Turkey is building border infrastructure to receive up to one million Iranian refugees, the most operationally concrete response from any neighbouring state to the conflict. While governments issue statements, Ankara is pouring concrete. The preparation acknowledges what diplomatic language has not: this war will displace people on a scale that reshapes the region's demographics.
Turkey shares a 534-kilometre border with Iran, running through predominantly Kurdish regions on both sides — a dimension that adds complexity given Ankara's own unresolved Kurdish conflict. President Erdogan has condemned both the US-Israeli strikes and Iran's retaliatory attacks , a both-sides position consistent with Turkey's structural contradictions as a NATO member state that maintains deep economic ties with Tehran. Turkey continues to import Iranian oil during the conflict, a direct tension with its alliance obligations to a country prosecuting a military campaign against the oil's source.
The refugee burden would land on an already strained system. Turkey hosts approximately 3.6 million Syrian refugees — the largest refugee population of any country worldwide. The political cost has been severe: anti-refugee sentiment contributed to opposition gains in Turkey's 2024 local elections, and Erdogan's coalition partners have pushed for accelerated returns to Syria. Adding a million Iranians would test infrastructure that is overstretched and a public mood that is hostile. Iranian Kurdish refugees arriving in Turkey's Kurdish-majority southeast would intersect directly with the PKK conflict that has cost over 40,000 lives since 1984.
The preparation also creates leverage. Ankara used Syrian refugee flows as a bargaining instrument with the European Union, securing a €6 billion agreement in 2016 and later threatening to "open the gates" when disbursements slowed. A parallel dynamic with Iranian refugees — directed at Washington rather than Brussels — is already taking shape. Turkey absorbs the humanitarian consequences of a war it did not choose. That position has a price, and Ankara has demonstrated before that it knows how to name it.
