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  • Putin says Turkey and Russia should cooperate in Caucasus, Central A

    Putin says Turkey and Russia should cooperate in Caucasus, Central Asia
    BY SUZAN FRASER; Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    September 1, 2004 Wednesday

    ANKARA, Turkey -- Russian President Vladimir Putin said in an interview
    broadcast Wednesday that Turkey and Russia should avoid competing for
    influence in the Caucasus and Central Asia and increase cooperation,
    especially regarding the soaring trade between the two countries.

    Putin was speaking before a two-day visit to Turkey that starts
    Thursday - a first by a Russian leader since the Soviet collapse.

    Bilateral trade, currently standing at US$6.8 billion ([euro]5.6
    billion), has increased sixfold since 1992, Putin said in an interview
    broadcast on CNN-Turk television. The interview was conducted in the
    Russian resort of Sochi on Monday.

    Turkey and Russia have been rivals for centuries, competing for
    influence in Central Asia, the Caucasus and the Balkans. That
    competition increased after the fall of the Soviet Union and the
    independence of Turkic states in Central Asia and the Caucasus.

    But recently rivalries have subsided and the two countries have been
    concentrating on trade.

    Turkey and Russia "are moving toward cooperation and welfare...
    Russian and Turkey are neighbors. We have common interests," Putin
    said in the interview. His remarks were broadcast dubbed in Turkish.
    A Russian transcript was not immediately available.

    "I certainly believe that today and in the future, we can cooperate
    and reach wider targets," he said, referring to past Turkish-Russian
    projects, including a 446-kilometer (278-mile) natural gas pipeline
    that runs beneath the Black Sea to Turkey.

    "I believe that if we want to solve the problems along regional
    interests, we have to especially avoid competition," Putin told
    CNN-Turk television.

    "Both Russia and Turkey are two states that wish, more than anyone
    else, for stability in the region and for the situation to return to
    normal. We know the problems there better than anyone else," he said.

    Putin and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan are expected
    to discuss trade but also contentious issues such as the Caucasus,
    where Turkey is allied with Azerbaijan and Russia is friendly with
    Azerbaijan's rival, Armenia.

    The conflict in Chechnya - also in the Caucasus - is on the agenda
    too. Turks sympathize with their fellow Muslims in Chechnya, and
    many Turks trace their ancestry to the Caucasus. Russia has called
    on Turkey to crack down on Turkish charities that it claims have
    provided support to Chechen rebels.

    Russia provides some 60 percent of Turkey's natural gas imports,
    and Putin said his country was also considering selling oil to Turkey
    and exporting fuel to other countries via Turkey.

    Turkey is expected to stress during Putin's visit that the narrow
    Bosporus Strait dividing Istanbul cannot handle further Russian oil
    exports. The Turks are expected to press for other ways of exporting
    Russian oil, such as pipelines through Turkey.

    Putin will be accompanied by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
    and Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov. Putin's predecessor, Boris Yeltsin,
    attended a regional security summit in Istanbul in 1999.
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