Gentrifying failure

Turkey's drift from the Western alliance is going to be very painful, and there seems to be no light at the end of the tunnel. As the West has started to perceive Turkey truly as a failing state, the country's rulers have started to feel freer to express their hostility (past and present) toward the West. 

What's more, Turkey's feelings of disappointment are directed at all sides - not just the EU countries that President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan condemns harshly almost every day. Most recently, Russia has frustrated Turkey's high expectations, not only by not lifting trade sanctions but (more importantly) by engaging with the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) in northwest Syria. Even the best friend of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) of northern Iraq, has enflamed the situation by raising the Kurdish flag at official buildings in Kirkuk, along with the Iraqi flag, and declaring Kurdish as an official language in Kirkuk. This is despite the fact that Kirkuk is not part of the KRG, but has been defined as "disputed territory" since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. 

It is not difficult to imagine how Turkey's rulers must be feeling being boxed in, rather like the character Helena in David Lynch's film "Boxing Helena." Nevertheless, the government has expressed no willingness to acknowledge the seriousness of the problems. Moreover, let alone trying to find ways out of its supposed encirclement, it seeks to repeat its mistakes by trying to use local forces in Syria and Iraq as leverage (if not as proxies).  

Throughout all this, Ankara has chosen to put all blame on the eternal enemies of Turkey who are supposedly acting together to bring down the "rising star of Islam" (Erdoğan's Turkey...

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