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Diana Lee

Turkey's Foreign Policy Plans in 2009 - 0 views

  • It's planning to boost its foreign policy involvement in the Caucasus, Middle East, Europe and the Mediterranean, senior Turkish diplomats tell TREND.
  • It's planning to boost its foreign policy involvement in the Caucasus, Middle East, Europe and the Mediterranean, senior Turkish diplomats tell TREND.
  • looking to modernize
  • ...18 more annotations...
  • that liberalization, which is connected to EU integration, is weakening the role and power of the military
  • more compatible with the outside world.
  • the Mediterranean Union, the brainchild of the French President Nicholas Sarkozy, as an alternative path for Turkey’s interaction with Europe.
  • "Turkey wants a globally effective NATO, a stronger Turkish-American cooperation, as well as Turkey in the EU. It is vital for the peace, stability, and cooperation," says a senior Turkish diplomat who visited Washington last month.
  • Turkey is among the most anti-American Muslim societies. Anti-Semitism,
  • Prime Minister Erdogan smashed Israel’s operation in Gaza as "inhumane", coming across as a Hamas supporter.
  • high-level contacts between Turkey and Armenia
  • Turkey supports territorial integrity of Georgia, including Abkhazia and South Ossetia as part of Georgia.
  • the U.S. and EU will be accommodated or integrated into the Caucasus initiative.
  • Russia and Turkey, together with the three South Caucasus countries ( Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan), but omitted the U.S. and EU, as well as Iran.
  • Turkey is an important energy transit country.
  • Abdullah Gul, Ilham Aliev and Gurbanguli Berdymuhammedov, in port of Turkmenbashi on the Caspian coast
  • It also showed that Turkey could play a major role in its implementation.
  • Turkey played a positive role in Afghanistan,
  • watch closely how the incoming Obama administration deals with the Armenian genocide resolution, which the Armenian lobby and its supporters in Congress propose yearly to the U.S. government.
  • Turkey is willing to participate in tighter sanctions against Iran, if and when sanctioned by the U.N. Security Council
  • the relations between the U.S. and Turkey will remain complex,
  • from the Caucasus to Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan, which dictate further dialogue
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    Current Foreign Policy Info.
Diana Lee

