as the essential first goal, with ISIS only a secondary target to be left for later, while the U.S. and Western view is that ISIS became the far graver danger of the two.

Turkey didn't see it that way and was also preoccupied with its security struggles against the domestic Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has struggled for self-determination for Kurds.

BusycombatingAssadand Kurdish rebels, Turkey avoided the kind of all-out assault against ISIS that others wanted. Granted, it had much to fear. Turkey knows attempts to cripple ISIS would inevitably bring revenge attacks against its most critical soft target: Tourism.

The importance of Turkey's tourism industry is hard to overstate. It accounts for almost 10 per centof GDP, brings in more than 30 million visitors a year and employs more than two million workers.Cripple this sector and the economy might crumble. It survives only if visitors feel safe coming, an increasingly shaky proposition.

16 terror attacks in a year

But Turkey has learned, like others before it, that ISIS grants no favours for going easy on it. The country has been hit with 16 terror attacks in a year, not all ISIS directed, but many of them are believed to be the group's work.

The pace of attacks is increasing. They include suicide bombings last October at a peace rally outside Ankara's train station that killed 103 people; an attack right in the heart of Istanbul that killed a dozen German tourists in January; a bomb on the city's main pedestrian street that killed five people in March; and Tuesday's airport attacks that struck at the very central nervous system of Turkish travel and tourism.
A woman reacts at the site of an explosion in Ankara on Oct. 10, 2015. Two bomb explosions targeted a peace rally in Turkey's capital, killing 103 people. (Burhan Ozbilici/Associated Press)

Officials expect a 40 per cent drop in tourists this year, a shattering blow to national revenues. Tourism has also been damaged by the standoff with Russia.President VladimirPutin banned his people from vacationing in Turkey, a potential loss of 3.5 million visitors.

The deteriorating situation appears to have convinced Ankara it needs a major strategic rethink that involves engaging internationally and rebuilding friendships. These moves began even before Tuesday's attack, whenErdoganfinally wrote the full apology toPutinfor the downed plane.Both sides quickly vowed to make up.

Almost simultaneously, Turkey ditched a six-year diplomatic freeze with Israel that it began after Israel's raid on theMavicMarmararelief ships in international waters in 2010.AsErdogancommented after the restoration of full diplomatic ties, Israel needs Turkey "but we have to admit we also need Israel."Astonishing words from the hyper-proud president.

Peace talks

No power is happier with the new "Turkey is Back" posture than Washington, where officials hopeErdoganwill finally pull out all stops against ISIS. Immediately after the airport attack,Erdoganstressed that nations are all equal in the face of such threats: there's "no difference between Istanbul and London, Ankara and Berlin."

The anti-ISIS alliance has already noticed some improvement in Turkish security efforts in recent months and hopes it will do far more to seal up remaining holes in its borders with Syria and Iraq, and participate more aggressively in the air campaign against ISIS.

There are also early diplomatic hopes that Turkey will work with Moscow and Washington to restart the stalled Syrian peace talks by dropping previous objections to Kurdish involvement.

The addition of Turkey as a key player in peace efforts would be a major breakthrough. It would signal Turkey has finally concluded Assad simply can't be overthrown by war, but must be ousted in a compromise peace and that ISIS can't be crushed without such a peace.

A Turkish policy shift could be a profound setback for ISIS.