Stephen Turner’s convenient beliefs are operating at full presidential and strategic throttle in the Presidential Palace, the Foreign Ministry, MIT (Milli İstihbarat Teşkilatı), and the energy and defense strategy rooms right now. With the U.S.-Israeli campaign in its second month, Khamenei martyred, Iranian nuclear sites cratered, oil terminals smoking, and global energy prices still volatile in the $90s after their brief $110 spike, these beliefs let President Erdoğan (or his inner circle), senior ministers, and the security establishment maintain domestic unity, justify calibrated “strategic autonomy,” keep the Russian and Iranian energy pipelines and drone deals quietly humming, and position Turkey as the indispensable, pragmatic power broker of the region—without ever admitting that prolonged chaos could still inflame Kurdish tensions, strain the lira, or complicate the post-earthquake reconstruction narrative.
Here are the 10 most useful ones circulating among Turkey’s leadership today:
The U.S.-Israeli war on Iran proves once again that Turkey’s policy of strategic autonomy and multi-alignment was the only wise course—not blind loyalty to Washington or Tehran.
Every new strike becomes Exhibit A that Ankara alone understands the real balance of power.
Sky-high energy prices are a temporary but perfectly timed windfall for our Russian gas deals, Azerbaijani oil transit, and growing role as an East-West energy hub.
Higher household bills are framed as the necessary price for making Turkey the indispensable corridor.
The weakening of Iran opens historic opportunities for Turkish influence in Syria, Iraq, and the broader region without direct confrontation.
Lets leaders quietly expand operations against Kurdish groups while claiming “stabilizing influence.”
Our firm but measured criticism of Israeli “aggression” combined with quiet NATO cooperation shows classic Turkish pragmatism—neither naïve dove nor reckless hawk.
Keeps the domestic base happy while preserving U.S. basing rights and F-16 upgrades.
Domestic support for strong, independent Turkish leadership remains rock-solid; the external crisis has only unified the nation behind the AK Party vision.
Any economic grumbling or opposition noise is dismissed as foreign-orchestrated or marginal.
The crisis validates our massive defense-industry buildup and drone exports; Turkey is now a genuine regional military power that both sides quietly respect.
Frames every Bayraktar sale or domestic production milestone as vindication of the “century of Türkiye” narrative.
European and Gulf partners now need Turkey more than ever as a mediator, refugee manager, and energy stabilizer—our leverage has never been stronger.
Positions Ankara as the adult everyone calls when the shooting gets messy.
The humanitarian and refugee fallout from Iran only underscores why Turkey’s firm border and migration policies were correct all along.
Turns any new influx into justification for tighter controls and louder demands for EU money.
Strategic patience and multi-vector diplomacy will once again prove superior; history shows Turkey always emerges stronger when other powers exhaust themselves in the Middle East.
Gatekeeps the diplomatic line against any internal voices pushing deeper alignment with either side.
Turkey’s unique blend of military strength, economic resilience, and civilizational depth will ensure we emerge as the undisputed winner of this chapter; the 21st century belongs to Türkiye.
The ultimate meta-belief. It lets the leadership sleep soundly (in the palace or on the flight to Moscow/Beijing) knowing that every additional week of the war is simply another step toward Turkey’s long-delayed return to regional primacy.
These aren’t conspiracy theories—they’re adaptive survival tools for a governing circle whose political survival, economic model, and neo-Ottoman self-image depend on never sounding panicked, insufficiently independent, or overly entangled in anyone else’s war. Even as Iranian missiles keep the oil market twitchy and the war refuses to end on schedule, these beliefs keep the palace unified, the public briefings defiant, and the brand insulated from both “too pro-Western” and “too reckless” critiques. Question too many of them out loud and you risk becoming the minister or adviser labeled “out of step with the Turkish century.”
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