Kurdistan Center
for Democracy in the Middle East
Accueil En
Accueil Fra
Accueil Ku
accueilAr
Accueil En Accueil Fra Accueil Ku accueilAr
Khoyboun Flag
Home Page Accueil En Articles articles LangueArt
LangueArt archives
archives contact
contact titres livres
titres livres
About us
about us
www.kcdme.com

Erdogan's pendulum: Trapped between Tel Aviv's warpath and Washington's leash



Ankara’s attempt to straddle east and west is collapsing under the weight of US-Israeli designs, with Syria once again the critical battleground.



01.01.2026

By Fehim Tastekin

Source:https://thecradle.co/articles/erdogans-pendulum-trapped-between-tel-avivs-warpath-and-washingtons-leash



As 2025 drew to a close, West Asia remains convulsed by a chain reaction set off by the Arab uprisings of the 2010s. What began as civil unrest has metastasized into overlapping wars, targeted killings, and fierce geopolitical rivalries. From Libya to Sudan, from the Persian Gulf to the eastern Mediterranean, local actors are locked in escalating peripheral battles.


Amid this storm, Turkiye is both participant and prize. Once seen as a pivotal NATO bridge to the region, Ankara now finds itself the focus of competing axes – with Syria once again at the heart of the confrontation.


Crashes and conspiracies


In November, a Turkish military C-130 crashed in Georgia on its return from Azerbaijan. Weeks later, on 23 December, a plane carrying Libya's western army chief, Mohammed al-Haddad, a close ally of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, crashed near Haymana, outside Ankara. He was in the country for high-level talks. Just prior to this, Turkiye's parliament extended its Libya mission for two more years. Questions of sabotage are rife.


A day earlier, on 22 December, Israeli, Greek, and Cypriot leaders held a summit in West Jerusalem to solidify their "energy partnership" in the eastern Mediterranean. At the gathering, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pointed a finger indirectly at Ankara, declaring: “Those who fantasize they can reestablish their empires and their dominion over our lands” should “forget it.” This was widely considered to reference Tukiye’s Neo-Ottoman ambitions.


The summit included discussions on forming a joint rapid response force. Military officials later signed a cooperation agreement in Nicosia, covering joint special-forces training, shared expertise on countering drone and electronic warfare threats, and an intensive schedule of air, land, and naval exercises. The unambiguous target of this pact: Turkiye.


Syria reshaped, borders redrawn


While Israel locks in regional allies, Turkiye's Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, Defense Minister Yasar Guler, and MIT intelligence chief Ibrahim Kalin travelled to Damascus. Their visit was reportedly triggered by rumors that a 10 March agreement between the transitional Syrian government and the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) had reached terms that would grant Syrian Kurds the autonomous status they have long sought, with a military component. The visit, however, appears to have yielded no breakthrough.


Also on 23 December, the same day as the Libyan plane crash, Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff Asim Munir was in Benghazi – stronghold of the Libyan National Army (LNA), which opposes the Tripoli-based government.


Munir signed a military procurement deal worth about $4 billion. Although Ankara has long backed the Tripoli government, especially since the lynching of Muammar Gaddafi, it has also been in quiet contact with Benghazi in recent years.


Yet, the pivotal maritime agreement establishing an Exclusive Economic Zone was inked with Tripoli, rendering it legally void without ratification from the eastern parliament.


Thus, the plane crash dropped squarely into a combustible matrix of rivalries. Whatever its cause, Ankara's regional foes are looking at the incident through a lens of suspicion.


Across the Red Sea, Israel's recognition of Somaliland marked another front in its shadow war with Turkiye. While Ankara invests heavily in Somalia and postures as a mediator, Tel Aviv's move derailed efforts to reverse the country’s fragmentation. Israel is expanding its footprint, and Turkiye is in its sights.


The F-35 file and NATO's quiet betrayal


Although Israel has reaped the rewards of NATO membership thanks to Turkiye's acquiescence, Tel Aviv now sees Ankara not as a grey-zone actor but as a strategic competitor in West Asia. This shift is evidenced by Israel's obstruction of Turkiye's bid to rejoin the F-35 fighter jet program.


The US Congress, in its 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, embedded provisions safeguarding Israel's "qualitative military edge" in such detail that Tel Aviv can easily sabotage Turkiye's ambitions.


Erdogan still prefers patching things up with the US-Israel axis. But reality is moving faster. A divided Turkish public reads his Gaza rhetoric in two ways: as genuine Islamic leadership or as self-serving theatre. His zigzags – blasting Israel one month, preserving trade the next – reveal a deeper logic: Erdogan is always seeking validation from Washington.


