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Turkey Emerges as Iran War's Strategic Winner Without Firing a Shot

Turkey Emerges as Iran War's Strategic Winner Without Firing a Shot
Security · 2026
Photo · Kenji Watanabe for Asian Examiner
By Kenji Watanabe Politics & Diplomacy Apr 30, 2026 5 min read

When US and Israeli aircraft struck Iran on February 28, killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and decapitating much of the senior Iranian leadership, Turkey's reaction was striking for what it withheld. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the attacks as a violation of international law, closed Turkish airspace to US forces, and offered condolences for Khamenei's death. Yet Ankara also distanced itself from Tehran, criticizing Iran's retaliatory strikes on Gulf states and blaming Iranian intransigence for the collapse of pre-war negotiations. The message was deliberate: Turkey was against the war and was no one's ally in it.

That posture, which Turkish officials privately describe as “active neutrality,” is now paying compounding strategic dividends. Two months in, with a Pakistani-mediated ceasefire fragile but holding since early April, the most consequential second-order effect of the war may be the elevation of Turkey to a regional position it has not enjoyed in modern times.

The Mediator's Purse

The most visible gain is diplomatic centrality. The quartet of Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Pakistan that convened in Islamabad on March 29 to coordinate de-escalation is, in substance, a Turkish-driven format. Reuters reported on March 25 that Ankara had been a go-between for messages between Iran and the US, probing US positions while warning Tehran against widening the war. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen publicly endorsed Turkey's mediation efforts on March 1, and the personal rapport between Erdogan and Donald Trump, whatever its limits, has lent the role a credibility that Doha or Muscat alone cannot match.

Mediation matters not because Ankara expects to broker a comprehensive settlement (it does not) but because the role itself confers what diplomats call right of access: a permanent seat in the conversations that will shape whatever post-war regional order emerges.

A Vacuum at Iran's Expense

The deeper structural shift is geographic. For four decades, Iran functioned as the institutional anchor of a “resistance” axis running through Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and the Gulf. Israel's gradual dismantling of that network from 2023 onward, capped now by the joint US-Israeli decapitation strikes, has eviscerated it. Combined with Russia's weakened position after years of attrition in Ukraine and Iran's degradation, the Russia-Turkey-Iran triangle that governed Syrian diplomacy through the Astana process has effectively collapsed, leaving Turkey as the sole functional broker in that format.

The consequences are already visible on the ground. In Syria, where the Assad regime fell in late 2024, Turkish-aligned actors sit at the center of the post-war settlement, and Ankara's quiet deconfliction channel with Israel is now the principal mechanism preventing direct collisions in Idlib and the northeast. In Iraq, Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan has signaled that the “Syrian dossier” will expand to address the Qamishli–Sinjar corridor, where Iran-backed militias have lost the political cover Tehran once provided.

The $17 billion “Development Road” through Iraq, designed to link Europe and Turkey to the Persian Gulf, is suddenly viable in a way it was not a year ago. So is the Zangezur Corridor through the South Caucasus, which would connect Turkey to Central Asia while bypassing Iranian territory altogether. Taken together, these corridors would re-route a meaningful share of East-West trade through Turkish-controlled space. That is not a tactical windfall. It is a generational realignment.

The Defense-Industrial Dividend

The war is also accelerating a transformation in Gulf security thinking that began long before February 28. After watching Iranian missiles strike civilian infrastructure in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar despite American patronage, Gulf monarchies are quietly diversifying their security partnerships away from sole reliance on Washington. Turkey is the obvious regional alternative. Over the past decade, Turkey has evolved from a major arms importer into a self-reliant global exporter, with domestic production surpassing 80% by 2026, anchored by platforms such as the Bayraktar UAVs, the KAAN fifth-generation fighter, and an expanding naval fleet under the MILGEM program.

Defense agreements quietly concluded throughout March suggest that Ankara is converting Gulf anxiety into long-term contracts and embedded political relationships. Add to this Turkey's role as host of the July NATO summit, and the picture sharpens further. Erdogan will arrive at that meeting with leverage he did not possess in January: the alliance's most exposed frontline state, an indispensable mediator, and a credible candidate for reintegration into Western defense-industrial frameworks from which Washington had previously sought to exclude him.

This rise also carries risks. The Borsa Istanbul plummeted by 7% on March 2 as investors reacted to the strikes, and energy costs are eating into already brutal inflation. Iran has historically supplied roughly 14% of Turkey's natural gas imports, a structural dependency that war-driven disruptions have translated directly into domestic price pressure. As of mid-March, three reportedly Iranian missiles aimed at Turkey were intercepted by NATO missiles, a reminder that geographic exposure cannot be diplomatically wished away. More dangerous still, reports that Washington is exploring partnerships with Iranian Kurdish groups, particularly the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK), an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), could complicate Ankara's security calculus.

For now, Turkey's active neutrality has positioned it as the war's biggest winner without firing a shot. The question is whether it can manage the vulnerabilities that come with its newfound centrality. For Asian observers, the shift underscores how a conflict in the Middle East is reshaping trade corridors and security alignments across the Indo-Pacific, with implications for energy markets and strategic autonomy from Seoul to Singapore. As Seoul's Southward Pivot and India's Window for Restraint on Hormuz Crisis show, the region is recalibrating its dependencies in real time.

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