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> Politics

Russia, Iran and Turkey cut a deal

To cement Russian influence in Turkey, Putin is building a $20 billion nuclear reactor there in light of Erdogan's nuclear ambitions

Newsroom April 13 07:09

There can’t possibly be that many Russians of importance left to sanction. But President Trump has laid more economic restrictions on Russia, Russians and Russian companies for a variety of evildoings.

Forget for a moment that every president loudly announces such sanctions, which then are largely forgotten by everybody. If there’s any Russian (or Iranian or North Korean) dense enough to still keep assets in these United States, maybe they don’t really care about them. And if President Vladimir Putin has buckled to pull troops out of Crimea after four years of escalating U.S. sanctions, no one’s noticed.

All this, mixed with Trump’s poorly explained trade tariff tiff with China and his abnormal normal White House chaos, has managed to distract from development of an unholy Middle Eastern alliance that should cause serious concerns, not just for the White House.

Last week Putin, Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani and Turkey’s strongman Tayyip Erdogan completed a summit in Ankara by announcing their new partnership to establish a cease-fire in Syria and to start rebuilding the war-ravaged land that is ravaged in large part by their own forces.

All this without even an FYI to the U.S. administration that once played a major role in the oil-rich region. It’s a continuation of Putin’s deft power-plays to restore Russian influence well beyond its own borders and especially within the tumultuous Middle East. It’s been years in the making and benefited from President Barack Obama’s inept inaction.

Remember Obama’s unscripted red-line threat about Syria’s use of chemical weapons on its own people? With Russian knowledge, Syria’s Bashar Assad defiantly did just that. Putin offered to broker the phony destruction of all those lethal gases, which bailed out Obama and cemented Putin’s influence in Syria.

Last year Assad gassed civilians again. Within 48 hours on Trump’s orders, 60 cruise missiles devastated the launching airbase. They repeated the gas attack this month. Trump threatened new retaliation, which Russia vowed to stop.

Trump tweeted: “Russia vows to shoot down any and all missiles fired at Syria. Get ready Russia, because they will be coming, nice and new and ‘smart!’ You shouldn’t be partners with a Gas Killing Animal who kills his people and enjoys it!”

Trump’s instincts are to abandon the region. He recently announced a complete pullout from Syria of about 2,000 special operations advisers.

As they had with Trump’s desire to leave Afghanistan, his advisers, mainly Defense Secretary James Mattis convinced him to walk that back. Their valid argument being such hasty retreats would leave the same power vacuum as Obama’s hasty 2011 troop withdrawal from Iraq, which allowed ISIS to flourish.

Turkey is allegedly a NATO ally, allowing U.S. planes to fly against ISIS from Incirlik. But Erdogan regards the Kurds as terrorists and has now thrown in his lot with Putin and Iran. NATO’s European members will not do much because Turkey houses 3.5 million Syrian refugees and if Erdogan opened that human spigot, they would flood into Europe.

To cement Russian influence in Turkey, Putin is building a $20 billion nuclear reactor there and has just sold Erdogan $2.5 billion in sophisticated anti-aircraft missiles to use against someone’s planes.

That’s the same self-serving economic infiltration Putin used to tie Iran’s militant mullahs to Moscow. As the world’s largest exporter of terror, Iran has sent 100,000 troops to bolster Assad.

>Related articles

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European Commission handbook depicts the East Aegean islands and the Dodecanese as Turkish

Anger in Cyprus over the UN Secretary General’s envoy: She described the occupied territories as the “Turkish” side of Cyprus

Iran now has a direct landline through Syria to support its terror partners in Hezbollah on the borders of Israel, where Trump may soon visit. Much as Iran is arming and supporting Yemen’s Houthi rebels to destabilize Saudi Arabia.

Still pending this spring is Trump’s decision to abandon Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran. Tehran maintains that will free it to resume full-scale weapons development, which will likely prompt the Saudis to do the same. Trump has threatened to —wait for it— slap sanctions back on Iran.

Source: sfgate

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