Nominally a member of NATO, Turkey no longer sees itself under the aegis of the United States and is forming new alliances.
In 1964, Turkish prime minister Ismet Inönü had hoped the United States would intervene in the conflict between Turkish and Greek Cypriots in Cyprus. If it failed to do so, he warned the Western alliance would break up and a new world would be established under new conditions. Turkey would also find its place in this world.
Although this was almost sixty years ago, something similar is occurring against the backdrop of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Nominally a member of NATO, Turkey no longer sees itself under the aegis of the United States and is forming new alliances.
Ahead of his visit with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov stated that both Russia, China, and their “sympathizers” would together move towards a “multipolar, just, and democratic world order.”
In a July speech for the Ditchley Foundation, former British premier Tony Blair observed that the West had reached a new inflection point. He concluded that the biggest geopolitical change of this century will come from China, not Russia. According to Blair, it is the first time in modern history that the East can be on equal terms with the West in contrast to 1945 or 1980 (the collapse of the Soviet Union), when Western democracy was essentially ascendant.
Blair believes we are coming to the end of Western political and economic dominance, and that the world is going to be at least bipolar and possibly multipolar. So where does this leave Turkey?