History & the AKP Transformation
Turkey's trajectory as a state enabler of Islamist movements is inseparable from the political project of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the AKP, which came to power in November 2002 following Turkey's worst economic crisis in decades. Erdoğan presented the AKP to Western audiences as a moderate, democratising, pro-EU Islamic party that had made peace with secular democracy — a narrative that received a largely uncritical welcome in Washington and Brussels for nearly a decade. Beneath the reformist surface, however, the AKP was systematically dismantling the Kemalist institutional architecture — the military, judiciary, and civil service — that had enforced Turkey's secular orientation, and replacing it with an Islamist-nationalist network loyal to Erdoğan personally.
The pivot toward overt Islamist regional enablement became unmistakable after 2011. The Arab Spring presented Erdoğan with what he perceived as a historic opportunity: the emergence of Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated governments across the Arab world — in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, and potentially Syria — that would constitute a Sunni Islamist regional order in which Turkey, under AKP leadership, would be the natural hegemon. Erdoğan threw Turkey's diplomatic, financial, and military weight behind Brotherhood-aligned movements, most visibly in Egypt (where he was the most vocal international defender of Mohamed Morsi's Brotherhood government), Libya (where he deployed Syrian proxy militias and signed a maritime delimitation deal to extend Turkish naval reach across the Mediterranean), and Syria (where Turkish intelligence — MIT — ran the primary logistics corridor for foreign jihadist fighters entering the country, including those who later joined ISIS and al-Qaeda-affiliated groups).
"Erdoğan's Turkey is not a passive enabler. It has made a sovereign ideological choice to back political Islam across the region — and has used NATO membership as a structural shield against the consequences."
European Council on Foreign Relations, Turkey Assessment, 2021Turkey's relationship with Hamas represents the most internationally scrutinised dimension of its enabling role. Erdoğan has cultivated Hamas's political and military leadership for over fifteen years, hosting Hamas leaders in Ankara, providing Turkish passports and travel documents to Hamas operatives, and allowing Istanbul to serve as a base for Hamas fundraising and financial operations — activities documented by Israeli, US, and European intelligence services. Following the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel in 2023, Erdoğan refused to condemn Hamas, instead hosting Hamas Political Bureau Chief Ismail Haniyeh in Ankara and publicly describing Hamas fighters as "mujahideen" defending Palestinian land. Turkey's stance placed it in direct open conflict with its NATO allies and with EU positions, though the alliance's structural dependencies prevented any formal accountability.
The Kurdish dimension of Turkey's enabling role is equally significant and far more lethal in its immediate consequences. Since 2016, Turkey has conducted four major military operations against Kurdish forces in northern Syria — targeting the YPG/SDF, which served as the primary US partner force in the campaign against ISIS — and has conducted ongoing cross-border strikes in northern Iraq targeting PKK positions. These operations have displaced hundreds of thousands of Kurdish civilians, destroyed Kurdish-administered communities, and deployed Syrian Islamist proxy forces documented by human rights organisations as perpetrating looting, abductions, and summary executions of Kurdish and other minority populations.
Timeline
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2002–2007AKP wins landslide election victory. Erdoğan becomes Prime Minister in 2003. Turkey presents itself to Western audiences as a model of moderate Muslim democracy compatible with EU membership. The AKP begins systematically replacing Kemalist officials in the military, judiciary, and civil service with party loyalists while advancing formal EU accession negotiations as political cover.
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2010The Mavi Marmara incident: a Turkish flotilla attempting to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza is intercepted by Israeli commandos; nine Turkish activists are killed. Erdoğan breaks diplomatic relations with Israel, transforms Hamas from an Islamist pariah into a cause célèbre in Turkish politics, and begins cultivating Hamas's leadership as formal political interlocutors. Turkey does not restore full diplomatic relations with Israel for a decade.
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2011–2013Arab Spring. Erdoğan backs Brotherhood-aligned governments in Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya. Turkish intelligence MIT opens the Syrian border to facilitate the transit of thousands of foreign fighters into Syria — including individuals later identified as joining ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra. Erdoğan declares Turkish support for the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood-aligned opposition and provides weapons, financing, and logistical support to Islamist rebel factions.
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2013Egyptian military coup overthrows President Morsi's Brotherhood government. Erdoğan is the most vocal international defender of the Brotherhood government and the most strident critic of General Sisi's coup — condemning it as an illegitimate seizure of power and providing shelter in Turkey for Brotherhood figures expelled from Egypt. Turkey becomes the primary external base for the international Muslim Brotherhood network.
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2016Following the failed coup attempt of July 2016, Erdoğan launches a sweeping purge of the military, judiciary, media, and civil service — arresting over 150,000 people, dismissing 125,000 state employees, and shutting hundreds of media outlets. Turkey simultaneously launches Operation Euphrates Shield in northern Syria, deploying Syrian Arab proxy forces alongside Turkish military against Kurdish YPG positions — the first of four major operations against Kurdish populations in Syria.
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2018–2019Operation Olive Branch targets the Kurdish canton of Afrin in northwestern Syria. Turkish-backed Syrian National Army forces seize Afrin, with documented looting, property seizures, demographic displacement of Kurdish and Yazidi populations, and abductions of civilians. Operation Peace Spring in October 2019 targets Kurdish-held territory in northeastern Syria, triggering international condemnation from NATO allies and US congressional sanctions pressure — which Erdoğan weathers without substantive concessions.