TURKISH FOREIGN POLICY - 0 views

  • TURKISH FOREIGN POLICY TOWARD THE MIDDLE EAST
  • 1990-91 Gulf Crisis.
  • did not deviate from its traditional orientation.
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  • Turkish policymakers perceived changes in the external environment, the first condition for a state's changing its foreign policy.
  • President Turgut Ozal
  • "Peace at home and peace abroad,"
  • Kemal Ataturk, founder of the Turkish Republic
  • most cherished goal of becoming an equal member of the Western world of nations.
  • Aptlahat Akin, first Turkish Ambassador to Syria
  • Turkey's international orientation was non-alignment,
  • need of internal reconstruction, which made seeking peace a necessity.
  • to create a strong, modern state which could defend its territorial integrity and political independence, without external assistance, against external aggression; and to make Turkey a full, equal member of the Western European community of nations.
  • to avoid interference with that region's affairs.
  • Sadabad Pact
  • leaving the Arabs alone.
  • 1956 Suez Crisis was a test case for Turkey's Middle East policy.
  • During the early years, republican Turkey refrained from making overtures against anyone. In her weakness, she wished to give no cause for complaint. Other than the Hatay plum, which ripened and fell into the Turkish lap, the Turks pursued a non-committal policy, even up to the closing months of the World War II."
  • The fact that relations with the West were given top priority sometimes led Turkey to avoid entanglement with the Middle Eastern states.
  • Things did not change much after the end of the War
  • attitudes toward the newly independent Middle East states seemed to be one of accepting the existing situation but nothing more.
  • Active Turkish involvement in Middle East affairs and enthusiasm to cooperate with the U.S. forces during the DP administration can be regarded as a part of the same effort.
  • they argued that "only the Turks really understood the Arabs and therefore were in a position to approach the Arab states" for the proposed defense organization.
  • to secure its eastern and southeastern borders from a direct or indirect Communist threat.
  • it was impossible for Turkey to satisfy everyone, and thus it had decided that the West must be given top priority.
  • Turkey's economy also became dependent upon the West
  • "achieving first, national security, second, economic aid, and third, at expanding influence in the area."
  • Turkey's core foreign policy objectives remained the same except for dropping the phrase "without external assistance."
  • went forward with the idea of a Middle Eastern Defense Organization and then the Baghdad Pact shows Turkey's willingness to be subservient to the will of its allies, and especially the United States into whose sphere of influence it had entered.
  • Turkey's voting record in the UN was one of those problematic issues.
  • was shaped as an "extension" of its pro-Western policy with the ultimate aim of minimizing dangers to its core objectives.
  • The Baghdad Pact, largely due to its divisive nature, came to be regarded as a failure.
  • The policies of the 1950s were accepted as mistakes not to be repeated so that the so called new Turkish foreign policy towards the Middle East, drafted in the mid-1960s, was intended to become a continuity in negation.
  • Turkey became the second state after Jordan to recognize the new regime.
  • Turkish policymakers remained cautious and made known their desire that Turkish-Soviet relations remain within the framework of East-West relations.
  • The Middle East countries' support of the Greek Cypriots caused the Turks to come to terms with their cultural and historical bonds.
  • Turkey's pre-1960 policies toward the Middle East produced a negative feedback that led to cognitive inconsistency in and increased opposition to its policies.
  • emphasis on multi-faceted policy making.
  • this policy required less cooperation with the United States, and a more balanced attitude towards the Arab-Israeli dispute
  • CENTO (Central Treaty Organization, the name the Baghdad Pact took after Iraq's withdrawal in 1958
  • Turkey adopted a policy of caution in its attitudes towards Middle East crises as it carefully weighed the pluses and minuses of each potential action and decided accordingly.
  • Turkey's threat perceptions began to intensify.
  • one should not go too far in claiming that Turkey's relations with the United States were weakened in the post-Menderes era or that Turkey adopted a principle to overrule any U.S. request for the use of NATO bases in Turkey for non-NATO purposes. On the contrary, it may be argued that Turkey's national role conception remained that of a faithful ally of both NATO and the United States, although the latter was less pronounced.
  • Without changing the basic tenets of their foreign policy, Turkish policymakers were able to pull the Middle East states to their side -to the extent that was possible.
  • was defined as: non-interference in the domestic affairs of Middle East countries and in inter-country relations; equality among states; maintaining both diplomatic relations with Israel and political support for the Arab cause; preserving links with the West in regard to their impact on Turkey's relations with the Middle East and vice versa; development of bilateral relations.
  • t in trying to prove that Turkish foreign policy in the Gulf Crisis constituted a deviation from the traditional/Kemalist foreign policy.
  • a "major break from decades of established Turkish policy concerning non-involvement in Middle Eastern conflicts."
  • it is disputable whether Turkey's involvement in the anti-Iraqi camp regarding the Kuwait crisis, was a change in Turkey^Òs foreign policy toward the Middle East.
  • Turkish foreign policy makers--even when following a multi-faceted foreign policy, which aimed at rapprochement with Middle East states--did not completely rule out cooperation with the United States, which also remained an important priority.
  • Turkey's foreign policy toward the Middle East shows continuity.
  • Cautious to distinguish between pragmatism and opportunism, the foreign policy establishment did not deviate from past practices
  • accelerated or decelerated relations and ad hoc reactions cannot be categorized as change given the historical perspective.
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    Very long, but it gives a good view of the policies that Turkey has and the reason why.
Diana Lee

Foreign policy - Turkey - 0 views

  • Turkey has been eager for membership in the EU
  • Greece traditionally opposed the entry of Turkey into the union because of the situation in Cyprus.
  • Greek-Turkish relations have undergone significant improvement.
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  • to place Turkey as a candidate for EU membership also helped to continue the thaw in Greece's relations with its eastern neighbor.
  • France, Germany, and Belgium blocked a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) agreement to have the alliance come to the aid of Turkey in the event of an attack from Iraq.
  • The United States requested Turkey allow the deployment of 62,000 troops for use in a possible invasion of Iraq from the north, a decision voted down by Parliament on 1 March 2003.
  • Turkey fears the Iraqi Kurds will want to unite with Turkey's 12 million Kurds to form an independent Kurdistan.
Anne Wang