When relations with the west fray, he pivots eastward, flirting with the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) or adopting the language of the Global South. But when western doors reopen, he quickly shifts course.


That logic has defined his foreign policy since the early Justice and Development Party (AKP) years. From Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria to Lebanon, Libya, Yemen, and the Balkans, Erdogan consistently played within Washington’s playbook.


The post-2010 order, which opened space for Muslim Brotherhood-style governments, was seized by Ankara as a historic opportunity. This drew Turkiye into alliance with Qatar, while placing it at odds with Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt.


But the rupture came in Syria, when Washington armed the Kurdish SDF, redrawing Erdogan’s internal red lines. The failed Patriot deal and the purchase of Russian S-400s triggered US sanctions, pushing Turkiye further into diplomatic limbo.


Deals and derailments


Isolated in the eastern Mediterranean energy game, Ankara tried a reset. It reopened ties with Egypt, the UAE, and even Israel. In 2023, Erdogan and Netanyahu embraced in New York, promising energy cooperation. Netanyahu was to be welcomed in Ankara. Then came Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, and Israel’s ensuing genocide in Gaza.


Months passed before Turkiye imposed modest trade curbs. Even then, Azerbaijani oil flowed through the Ceyhan port, enriching Israel. Erdogan’s words and deeds diverged sharply, exposing the transactional heart of his diplomacy.


Two decades of AKP foreign policy boil down to one brutal fact: every US-led intervention Turkiye joined has strengthened Israel. Iraq, Libya, and Syria have all been cleared of resistance infrastructure.


And in Syria – once the buffer between Ankara and Tel Aviv – Erdogan helped dismantle the wall himself. No wonder he once received a "Profile of Courage Award" from the American Jewish Congress back in 2004, although it was “gladly” returned 10 years later over his criticism of Israel’s actions in Gaza.


Israel redraws the war map


Yet Tel Aviv now ranks Turkiye as its second most dangerous regional threat after Iran. Not because of any imminent attack, but because their Syria projects clash. Israel wants a demilitarized, pliant Damascus. Turkiye wants influence, bases, and a loyal armed Syrian proxy.


Israel has recast its brutality, from the genocide in Gaza, assaults in the West Bank, and bombing campaigns in Lebanon, to Yemen strikes and attacks on Syria and Iran, as part of a grand narrative: it intends to reshape the region through force.


These operations are laced with biblical symbolism. For instance, Israel dubbed its 8 December 2024 campaign – which reportedly destroyed up to 90 percent of Syria’s firepower – "Arrows of Bashan," a name referencing the ancient territory east of the Golan in the Hebrew Bible. The planned buffer zone in southern Syria thus takes on the contours of a messianic map. Observers in multiple states fear they may be next.


Ankara sees the threat. Some fear Israel will back Kurdish factions, forcing Turkiye to reopen its Kurdish peace track. Others warn that Israel's sabotage of Syria will sink Ankara’s reconstruction and refugee return plans. And then there's the unthinkable: that Israel aims to carve a "David's Corridor" from the Golan to the Euphrates. Once dismissed as conspiracy, the idea is now whispered in military circles.


Erdogan’s narrowing exits


Tel Aviv's goal is to force Turkiye out of Syria entirely. Media proxies claim Turkiye has replaced Iran as the US's new target. Their campaign is aimed squarely at US President Donald Trump, who they fear may curb Netanyahu’s excesses and realign Washington toward a more stable Syria policy.


Ankara, for its part, is betting on Trump to rein in Netanyahu and maintain engagement with Damascus, hopes a Syria-Israel security deal will take shape, and believes the SDF can still be folded into the Syrian state through the 10 March framework.


If that fails, Erdogan wants Moscow to re-establish itself in southern Syria to curtail Israel. Some even float the idea of Tehran's reentry – via Turkish-Russian coordination – to send Tel Aviv a warning: if this path continues, the Resistance Axis may reawaken.


But this path risks sacrificing Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa (Abu Mohammad al-Julani), who has long been tolerated as a balancing piece. As US Ambassador Mike Huckabee bluntly put it, Sharaa “knows that his pathway for survival is peace with Israel.”


Erdogan is watching Trump closely. He may help disarm Hamas, but only if Washington ensures the SDF is denied autonomy and Israel's aggression is reined in.


If US strategy fails to reconcile Turkish and Israeli aims in Syria, the consequences may spill far beyond Syria. Turkiye is caught in a web of interlocked fronts. What unfolds in Gaza, Benghazi, or Somaliland inevitably echoes through Damascus.


The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of The Cradle.