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2019–2020Turkey deploys thousands of Syrian proxy fighters to Libya to back the UN-recognised Government of National Accord against the Libyan National Army. The deployment shifts the balance of power in the Libyan civil war, secures a controversial maritime delimitation agreement with Tripoli, and establishes a permanent Turkish military presence in Libya. The Syrian fighters deployed include individuals from factions designated as terrorist organisations by the US and EU.
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2020Turkey deploys Syrian proxy forces to support Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh war against Armenia — their first deployment outside the Middle East and North Africa. The forces are drawn from Turkish-backed factions in Syria. Azerbaijan's military victory, enabled in part by Turkish Bayraktar TB2 drones, consolidates Turkey's role as a military-proxy power operating across a vast geographic arc from the Caucasus to West Africa.
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2021–2022Turkey blocks Sweden and Finland's NATO accession for over a year, demanding the extradition of Kurdish political figures it designates as terrorists and the lifting of arms embargoes imposed after Turkey's Syria operations. The extortion of NATO enlargement — in the context of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine — demonstrates Turkey's willingness to weaponise its alliance membership for unrelated political objectives.
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2023–2025Following Hamas's October 7 attack, Erdoğan refuses to condemn the assault, hosts Hamas leadership in Ankara, and calls Hamas fighters "mujahideen." Turkey suspends all trade with Israel in May 2024 — an unprecedented step by a NATO member against a close partner of the United States. Erdoğan simultaneously positions Turkey as an indispensable diplomatic interlocutor in Gaza ceasefire talks, deploying the same dual-track strategy of enabling and mediating that Qatar has used to insulate itself from accountability.
Ideology & the AKP Enabling Architecture
Erdoğan's ideological framework — a synthesis of Sunni Islamism, Turkish nationalism, and neo-Ottoman civilisational ambition — provides the doctrinal foundation for Turkey's enabling activities. His intellectual mentor, Ahmet Davutoğlu, articulated a "Strategic Depth" doctrine arguing that Turkey's Ottoman history gave it a natural sphere of influence across the Middle East, the Balkans, the Caucasus, and Central Asia — and that cultivating Muslim Brotherhood-aligned movements was the instrument through which Turkey could reclaim this role. This is not cynical realpolitik in the manner of Qatar's strategic clientelism; it is a genuine ideological commitment that Erdoğan has expressed consistently in public speech, diplomatic posture, and military action for over two decades.
The AKP's domestic consolidation has provided the institutional infrastructure for this external enabling. Diyanet — Turkey's Presidency of Religious Affairs, with an annual budget exceeding $2 billion and a network of over 80,000 mosques — has become a vehicle for projecting Turkish state Islam globally, funding mosque construction and imam training across Europe, the Balkans, Africa, and Central Asia in ways that advance AKP-aligned religious and political narratives. The Turkish intelligence service MIT has been restructured under Erdoğan as a directly presidential instrument, conducting operations across Syria, Iraq, Libya, and beyond with minimal institutional oversight.
"Turkey under Erdoğan has become the world's most consequential state backer of the Muslim Brotherhood — more important than Qatar because it has conventional military power, a large diaspora in Europe, and NATO membership that makes it structurally immune to the consequences."
Lorenzo Vidino, George Washington University Program on Extremism, 2020Turkey's enablement of Kurdish targeting operates through a different but equally deliberate doctrinal framework. The AKP government designates the PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party), the YPG (People's Protection Units), and the broader Kurdish political movement in Turkey — the HDP/DEM Party — as a unified terrorist threat, a designation that it uses to justify the arrest of elected Kurdish politicians, the removal of Kurdish mayors, military operations against Kurdish populations in Syria and Iraq, and the obstruction of any international recognition of Kurdish political rights. This framework has allowed Turkey to frame the systematic targeting of Kurdish communities as counter-terrorism while prosecuting what Kurdish advocates and human rights organisations document as a campaign of collective punishment and demographic engineering.
Turkey's NATO membership is the structural enabler of its own enabling: it provides Erdoğan with military protection, intelligence-sharing relationships, and a seat at the table of Western decision-making that insulates Turkey from the sanctions, designations, and diplomatic consequences that a non-NATO state conducting the same activities would face. The alliance's consensus decision-making rules mean that Turkey can veto measures directed against it, demand concessions in exchange for supporting alliance positions, and leverage its geographic control of the Bosphorus Strait — through which Russian naval forces must pass — as a permanent geopolitical bargaining chip.
Key Instruments of Enablement
Turkey deploys its enabling strategy through a combination of direct military force, proxy militia deployment, intelligence operations, religious soft power, and diplomatic protection — making it structurally the most capable and militarily consequential state enabler profiled in the IFC library.
Documented Enabling Actions
Turkey's enabling activities span direct military operations, proxy deployments, intelligence facilitation, and political protection — a combination that makes it the most operationally active state enabler documented by the IFC.
Affected Populations & IFC Desks
Turkey's enabling activities under Erdoğan have produced documented harm across an exceptionally wide range of populations — from Kurdish communities in Syria, Iraq, and Turkey itself, to Libyan civilians caught in proxy warfare, to European Muslim communities subjected to Turkish state surveillance and Brotherhood-adjacent radicalisation infrastructure.