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Is Turkey's Arms Industry Changing Equations?

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  • Is Turkey's Arms Industry Changing Equations?

    Is Turkey's Arms Industry Changing Equations?

    Commentary Magazine
    02.24.2013

    Michael Rubin | @mrubin1971

    Word out of Turkey is that Roketsan-Turkey's domestic missile
    manufacture-has just concluded a nearly $200 million deal with the
    United Arab Emirates. Turkey has made no secret of its desire to build
    up its arms industry. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ=9Fan
    has, for example, beseeched the Obama administration to provide Turkey
    with drones at the same time that a Turkish armament company was
    trying to develop Turkish drones for export.

    Turkey has taken an increasingly activist approach to the Middle
    East. It has supported the radical al-Nusra Front, designated a terror
    group by the Obama administration, because it prefers violent
    jihadists over secular Kurds. (Last week, Turkey's Foreign Minister
    Ahmet DavutoÄ=9Flu dismissed those who labeled the al-Qaeda affiliate
    `Jihadists' as little more than `American neo-cons and Israelis.' The
    fact that Turkey is willing to arm radical Islamists at odds with
    U.S. strategic interests certainly marks a new era.

    The Roketsan deal should also raise concern: While the United Arab
    Emirates is a U.S. ally, it is also the trans-shipment point for
    contraband heading to Iran. The Turkish government makes no secret of
    its solidarity with Hamas; the time is not long off that Turkey might
    supply Hamas with weaponry instead of just cash.

    It's not just U.S. national security at stake. As part of his
    pre-confirmation conversion on pretty much all his previous positions,
    defense secretary nominee Chuck Hagel has affirmed the importance of
    Israel's qualitative military edge (QME). Traditionally, the Pentagon
    calculates the QME relative to U.S. arms sales to Arab countries. Gone
    are the days, however, when the United States (and perhaps France and
    Great Britain) on one hand, and the Soviet Union (and perhaps East
    Germany and Czechoslovakia) supplied their respective Arab client
    states with arms. Today, it's a free-for-all. Turkey supports
    Islamists and terrorists. Sweden is ready to cash in on the
    action. When it comes to Israel's QME, the situation has gone
    metaphorically from middle school arithmetic to multi-variable
    calculus.

    Alas, while Hagel says he will maintain Israel's QME, neither he nor
    Obama have suggested their commitment is going to take into account
    other regional states that are increasingly willing to flood Arab
    armies with hi-tech weaponry with little or no regard to what they
    might mean for Israel's ability to defend itself.

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