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From Bridge to Hub: Türkiye’s Strategic Repositioning in NATO’s Emerging Geoeconomic Security Architecture  

This article argues that NATO’s emerging geoeconomic security architecture calls for a reinterpretation of Türkiye’s role within the alliance and that this shift is best understood as a strategic repositioning through a hub-state logic. As resilience, critical infrastructure protection, supply-chain security, energy continuity, civil preparedness, cyber defense, and defense-industrial capacity move closer to the operational core of deterrence and defense, economic security becomes increasingly tied to the conditions of military-strategic effectiveness. In this setting, Türkiye’s value lies less in possession alone than in the extent to which its assets can be converted, through positionality, into alliance-relevant leverage. To explain this reorientation, the article proceeds from the distinction between power as possession and power as positionality and develops power pricing and power valuation as analytical tools for rethinking strategic value under conditions of deepening interdependence. Through this framework, it examines four dimensions of Türkiye’s hub-state role (routing, switching, buffering, and synchronizing) to show how the country contributes to alliance continuity, crisis management, regional coordination, and diplomatic intermediation across a wider geoeconomic periphery.

From Bridge to Hub Türkiye s Strategic Repositioning in NATO
 

 

Introduction

 

Recent shifts in NATO’s strategic agenda invite a broader reassessment of Türkiye’s role within the Alliance. Territorial defense, force readiness, and conventional deterrence remain NATO’s core functions. Resilience, critical infrastructure protection, supply-chain security, energy continuity, civil preparedness, cyber defense, and defense-industrial capacity, however, can no longer be treated as peripheral; they increasingly form part of the conditions that make deterrence and defense effective. The 2021 Strengthened Resilience Commitment, the 2022 Strategic Concept, and the defense-investment trajectory sharpened by the 2024 Washington Summit and the 2025 Hague Summit all suggest that security is now shaped not only at the front line, but also through the infrastructural, industrial, and civilian capacities that sustain continuity under stress. In this setting, security cannot be reduced to force posture alone; it also depends on the arrangements of connectivity, resilience, and continuity that make that posture credible and sustainable.

 

This reorientation also alters the meaning of economic security within NATO. It can no longer be treated only as a matter of securitization or economic coercion; it is increasingly tied to the operational foundations of military-strategic effectiveness. Defense production, access to critical inputs, infrastructural resilience, supply continuity, energy security, and civil-military preparedness now help shape the credibility of deterrence and defense. Economic security, in this sense, is not simply about moving economic issues into the security realm. It is also an operational field that helps define the conditions under which military effectiveness can be sustained. As a result, both the protected values and referent objects of economic security are expanding.

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