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Both countries also will have an interest in maintaining sea lanes from the
Strait of Hormuz to the Strait of Malacca. So there will be a comfortable
convergence of interests with few friction points.
Obviously the emergence of Turkey in the region and as a maritime
power will be alarming to the United States, particularly
as it will happen at
the same time that Japan is surging. And the low- key cooperation between
Turkey and Japan in the Indian Ocean will be particularly disconcerting.
Turkish power will now be overwhelming in the Persian Gulf—as will be
Japanese naval power in the northwest Pacific. The United States will still be
the dominant power in the Indian Ocean, but as with the Pacific,
the trend
won’t be moving in its direction.
Equally disturbing will be the way in which Turkey gathers up the rem
nants of the previous generation’s Islamists, adding ideological and moral
weight to its emerging preeminence in the region. As its influence spreads, it
will be about more than military power. This obviously will be unsettling to
the United States, as well as to India.
The United States will have had a long relationship with India,
dating
back to the U.S.–jihadist war of the early twenty- first century. While India,
internally divided, will not have managed to become a global economic
power, it will be a regional power of some importance. India will be dis
turbed by the entry of Muslim Turks into the Arabian Sea, and will fear fur
ther Turkish expansion into the Indian Ocean itself. India’s interests will
align with those of the Americans, and so the United States will find itself in
the same position in the Indian Ocean as in the Pacific.
It will be aligned
with a vast, populated country on the mainland, against smaller, more dy
namic maritime powers.
As this process intensifies, the power of Japan and Turkey—on opposite
ends of Asia—will become substantial. Each will be expanding its interests
in mainland Asia and therefore shifting its naval assets to support them. In
addition, each will be enhancing
its space- based operations, launching
manned and unmanned systems. There will also be a degree of technical co
operation in space; Japan will be ahead of Turkey in technology, but access
to Turkish launch facilities will give Japan added security against an Ameri
can strike. This cooperation will be yet another source
of discomfort for the
United States.
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By the middle of the century, Turkey’s influence will extend deep into
Russia and the Balkans, where it will collide with
Poland and the rest of the
Eastern European coalition. It will also become a major Mediterranean
power, controlling the Suez Canal and projecting its strength into the Per
sian Gulf. Turkey will frighten the Poles, the Indians, the Israelis, and above
all the United States.
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