Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Medvedev's Visit To Strengthen Russian-Turkish Rapprochement

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Medvedev's Visit To Strengthen Russian-Turkish Rapprochement

    MEDVEDEV'S VISIT TO STRENGTHEN RUSSIAN-TURKISH RAPPROCHEMENT
    Andrei Fedyashin

    RIA Novosti
    MOSCOW

    When Russian President Dmitry Medvedev arrived in Turkey on Tuesday
    May 11, it was clear that the main outcome of his visit would be the
    establishment of a High-Level Cooperation Council (to be co-chaired
    by Medvedev), the signing of an agreement on one-month visa-free
    travel for tourists, and cooperation in the construction of nuclear
    power plants.

    The first meeting of the council, to be attended by the Russian
    president, is to formalize the agreement to launch a three-stage
    roadmap for strategic cooperation in the political, trade and economic
    spheres and between public organizations.

    Medvedev will also meet with Turkish President Abdullah Gul and Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    The sides plan to sign a score of agreements and political documents,
    which should advance bilateral cooperation to a higher level. Turkey
    describes it as privileged cooperation and Russia as multifaceted
    strategic partnership.

    Europe is always slightly alarmed when a Russian president (or a
    prime minister) goes to Turkey or a Turkish leader visits Russia. It
    fears that Turkey may lean too closely towards Russia and that the
    relationship could revive imperial ambitions in both Russia and Turkey.

    Also, Europe sees a double danger in the fact that Russian-Turkish
    political friendship is being reinforced with energy, oil and gas
    deals.

    Russian energy giant Gazprom supplies 63% of Turkey's gas needs (the
    third largest amount after Germany and Italy). The two countries
    are building the Blue Stream gas pipeline along the Black Sea bed
    and have decided to build a second line of the pipeline. Turkey
    is also considering joining the South Stream project to transport
    Russian natural gas across the Black Sea to Bulgaria and on to Italy
    and Austria.

    Russia supplies approximately $1.8 billion worth of oil and between
    $1.1 billion and $1.3 billion of refined oil products to Turkey
    annually.

    Russia is ready to contribute to the construction of the Samsun-Ceyhan
    oil pipeline, which Turkey approved in 2006. The 550-km (342-mile)
    pipeline is to link Samsun, a Turkish port on the Black Sea, with
    the Kirikkale refinery located 15 km (9 miles) from Istanbul, where
    it will be connected to the Kirikkale-Ceyhan pipeline.

    The new pipe will annually transport 50-70 million metric tons of
    oil from Russia and Kazakhstan to Ceyhan on the Mediterranean.

    The question of who needs the oil and gas friendship more, Russia or
    Turkey, and if they would have been friends without their pipeline
    projects is impossible to answer because it is difficult to say where
    pipes begin and politics end.

    Turkey has been cleverly using the Russian card in its relationship
    with the European Union. After it was denied entry into the
    organization at the EU summit in Copenhagen in 2002, Prime Minister
    Erdogan went to Moscow, and Turkey has used that political option
    several times since then.

    The EU's unwillingness to admit Turkey is in fact pushing it into
    Russia's embrace. Officially, Turkey is continuing its accession
    talks, which it started in 2005, but France and Germany have announced
    that they don't want to see a country with 60 million Muslims in the
    EU. This has put off its entry into the EU for ten years, and it is
    therefore not surprising that Turkey is looking for alternatives. The
    best option is to strengthen its regional political and economic
    prestige, which Turkey cannot do without Russia.

    Turkey's cooperation with Russia is turning it into the oil and gas
    dispatcher hub of the whole Asia Minor, southern Europe (including
    the Balkans) and the Middle East and strengthening its economic role.

    At the same time, Turkey has been trying to become involved in the
    South Caucasus policy in the past few years. Coordination of its
    positions with Russia could produce very good results there.

    The South Caucasus countries - Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia -
    currently have no regional leader. Azerbaijan is leaning towards
    Turkey, Armenia has embraced Russia, and Georgia has been seeking
    rapprochement with NATO and the United States. When these countries
    lean (or are prodded) towards different supports, it usually ends
    badly, as proved by the August 2008 war between Georgia and Russia
    over South Ossetia.

    So, if Turkey and Russia go over from coordinating their energy plans
    to cooperating in the sphere of regional security, this could encourage
    the region to create a common security system. Such a system should
    clearly stipulate what its member countries may or may not do with
    regard to their neighbors.

    Since the OSCE, the EU and the UN have failed to ensure this, Russia
    and Turkey could try to establish a regional forum to address this
    task. In 2008, Turkey proposed a Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
    Pact, which would include the three South Caucasus countries plus
    two regional heavyweights, Turkey and Russia.

    The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not
    necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.
Working...
X