Have Turkey's Erdogan and Russia's Putin Kissed-and-Made-up for the Very Last Time?
"This is a person [Recep Tayyip Erdogan] who keeps his word — a man.""He does not follow his tail. If he believes it is advantageous for his country, he goes to the end""There is an element of predictability, and it is very important to understand who you are dealing with."Vladimir Putin, 2021"[Putin’s words are] exactly how I have known Mr. Putin since I first met him.""He is straightforward and keeps his word.""It is rare to have such strong relations with any state."Recep Tayyip Erdogan
![]() |
| Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the Kremlin on March 5, 2020 in Moscow, Russia/ Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images |
"On Nov. 24, 2015, Turkey shot down a Russian fighter jet over Syria, resulting in the deaths of two Russian soldiers and prompting a sometimes spine-chilling war of words. At his annual press conference in December that year, Putin’s description of Erdoğan was quite different from the one he gave five years later. He said he did not “see any prospect of improving relations with the Turkish leadership,” whom he accused of trying to “lick the Americans in a certain place”.""Sinking the knife in even deeper, Putin accused Erdoğan of betraying the secular system put in place by Turkey’s national hero, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. “The creeping Islamization would probably cause Atatürk to turn in his grave,” he said. Erdoğan, for his part, lambasted Russian “war crimes” in Syria. Russia imposed sanctions, with the package holidays that brought hundreds of thousands of tourists to Turkey’s Mediterranean coast halted and goods like Turkish tomatoes no longer welcome in the other direction."Stuart Williams, New Lines Magazine
Suddenly
Turkey is Ukraine's best friend -- no, really. With Erdogan's courteous
assistance, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy now has cordial
ingress to the movers-and-shakers of the Middle East. Many of whom have
been under extreme violent duress, with the Islamic Republic of Iran
punishing the Gulf states for their friendliness with the United States,
not to mention Israel. U.S. military bases in Saudi Arabia, the UAE,
Bahrain, Qatar and Kuwait, all of whom have been, to some degree
targeted by the IRGC; above all, the United Arab Emirates.
If
any leader of any country currently knows anything about
counteroffensives and self-preservation, it is the Ukrainian President,
and he is more than pleased to be able to demonstrate what the Ukrainian
military has learned while it has been under massive bombardment by an
aggressive, much larger conventionally armed neighbour. The Iran war has
enabled Mr. Zelenskyy to cultivate closer ties with Gulf states. The
Shahed-136 kamikaze drones that Russia uses in Ukraine have been
supplied to Iran by Russia and China.
![]() |
| At the Dolmabahçe Palace in Istanbul, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy held a meeting with President of Türkiye Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. President of Ukraine |
Ukraine's
answer to the devastating attacks on its cities and civil
infrastructure was almost-instant devising, production and use of
surprisingly simple advance drone technology which has given it longer
reach into Russia itself, demonstrating what's good for the goose is
fine for the gander in blowing up Russian military bases, bridges,
ships, weapons storage, and oil depots. Ukrainian resistance has
resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands Russian servicemen monthly,
dealing severe blows to Russia's troop numbers and recruitment.
With
all that experience behind them, Ukraine was pleased to dispatch air
defense teams to Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Turkey, in ushering Ukraine into the comfort zone of making new contacts
in the Middle East, has a new partner, as it leaves behind the old one
with which its own agenda was never quite a perfect fit. After all,
during the drawn-out civil war in Syria, Turkey armed the Sunni groups
trying to break Bashar al-Assad's Alawite grip on the country, even as
Erdogan targeted Kurds whose fighting prowess was superior to all of the
regime's opponents.
And
it was Russian warplanes out of the Russian air base in Syria that
constantly flew over Sunni strongholds bombing them mercilessly. Just
incidentally the very same Sunni fighting groups that Mr. Putin has
attempted after the fall of President Assad, (domiciled now in Russia),
to ingratiate himself with, hoping to be able to maintain both his
remaining naval and air bases in the new Sunni-led government of Ahmed
al-Sharaa.
![]() |
| The Russian military presence in Syria has declined significantly over the past two years, from 114 military sites to only two bases today. [Getty] |
In
the early years of Russia's conflict in Ukraine when Moscow was
isolated by the West, Turkey, though a standing member of the NATO
alliance, spurned the sanctions. In the process becoming a link for
Russian trade, investment and energy flows. A situation that gave Ankara
greater leverage over Moscow. Russia, before the ouster of the Syrian
Alawite regime, could do anything it wanted there and had hundreds of
military bases; now under the new Sunni-led regime, reduced to two,
albeit its major bases.
It
is Turkey that is now the power lever in Syria, helping its interim
president al-Sharaa to be presented to the EU, the U.S. as the new,
kinder, 'democratic' face of Syria with whom they could all do business
with confidence. And in the process, Turkey has become the king-maker,
which suits its future plans of greater dominance in the Middle East
very well. A role that as a junior partner to Russia for so many years,
Russia cultivated for itself, while it is Turkey now that has inserted
itself in helping to rebuild the Syrian Army.
By
openly giving assistance to Ukraine's President Zelenskyy, Mr. Erdogan
is amply demonstrating that once again Turkey has spurned its
sometimes-tenuous, but generally past-useful allyship with Russia,
moreover a Russia that has, by its territorial aggression served to
isolate itself, while continuing to aggravate and threaten his eastern
European neighbours and needling NATO, of which Turkey is a member.
Vladimir Putin and his war-wearied economy has lost the projection of
global power, and Turkey for the time being has no further use of his
allyship with Russia.
![]() |
| Russian and Turkish delegations at a summit in Tianjin, China, September 2025 Vladimir Smirnov / Reuters |
Labels: Gulf States, Iran Conflict, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Russian Invasion of Ukraine, Sanctions, Syrian Civil War, Turkey-Russian Alliance, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy





<< Home