Is the Turkish-Wahhabi,anti-Brotherhood, and Zionists’ Honeymoon near?
Turkey, which once considered itself the flagship of the Islamic world on the Palestinian issue, both described Ankara as the center of the Brotherhood and the Saudi Wahhabi government as its main enemy, and for some time now the practice has been going on with all these slogans.
Expressing Turkey’s interest in establishing relations with Egypt, which has a long history of enmity with the Muslim Brotherhood, announcing its support for Saudi policies, especially in Yemen, and finally the repeated emphasis of Turkish officials on the need to take advantage of establishing relations with the Zionist regime. The emergence of new Turkish policies in the region and in the above categories is such that some have come to believe that supporting the Palestinian cause, along with supporting the Muslim Brotherhood and, of course, declaring enmity with Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Israel. The slogan has not gone beyond and has only served the interests of Turkey and nothing outside of it. Experts from this standpoint, of course, see Turkey’s close ties with Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Israel as practical challenges. First, in their view, is assuming a more serious Turkish presence in the Yemeni crisis. Will this issue be met with silence by the UAE? Will the Saudis finally agree to the presence of the Turks in Yemen and in its vicinity? Will this sympathy take on a more serious dimension than the sale of drones and military aid to Saudi Arabia? Or will the duration of this proximity be limited to resolve the Saudi entanglements in Marib and getting rid of the Yemeni swamp?
Regarding Egypt, experts argue that it is impossible to combine the Brotherhood’s ideology with the ideology the anti-Brotherhood view of the Egyptian military. Of course, in interpreting Ankara’s strange behavior towards the Zionist regime, this group of experts prefers to cite Erdogan’s pragmatic spirit as the reason for this.
Regardless of the above views, what is important is to note that the ground realities of the region are being peeled off in the shadow of such interactions, and of course, one can expect to see new alignments in the region in the not-too-distant in the future the three approaches the Qatar-Turkey Brotherhood Coalition, and finally the Hebrew-Arab Axis, one of the components of which is proximity to Israel. In such a situation, it seems that the time may have come to change the fundamental slogans, tactics, and strategies of the regional arena.