French-Turkish tensions have an American footprint
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Islamic fighters trained by the CIA and Pentagon are at least partly
responsible for escalating tensions between Turkey and France. Sounds like
another big win for U.S. foreign policy and its many unintended consequences.
Not since Operation Cyclone, a CIA program supporting the mujahideen in
Afghanistan against the former Soviet Union, have U.S. efforts to impose
democracy and “freedom” in the Middle East been so sloppy.
French President Emmanuel Macron has adopted an aggressive approach to calling
out Islamic terrorists and their often covert role in emerging conflicts. In
this instance, the country moving jihadists around like pawns on a geopolitical
chessboard is Turkey, led by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. America’s NATO
partner has become a top broker for the jihadist gig economy.
In the case of some of these terrorists, it was the CIA and Pentagon that served
as their Harvard of so-called “freedom fighting,” training them to fight in the
Syrian civil war before abandoning them to an uncertain market for their skills.
Erdogan has become a one-man jihadist job-creation machine. And Macron has been
pointing out Erdogan’s various initiatives, much to the Turkish president’s
displeasure.
Macron has expressed concern about jihadist nests festering on Europe’s doorstep
in Libya — a country from which France has already seen a flood of migration
under the pretext of refuge from civil war. (That war was sparked at least in
part by former French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who helped spearhead the ouster
of former Libyan President Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.)
Over the summer, Macron called Erdogan’s maneuvering in Libya “unacceptable,”
accusing Turkey of being the primary source of intervention in that country and
“massively reimporting jihadist fighters from Syria.” Macron did not seem
impressed by Erdogan’s entrepreneurial verve in landing jobs for jihadists who
were trained and then abandoned by America’s military industrial complex.
Former Turkish Foreign Minister Yasar Yakis explained to me that Erdogan views
the situation in Libya as an opportunity to “kill two birds with one stone.” On
one hand, Erdogan is able to rid Syria of America of abandoned jihadist
fighters. On the other, Erdogan is using them as cannon fodder to further his
interests in Libya, a country that has long been beholden to Islamic terrorists
and seems to be losing support of the international community as a result.
Earlier this month, Macron angered Erdogan once again by publicly lifting the
lid on another Erdogan job-creation initiative for Syrian rebel terrorists —
this time in Azerbaijan, as armed conflict broke out between Armenian and
Azerbaijani forces.
“According to our own information, 300 fighters left Syria to reach Baku via
Gaziantep (in Turkey),” Macron said in a European Union summit in Brussels.
“They are known, traced, identified, they come from jihadist groups operating in
the Aleppo region.”
More recently, Macron irritated Erdogan by defending caricatures of the Prophet
Mohammed as free expression after the beheading earlier this month of
schoolteacher Samuel Paty, 47, near Paris. Paty had showed caricatures of
Muhammad to his class during a discussion about freedom of speech.
In January 2015, Islamic terrorists killed 12 people and injured 11 others at
the Paris headquarters of Charlie Hebdo magazine because of anger over a series
of cartoons of Muhammad that the magazine had published.
Macron recently defended such cartoons as an exercise in free expression and
described Islam as a religion “in crisis” worldwide. Erdogan is calling for a
boycott of French goods and says that Macron had “lost his mind” — resulting in
Paris recalling its ambassador from Ankara.
Meanwhile, the rock-and-roll world jihadist tour continues, except that it’s
countries being destroyed rather than just luxury hotel suites. Also being
destroyed is the persistent myth that the jihadists fighting in these conflicts
just materialize out of nowhere and start hating on everyone’s freedom and
democracy. Macron has been calling out the typically opaque trajectory of these
terrorist actors, many of whom were spawned by the CIA and Pentagon in Syria
during former U.S. President Barack Obama’s tenure.
Will the Washington institutions responsible for this mess ever learn their
lesson? Or will the establishment persist in unleashing more mayhem on the world
under the guise of protecting us all from the terrorism that it’s largely
responsible for sparking?
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN