The Turkey Doctrine
-
- $8.99
-
- $8.99
Publisher Description
Erased History Project is a series dedicated to documenting the events, deals, and power plays the global establishment would rather vanish, because this is history not being told and not being recorded in history books in a linear fashion in order to write their version. Each volume captures the buried connective tissue between wars, coups, sanctions, and diplomatic theater, preserving the receipts before they can be shredded, rewritten, or algorithmically buried. If you suspect the official timeline has been edited for your consumption, this series is where the missing chapters live.
NATO was built without a way to expel a member state—and Turkey under Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has spent the last two decades turning that design flaw into a weapon. “The Turkey Doctrine” is a gripping, real‑world geopolitical thriller that shows how a single NATO member bought Russian air defenses, laundered billions in Iranian sanctions‑busting cash through its own public bank, occupied EU territory, armed Islamist networks, and redrew sea borders from Libya to Cyprus—yet never paid an institutional price. Through Somalia bases, energy chokepoints, migrant leverage over Europe, and the quiet hosting of Hamas and Brotherhood cadres, the book reveals how Ankara built a global architecture of impunity while Washington and Brussels talked tough and quietly shifted jets, bases, and pipelines around it.
Drawing on investigative detail usually locked in classified briefings, “The Turkey Doctrine” reads like a war‑room memo you were never meant to see. It walks you into the back rooms where U.S. and European planners scramble to build workarounds in Greece, Cyprus, and the Black Sea, then fast‑forwards to the looming NATO Summit in Ankara in July 2026, when the alliance must finally decide whether Turkey is still a pillar—or a saboteur sitting inside the tent. For readers of hard‑edged nonfiction who want to understand the next Middle East crisis, the next energy shock, or even the next great‑power war before it hits the news crawl, this book offers a clear message: the bill for twenty years of looking away is due, and what happens next will reshape the entire postwar order.