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ANKARA: Top Adviser: Turkey Managed To Have Zero Problem-Foreign Pol

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  • ANKARA: Top Adviser: Turkey Managed To Have Zero Problem-Foreign Pol

    TOP ADVISER: TURKEY MANAGED TO HAVE ZERO PROBLEM-FOREIGN POLICY

    Anadolu Agency
    Oct 29 2008

    Davutoglu said that all frozen clashes were occurring in the geography
    where Turkey was situated, and the real problem was how a new world
    order could be established.

    A Turkish adviser said on Tuesday that Turkish-U.S. relations would
    be a success story.

    Ahmet Davutoglu, the chief foreign policy adviser to Turkey's Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said that the new era with the United
    States would be a success story whoever was elected the new president
    of that country.

    "The new president of the United States will be Turkey's best friend,"
    Davutoglu said during a meeting on "Turkey, the region and U.S.-Turkey
    relations: Assessing the challenges and prospects" at the Brookings
    Institution in Washington D.C.

    On Turkey's relations with Armenia, Davutoglu said that Turkey was
    ready to discuss negative problems and two countries should seize
    recent opportunities in their relations.

    Davutoglu expressed his expectation that the Armenian diaspora should
    support the process between Turkey and Armenia, and said this new
    process had not caused concerns in Azerbaijan and relations among
    Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan would go on synchronously.

    The adviser said that there was need for courage and creativity to
    solve the Upper Karabakh dispute, and no one could wait for 20-30
    years more to resolve the issue.

    Davutoglu said that all frozen clashes were occurring in the geography
    where Turkey was situated, and said the real problem was how a new
    world order could be established.

    The Turkish adviser said that a new economic order should be
    established and the world needed a new global order.

    "Nobody should perceive different cultures as a threat. This is the
    wealth of the entire world and humanity," he said.

    Davutoglu said the main principle of Turkish foreign policy was
    to establish a balance between security and freedom, and told the
    gathering that one should not be sacrificed for the other.

    "Security means NATO for Turkey, and freedom means the democratization
    process in the EU," the adviser also said.

    Talking about Turkey's relations with its neighbors, Davutoglu said
    Turkey had managed to have zero problems with its neighbors and told
    the participants of the meeting that Turkey had good relations with
    Greece, Bulgaria, Georgia and Syria.

    Davutoglu said that Turkey had established a strong relationship with
    Iran, and also said that Turkey had made progress in its relations
    with Armenia and in settlement of the Cyprus issue.

    The Brookings Institution and SETA Foundation for Political, Economic
    and Social Research will host a conference to examine Turkey's domestic
    and foreign policy challenges and prospects.

    After the keynote address by Ahmet Davutoglu, Ibrahim Kalin,
    founding director of SETA; Nonresident Fellow Omer Taspinar,
    director of the Turkey Project at Brookings; Visiting Fellow Mark
    Parris, former U.S. ambassador to Turkey; and Talha Kose of George
    Mason University are expected to moderate a series of discussions
    featuring a distinguished group of Turkish and American experts,
    officials and scholars.

    The Brookings Institution is a nonprofit public policy organization
    based in Washington D.C. Its mission is to conduct high-quality,
    independent research and, based on that research, to provide
    innovative, practical recommendations that advance three broad
    goals:Strengthen American democracy; foster the economic and social
    welfare, security and opportunity of all Americans and secure a more
    open, safe, prosperous and cooperative international system.
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