Strengthening Turkey-Syria ties put Israel on backburner - Hurriyet Daily News and Econ... - 0 views

  • relationship from cooperation to integration
  • Turkey and Syria announced plans to establish a high-level strategic cooperation mechanism to deepen ties in every sphere, similar to Turkey’s agreement with Iraq.
  • considerable change in Turkish-Syrian relations compared to the 1990s
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  • two countries struck military deals,
  • For Syria, it is important that Turkey distance itself from Israel
  • intelligence sharing, confidence-building measures
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    Turkey and Syria Bad to Good
Justin Lazaro

'Strong Army, Strong Turkey' mark independence - Hurriyet Daily News and Economic Review - 0 views

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    'Strong Army, Strong Turkey' mark independence
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    'Strong Army, Strong Turkey' mark independence
Diana Lee

Gloria Center: Turkey's New Foreign Minister and It's Foreign Policy Strategy [Article] - 0 views

  • For Davutoglu, this represents a balanced policy between Turkey's European and Middle Eastern interests.
  • He is quite thoughtful about balancing Turkish interests and in some ways he seems like a Turkish version of the kind of thinking that typifies the EU.
  • that Turkey should have the best possible relations with all its neighbors and especially with those forces that are most threatening.
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  • .Throughout the 1990s we had certain problems with almost all of our neighbors. Now we have excellent relations with all of our neighbors."
  • Security for both sides is vital, since in the Middle East, if we want to have a real peace, security for the Palestinians should be equal to security of Israelis.
  • f Russia advances in the Caucasus and Central Europe through bullying or more militant methods, which side will Turkey choose?
  • Davutoglu's strategy of being friends with everyone seems an ideal policy for Turkey.
  • the Ankara regime's moves closer to the Iran-led alliance.
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    Information about Turkey's Foreign Policy
Anne Wang

Iraq-Turkey Relations | Encyclopedia of Modern Asia Summary - 0 views

  • Iraq, for its part, often ignored Turkey's close ties with the United States
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    Turkey and Iraq
Anne Wang

Syria and Turkey Deepen Bilateral Relations - Brookings Institution - 0 views

  • For Syria, the military exercise with Turkey allows it to send a political message to Washington and make Israel nervous. For Turkey, the military exercise with Syria helps it better protect its borders and develop more positive relations with its Arab-Muslim neighbours
  • Turkish-Syrian relations have come a long way since 1998, but they still fall short of a strategic alliance, which requires parallel political visions for, and positioning in, the Middle East
  • On 27 April, Turkey and Syria launched their first joint military exercise
Anne Wang

Turkey-Israel Relations - 1 views

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    Turkey and Israel
Diana Lee

Historyoftruth.com - Armenian Allegations - "AZERBAIJAN IS PRIORITY FOR TURKISH FOREIGN... - 0 views

  • Armenia’s occupation in Azerbasijani lands is against international norms. We do not make any step that conflicts Azerbaijan’s interests
  • Turkey’s foreign policy of zero problems with neighbouring countries is being continued with decisive steps
  • “Nobody can expect Turkey to make steps that would conflict interests of Azerbaijan.”
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  • “Azerbaijan is one of the priorities of Turkish foreign policy and nobody can expect Turkey to make steps that would conflict interests of Azerbaijan.
  • The process will go on if Sarksyan does not come to Turkey but his visit is important about some psychological thresholds.”
  • And there is ethnical tension in Georgia. Parties should produce vision.”
Anne Wang

Turkish FM visits Egypt - Hurriyet Daily News and Economic Review - 0 views

  • rade volume between the two countries has reached $5 billion
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    Turkey and Egypt Good relation
Anne Wang

PowerSearch  Document - 0 views

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    Turkey, Iraq and Syria Sharing resources
Anne Wang

PowerSearch  Document - 0 views

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    Turkey and Syria Worsening relations
Diana Lee

Palestinian Authority / Fateh (West Bank) - 4 views

I cannot find any information on the relation they have with Turkey. Can anyone help me??? Please and Thank You!

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