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Russia, Sweden have political incentives to aid Turkey after earthquake

Peter Zeihan Geopolitical Strategist
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Countries around the globe are responding to the catastrophic earthquake that ravaged parts of Turkey and Syria on Monday. President Biden said the United States will send “any and all” aid needed to help recovery. At least 13 EU member countries have offered assistance, and Israel said search and rescue teams will be heading over. Even Russian President Putin made a call to President Erdogan to express condolences. In fact, according to Straight Arrow News Peter Zeihan, both the Russians and Swedes have reasons to offer Turkey humanitarian aid.

Excerpted from Peter’s Feb. 7 “Zeihan on Geopolitics” newsletter:

In the early hours of Monday, Feb. 6th, an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.8 hit the city of Gaziantep in southern Turkey. The quake was felt across Turkey and deep into Syria, leaving behind a path of deadly destruction.

At the time of recording, the death toll in Turkey and Syria was in the 2,000s. At the time of scheduling this newsletter, the death toll in Turkey and Syria is well above 3,500 and will continue to rise throughout the coming days.

Natural disasters happen at random, but that doesn’t mean they can’t also be geopolitical events. The 2011 Togoku earthquake/tsunami that took the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear reactor offline had grave consequences for global nuclear energy policy. In Turkey’s case, expect Sweden and Russia to offer humanitarian aid and try to get back into Ankara’s good graces.

Hi, everyone, Peter Zion here coming to you from somewhere in Florida. On Monday, the sixth of February in the early hours, an earthquake hit the city of Santa in south central Turkey, which is hard up on the Syrian border. And the destructive capacity of it was 7.8 on the Richter scale that was felt as far away as Hatay, which is where the Turkish territory meets the Mediterranean, as well as well into Turkish Kurdistan. And of course, throughout most of Syria, devastation is considerable. This is definitely the strongest earthquake that has hit the area and about 20 years. Early death estimates are already well over 2000, they’ll probably be over 20,000, within a week, when earthquake hit this area, they can really be awful. We are in a very seismically active area here. And a lot of the construction is not up to you when you consider up to say like Japanese style standards. So the idea that you could actually reach 100,000 deaths is not, not out of the ballpark. Earthquakes are often geopolitical events, not in that they wreck countries, although that they do. But instead, they provide opportunities for diplomatic breakthroughs. And as regards Turkey at this moment, there’s really two countries that would be really, really looking to provide some aid in order to tilt politics in Turkey in the direction. The first one would be Russia. Turkey is one of the very few outlets that the Russians have right now for getting their trade in and out. And the Turks have been acting as middlemen. So if the Russians were able to provide some sort of diplomatic and economic emergency assistance, build, bridge building, relief crews, that sort of thing, then you could see some significant warming and relations. The problem, of course, is all the Russians capacity has already spoken for in Ukraine. And it’s not clear that it’d be worth the Russians time to pull a few people off of the front lines in order to give supply to the Turks. The Russians have something that’s called the disasters ministry, which is actually really good at doing stuff like this used to be run by Shogo who is the current defense minister, but it’s really just a paramilitary arm of the government. And it’s just completely spoken for already. The second group that would have an interest of maybe tilting things diplomatically with the Turks would be the Swedes. The Swedes have been trying to get into NATO for about a year now. And the Turks have been threatening to veto their membership, because of the Swedes taking a certain position on Kurdish issues with the Turks think is and FEMA to them being in alliance. But if Sweden, which does have some spare capacity and does have a good record of humanitarian effort, even with the Kurds, were to provide that with the Turks, it might just provide the sort of opening that the Swedes need to get over Turkish hesitance in terms of letting them join the Alliance. So those are the two to watch for you won’t have to wait very long. This is the kind of thing that either happens or it doesn’t within just a couple of days, because after that, too late and the people buried under the rubble are already gone. So we’ll know soon. That’s it for me. Until next time, bye.

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