Scholar says Turkey is less reliable for the West as it is still influenced by Muslim Brotherhood

<p style="text-align: left;">Turkey&amp;rsquo;s foreign policy continues to become less Western-oriented, while its ideological leanings continue to resemble Muslim Brotherhood&amp;rsquo;s extremism, scholar Mordechai Kedar of the Bar-Ilan University said on Tuesday.

&ldquo;It is becoming undeniably harder for (Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan) to hide behind his NATO membership as he draws a foreign policy that has inevitably become less Western-oriented and more EU- and US-hostile,&rdquo; Kedar said.

Turkey becoming a less reliable security partner for the West will have consequences on its relations and foreign policy, he added.

Turkey&rsquo;s choices include some who fight against the West, the scholar said, and it may be speculated that its abandoning of its support for ISIS happened &ldquo;primarily because of the pressure exerted on it by Russia, the US and Europe, instead of an outright rejection of the ideology.&rdquo;

&ldquo;To this day, Turkey is seen to be under the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood doctrine,&rdquo; he said.

Turkey allowed ISIS volunteers to cross its borders freely to reach the so-called caliphate in 2014, when the group was first emerging, the scholar said, and ISIS made millions in illicit oil sales to Turkey. &ldquo;It seems pertinent to mention that Erdogan&rsquo;s family was also involved in the oil business with ISIS,&rdquo; he said.

Several Turkish provinces became ISIS hotspots, like Hatay, while ISIS members were able to launch attacks on their opponents from Turkish soil as a tactical advantage, within the knowledge of Turkish officials. Turkey&rsquo;s intelligence service was accused of having provided ISIS with weapons. An ISIS commander told Washington Post in 2014 that their equipment and recruits both came from Turkey.

&ldquo;Erdogan has neglected to launch counterterror operations to disrupt ISIS&rsquo;s networks or recruitment activities, since its inception,&rdquo; Kedar said.

Reporter&rsquo;s code: 50101

News Code 128572

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