If any single empire is to profit from the havoc unleashed on the world by Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, it will be that of Turkey rather than Russia. Long the main beneficiary of the war in his backyard, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan continues to play an outsized role in the conflict as evidenced by his meeting with Putin in Sochi on Monday and Volodymyr Zelensky’s symbolic choice of Rustem Umerov, a Crimean Tatar, to be Ukraine’s new defence minister the day beforehand.
Erdogan has been playing both sides in the conflict off against each other from the very beginning, acting as a mediator and a pillar of support for Kyiv and Moscow alike. Aware of Turkey’s strategic significance, both parties have been actively vying to win his backing, constantly raising the stakes as they do so.
Ankara’s ability to influence the course of the war has always been clear. Erdogan's decision to close the Turkish straits to maritime traffic days after Russian tanks began rolling towards Kyiv prevented Russian cargo ships from entering the Black Sea, possibly thwarting a naval assault on Odesa. Turkey has also been supplying crucial Bayraktar drones to Ukraine, and while Putin threatened the West with nuclear weapons if it intervened in the war, he notably addressed not a single word on the subject to the Turkish leader.
Western sanctions on Russia have had the unintended effect of transforming Turkey into a thriving marketplace for Russian companies to make vital purchases as well as somewhere to stash their cash.