Trump and Xi Jingping summit: How are the United States and China redefining their relationship?
ERBIL / Kurdish Policy Analysis — As the war against Iran reshapes alliances across the Middle East, a pair of controversial reports from the Foundation for Defense of Democracies is igniting debate in Washington: should Turkey, a long-standing NATO ally, be the next target of U.S. pressure?
The reports, published on April 1, argue that Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has drifted far from its secular democratic roots—evolving instead into what analysts describe as an “Islamist geopolitical hub” with ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and affiliated networks.
One of the reports claims that modern Turkey has undergone a profound ideological transformation since Erdoğan came to power in 2003. It argues that Ankara has gradually dismantled the secular foundations laid by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and replaced them with a system aligned with political Islam. According to the analysis, Turkey has:
The report further alleges that Turkey’s policies extend beyond political support, claiming financial and logistical backing for Islamist actors, including some linked to jihadist organizations.
These claims remain highly contested and are rejected by Ankara, which maintains that it is combating terrorism and acting as a stabilizing regional power.
The second report makes a more direct policy argument: if Donald Trump returns to power, Turkey—not Russia, not China—should be the first NATO ally subjected to pressure. The reasoning is strategic:
The report warns that failing to confront Turkey could allow it to fill the vacuum left by a weakened Iran, positioning itself as the dominant ideological and political force in the Muslim world.
FDD-linked analysis points to recent developments reinforcing these concerns, including:
At the same time, Turkey has avoided direct confrontation with Iran, likely due to economic and political risks.
The Foundation for Defense of Democracies is a Washington-based policy institute focused on national security and counterterrorism.
However, the organization is also controversial. Critics—including academics and journalists—have accused it of:
This raises a critical question: are these reports objective intelligence analysis—or part of a broader geopolitical lobbying effort?
The timing of these reports is not accidental.
As U.S. and Israeli operations weaken Iran’s regional network, a power vacuum is emerging across the Middle East. Analysts warn that:
In this context, framing Turkey as a “problem ally” may serve to prepare public and political opinion for future confrontation or pressure.
Despite the alarmist tone of the reports, reality is more complex. Turkey remains:
While concerns about democratic backsliding and foreign policy activism are widely shared in Western policy circles, labeling Turkey as a hub of jihadism is a far more contentious claim.
The emerging narrative from Washington think tanks suggests a dramatic shift: From “Turkey the ally” → to “Turkey the strategic challenge.” Whether this reflects reality—or an attempt to shape it—may determine the next phase of Middle East geopolitics after Iran.
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