Tag: velluminsights

  • Turkey: The Third Gulf Axis Of Power

    Turkey: The Third Gulf Axis Of Power

    Turkey Is Modernizing Its Military to Send Message to the Rest of NATO -  Business Insider

    I. Historical & Strategic Context

    Turkey has long viewed itself as a bridge between Europe, the Middle East, and Central Asia, but in recent years, it has evolved into a military-industrial powerhouse with global reach. No longer a passive NATO border state, Turkey under Erdoğan is increasingly projecting influence:

    • North Africa (Libya)
    • The Caucasus (Azerbaijan-Armenia war)
    • Levant and Gulf (Qatar, Iraq, Syria)
    • East Africa (Somalia, Red Sea bases)

    Strategic Shift: From reactive defense to neo-Ottoman influence projection, blending soft and hard power.

    II. Defense Industry as a Foreign Policy Weapon

    Turkey is one of the world’s top 10 arms exporters—a remarkable shift over the past decade. Key defense assets include:

    Bayraktar TB2 & Akinci Drones

    • Used in Libya, Syria, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Ukraine with lethal efficiency
    • Proven value: Affordable, modular, and swarm-capable
    • Exported to over 30 countries

    Domestic Naval Power

    ANALYSIS] TCG Anadolu: the most powerful warship and the flagship of the  Turkish Navy - Turkish Minute
    TCG Anadolu
    • TCG Anadolu: Turkey’s first aircraft carrier (drone carrier)
    • Development of homegrown submarines, corvettes, and missile boats
    • Naval projection into Red Sea and Gulf waters via bases in Qatar and Somalia

    Roketsan & ASELSAN Weapon Systems

    • Indigenous missile tech (SOM cruise missiles, surface-to-air platforms)
    • Electronic warfare, SIGINT, and AI-based C4ISR platforms
    SOM (missile) - Wikipedia

    III. Turkey’s Military Footprint in the Gulf & Red Sea

    Qatar: The Core Gulf Ally

    New military base in Qatar to inaugurate in autumn - Türkiye News
    • Permanent Turkish base in Qatar (Tariq bin Ziyad Base) since the 2017 Gulf blockade
    • Trains Qatari military officers and provides a counterbalance to Saudi-UAE axis
    • Shared interests in Islamic soft power and Muslim Brotherhood-aligned networks

    Somalia & Horn of Africa

    • Camp TURKSOM: Largest Turkish overseas base, training Somali forces
    • Gateway to Red Sea, Indian Ocean routes, and Gulf of Aden chokepoints
    • Turkey is viewed by local governments as an alternative to Western and Chinese influence

    Levant & Iraq

    • Deep involvement in northern Iraq operations (anti-PKK) and northern Syria
    • Construction of semi-permanent military zones near Mosul and Afrin
    • Facilitates indirect influence over Kurdish and Shia corridors leading into Iran and the Gulf

    IV. Strategic Military Doctrine: Asymmetric, Exportable, Agile

    Turkey’s emerging doctrine can be summarized as “Agile Strategic Presence”:

    • Exportable Firepower: Drones, missiles, and electronic systems designed for “plug-and-play” use by allies and proxies
    • Hybrid Warfare: Combines conventional operations with proxies (e.g., Syrian militias), drones, cyber ops, and psychological warfare
    • Strategic Basing: Establishing forward bases without requiring full occupation—training partners, guarding ports, building schools and airfields

    V. Strategic Recommendations: How Turkey Can Solidify Gulf Influence

    1. Expand Naval Presence into Western Gulf
      • Leverage Qatar to co-develop naval facilities
      • Introduce drone naval platforms in Hormuz-Red Sea corridor
    2. Create a Turkish-Gulf Defense Education Exchange
      • Offer military academies in Africa and Asia under Turkish branding
      • Counterbalance Western training programs with Islamic-friendly curriculum
    3. Cyber-Islamic Coalition
      • Build digital alliances with Muslim-majority countries (Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan) using shared AI, cyberdefense, and drone doctrine
      • Present this as a “non-aligned Islamic defense bloc”
    4. Weaponize Infrastructure
      • Package military presence with hospitals, mosques, infrastructure deals
      • Lock in multi-domain loyalty among unstable regimes (Sudan, Djibouti, Libya)

    Table comparison with UAE & Saudi Arabia

    DimensionTurkeyUAESaudi Arabia
    Military DoctrineAgile & Hybrid WarfareTech-first asymmetric deterrenceStrategic autonomy, conventional
    Regional AllyQatar, SomaliaEgypt, Jordan, Israel (informal)Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan
    Defense IndustryDrones, missiles, navalDrones, EW, AI weaponsLand vehicles, missiles, MRO
    Influence MethodProxy warfare + soft powerTech diplomacy + trainingArms deals + economic leverage

    Sidenote: Hi guys, im trying my best to pump out the content. Life has been hectic lately.