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Is Washington Quietly Reshaping the Israel–Turkey Rivalry?


 The Israel–Turkey confrontation after Iran is often explained as a natural shift in regional power. Iran weakens. Türkiye rises. Israel adjusts. That story is neat. It feels logical.

But it is not complete.

A quieter force is at work. One that rarely makes headlines but shapes outcomes just as strongly. The United States is not just observing this transition. It is influencing how it unfolds, not through direct confrontation, but through alliance management.

That changes everything.


Power is shifting. But also being redirected

For years, Iran served as the central axis of resistance in the Middle East. Israel built its security doctrine around that reality. Gulf states reacted to it. Washington contained it.

Now that structure is weakening.

Türkiye has stepped into the space with increasing confidence:

  • Expanded military presence in Syria and Iraq
  • Strategic footholds in Libya and Somalia
  • A growing defense industry, especially in drones

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Türkiye’s defense spending and exports have steadily increased, placing it among the most active mid-tier military powers.

This rise is real. But it is not happening in isolation.


The U.S.–Türkiye trust gap

The turning point came with Türkiye’s purchase of the S-400 missile system from Russia.

Washington responded decisively:

  • Türkiye was removed from the F-35 fighter jet program
  • Sanctions were imposed under CAATSA
  • Defense cooperation became more cautious

These were not routine disagreements. They signaled a deeper concern.

From Washington’s perspective, Türkiye was drifting away from NATO alignment.
From Ankara’s perspective, it was asserting independence.

That difference in perception created a gap. Not a break, but a strain.


A quiet pivot toward Greece

At the same time, the United States began strengthening ties with Greece.

  • Expanded military access to Greek ports such as Alexandroupoli
  • Increased joint exercises in the Eastern Mediterranean
  • Advanced aircraft deals and upgrades

Israel also deepened cooperation with Greece and Cyprus, particularly in energy and security.

These moves were not framed as anti-Türkiye. But their effect was clear.

They created alternatives.


How this reshapes the Israel–Turkey dynamic

Without U.S. involvement, Israel–Türkiye tensions would remain a regional rivalry.
With U.S. alignment shifts, the rivalry becomes structured.

Israel now operates within a network that includes:

  • Greece
  • Cyprus
  • U.S. military backing

Türkiye, by contrast, feels partially excluded from that system.

That changes incentives.

  • Ankara becomes more assertive in Syria and the Mediterranean
  • Israel becomes less cautious in countering Turkish moves
  • Trust erodes faster on both sides

The result is not immediate conflict. It is sustained friction.


Strategic autonomy or “double game”?

Critics often describe Türkiye as “playing both sides.”

There is some truth in that view:

  • Engagement with Russia
  • Tactical coordination with Iran
  • Continued membership in NATO

But the label oversimplifies.

From Ankara’s perspective, this is strategic autonomy. A way to avoid dependence on any single bloc.

Türkiye also faces its own security pressures:

  • Kurdish militancy near its borders
  • Instability in Syria
  • Energy competition in the Mediterranean

These factors push it to diversify relationships.

Still, there is a limit to this balancing act.


The limit of ambiguity

“You can only go so far by being coy.”

That line captures a deeper reality.

Great powers tolerate ambiguity only up to a point.
Beyond that, they begin to hedge.

The United States is now hedging.

  • Strengthening Greece
  • Maintaining pressure on Türkiye
  • Supporting a network that excludes full Turkish participation

This does not isolate Türkiye completely. But it reduces its strategic comfort.

And that has consequences.


A system under pressure

A 2025 briefing from the International Crisis Group warned that overlapping military deployments in Syria increase the risk of unintended escalation.

That warning applies more broadly.

The Middle East is moving toward a system where:

  • Multiple powers operate in the same spaces
  • Alliances overlap and shift
  • Miscalculation becomes more likely

This is not a return to old rivalries. It is something more complex.


Conclusion: shaping conflict without fighting

The Israel–Turkey confrontation after Iran is not just the result of changing regional power. It is also shaped by how the United States manages its alliances.

Washington does not need to confront Türkiye directly.
It can reshape the environment around it.

By:

  • Strengthening alternative partners
  • Adjusting trust levels
  • Rebalancing regional networks

That alone can increase pressure and intensify rivalry.

The Middle East is not entering a phase of clear alignments. It is entering a phase of layered competition.

And in such systems, stability is not guaranteed. It is negotiated. Repeatedly. Quietly.

Until one day, it fails.

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