Nadene Goldfoot
Turkey’s recent purchase of the S-400 caused outrage for its defiance of the NATO alliance. But this action was a part of a much broader pattern in President Erdogan’s foreign policy: one which has increasingly engaged in foreign aggression, proxy warfare, saber-rattling and ethnic cleansing.
President Donald Trump is considering lifting sanctions and selling F-35 fighter jets to Turkey. This potential sale would reverse a previous ban and hinges on Turkey resolving security concerns regarding its Russian-made S-400 missile systems.The Opposition: The proposed deal faces heavy resistance from U.S. lawmakers and allied leaders, including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who warn it could disrupt the balance of power in the Middle East.
The S-400 Triumf is an advanced, mobile, long-range surface-to-air missile (SAM) system developed by Russia. Designed to engage and destroy a wide spectrum of aerial threats—including stealth aircraft, drones, cruise missiles, and ballistic missiles—it serves as a key component of Russia’s integrated air defense, The S-400 is considered one of the most formidable air defense systems in the world, often compared to the American Patriot system. Its export has occasionally caused significant geopolitical friction. For instance, Turkey’s purchase of the system led to U.S. sanctions and its removal from the F-35 fighter jet program, while countries like India and China have also deployed the system.
In addition to persecuting those Kurds who live within Turkey’s borders, Erdogan has attacked Kurdish targets in Syria and Iraq. Turkey’s devastating invasion of northern Syria has displaced roughly 600,000 people, and critically endangered already persecuted religious minorities such as Yazidis and Christians.and JEWS. Turkey is also targeting the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF)—the United States’ most reliable partner in Syria and the coalition most responsible for the demise of ISIS."
A Syrian Kurdish girl (Picture source: Daily Mail/Eric Lafforgue).Syria’s Kurds—the country's largest non-Arab minority, numbering around 2 to 2.5 million—have seen their governance shift drastically. After losing vast portions of their former autonomous region, "Rojava," they are integrating into the centralized Syrian state. An agreement between the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and the Damascus government established the following parameters: Military Integration: Three SDF brigades are being incorporated into the official Syrian army as whole units. Citizenship & Language: The deal promises to grant citizenship to tens of thousands of stateless Kurds, make Kurdish an official national language, and legally protect Kurdish civil and educational rights. Displacement Crisis: Following clashes and territorial losses to Turkish-backed and central government forces, thousands of displaced Kurds were forced into camps or are facing uncertainty returning to heavily damaged neighborhoods in places like Aleppo.
Turkey is illegally occupying a large portion of Northern Syria – specifically Kurdish-majority areas on its border. Since it began its occupation, the Turkish military has engaged in ethnic cleansing and fomenting religious extremism. As a neighbor of Syria and host to the largest portion of Syrian refugees in the world, Turkey has been a stakeholder in Syrian affairs since the start of the civil war in 2011. While Erdogan initially supported efforts to overthrow Bashar Al Assad, his aims have since turned towards stopping suspected Kurdish political ambitions in the region. Since 2014, the Turkish military has been far more concerned with destroying Kurdish aspirations than defeating jihadist groups or tempering Assad’s destructive hold.
When ISIS conquered large swaths of Syrian territory, the Turkish military sat by idly on its side of the border as the former crushed nearly all Kurdish resistance. It was only when the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) managed to turn the tide against ISIS that Erdogan decided to turn its forces against the Kurds. As the SDF were fighting ISIS, it also had to fight off Turkish attacks from air and artillery – which proved extremely counterproductive to NATO’s fight against ISIS. These actions once again prove Turkey to be an unreliable NATO member, putting its own concerns about the Kurds before the interests of not only its NATO allies but of long-lasting peace in the region. Turkey’s occupation of northern Syria has lasted for two years now, and its showing no signs of ending any time soon. The longer Turkey’s involvement in Syria continues, the less likely it will become a functional or even unified state again.
The relationship between Turkey and the Jewish community is highly complex, marked by a sharp distinction between intense political hostility toward the State of Israel and the historical, yet increasingly vulnerable, status of Turkey's domestic Jewish minority. While Turkish leadership frequently frames its stance as strictly political opposition to Israeli government policies, international observers and local community members warn that this fierce rhetoric heavily spills over into domestic antisemitism