A new MetroPoll survey suggests that a strong majority of the Turkish public opposes any direct involvement in the war launched by the US and Israel against Iran, while still viewing NATO as an important pillar of Turkey’s security. The findings offer fresh insight into how President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s foreign policy is being received at home. According to Yetkin Report and the results from MetroPoll’s March 2026 “Pulse of Turkey” survey, shared by senior pollster Özer Sencar, 68.1% of respondents said Turkey should remain neutral in the conflict. Another 22.6% said Ankara should side with Iran, while only 2.1% supported aligning with the US and Israel. The remaining respondents were undecided. The numbers point to a clear public preference: Turkey should avoid being drawn into war. At the same time, another result in the same survey reveals a more complex picture of public opinion. When asked about NATO’s role in Turkey’s security, 61.0% described it ...
In a dramatic shift from their traditionally cautious diplomacy, Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, alongside key regional allies, have adopted a unified and defiant posture against Iran, rejecting any notion of an "easy off-ramp" to the ongoing war. Recent high-level summits and joint statements reveal a region no longer willing to be a passive battleground, demanding the permanent degradation of Iran's military capabilities as a condition for peace. The Riyadh Summit: A Coalition Forged in Crisis The pivotal moment came on March 18-19, when Saudi Arabia hosted a consultative ministerial meeting in Riyadh. Foreign ministers from all six GCC states—Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and Oman—joined counterparts from Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Syria, Türkiye, and Azerbaijan. The meeting, timed deliberately as Iranian missiles struck nearby, was a powerful display of unity. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan confirmed the attack was in...