November 1, 2016 | Quoted by Russ Read - The Daily Caller

Study: US Needs A Contingency Plan To Move Bases Out Of Turkey

Despite Turkey’s strategic role in U.S. defense policy, the military needs to have a contingency plan to move its bases out of the country, according to a recent study by a Washington, D.C. think tank.

“Although I join most observers in continuing to believe that the U.S.-Turkish relationship is crucial and that Incirlik’s role is particularly important in the context of the anti-IS (ISIS) struggle, it is clearly time to face the possibility that the U.S. may, against its will, be forced to leave,” wrote Eric Edelman, the former U.S. ambassador to Turkey and current senior adviser at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD).

The report, titled, “Covering the Bases: Reassessing U.S. Military Deployments in Turkey After the July 2016 Attempted Coup d’Etat,” emphasizes the importance of trying to maintain Turkey’s role in NATO through all diplomatic means, but also recognizes the fractured relationship between the U.S. and Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Creating a contingency plan for U.S. forces based in Turkey serves a dual purpose, according to the authors. First, it ensures that the U.S. can continue operations against enemies in the Middle East in other areas of the region. Second, it serves as a diplomatic tool to encourage Erdogan to cease engaging in policies contrary to U.S. and NATO interests.

“Moving NATO bases out of Turkey is the last course of action,” said FDD senior fellow John Cappello, the report’s lead author, in a press statement provided to The Daily Caller News Foundation. “Any pressure the United States brings to bear on Turkey should be applied delicately and in coordination with NATO members. But signaling to Erdoğan that the U.S. is not solely dependent on Turkey could help to put the relationship back on equal footing.”

Read the full article here

Issues:

Issues:

Turkey

Topics:

Topics:

Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Middle East NATO Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Turkey United States United States Armed Forces Washington