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Turkey Isn't Asleep: Russia Fragmentation Plan

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  • Turkey Isn't Asleep: Russia Fragmentation Plan

    Turkey Isn't Asleep: Russia Fragmentation Plan

    Igor Muradyan, Political Analyst
    Comments - 04 September 2014, 08:01


    Turkey is scrutinizing developments in Ukraine and trying to develop
    its policy which is not fully identified yet.

    Turkey has appeared between several positions: Russia, U.S., Germany,
    NATO and EU. This is an overly complicated situation even for such a
    big country as Turkey. In addition, no less dangerous processes are
    unfolding in the Near East. Turkey is trying to identify its goals
    relating to Ukraine and Russia in several dimensions.

    In late August and early September a conference with a strange agenda
    was organized in one of the beautiful towns of South Ukraine. A big
    group of experts from Turkey, as well as Azerbaijan, Tataria,
    Chuvashia, Gagauzia, Crimea and many other republics and communities
    of the Volga basis and North Caucasus were attending the forum.

    Such conferences are usually organized in a hangout mode, with rich
    exterior and interior design and catering. This time there was a
    business atmosphere, purposeful and specific questions. The matters
    discussed concerned several problems, all of them geopolitical.

    Turkish experts announced that the notion of "ethnopolitical
    conflicts" is a merely adherent characteristic and in reality there is
    geopolitical confrontation and tough antagonism. Furthermore, this
    thesis became the key focus of consideration of the prospective
    political work of groups of experts and politicians of these republics
    and communities in Ukraine and Russia.

    The following objectives were considered using the methods of
    comparison, juxtaposition and complex analysis: the U.S. and NATO
    policy on the Black Sea region; Crimean-Tatar problem in terms of
    geopolitical antagonism; expectations relating to Russia's
    fragmentation, emergence of independent or more or less sovereign
    states in its territory.

    I have attended a lot of forums organized by pan-Turkism groups but I
    have never seen such sincere statements and specificity, appropriate
    looks and proficiency in languages of peoples living in Eastern
    Europe.

    Of interest are statements by experts of the Volga basin and the North
    Caucasus. For example, it was stated that the ongoing developments in
    Ukraine and NATO-Russia antagonism have resulted in a favorable
    atmosphere for the secession of several ethnic political formations
    from the Russian Federation, primarily Tataria and Chuvashia.

    The representational delegation of Crimean Tatars was from Crimea,
    presenting claims to Turkey for its passiveness towards the issue of
    this region.

    The representatives of Azerbaijan tried to raise the Karabakh issue
    but the leadership of the conference rudely interrupted them and
    reminded that the topic of the forum was different.

    Two Armenians attending the conference did not represent Armenia or
    Armenian organizations but other countries. On the whole, the
    impression was that Turks would like to sell up their possibilities in
    Eastern Europe to Americans or Europeans.

    At the same time, the purpose was to warn Russia about Turkey's
    potential in the Russian territory. In other words, the West was
    obviously the consumer of this action.

    At the same time, the day before the closing of this long and
    meaningful conference it became known that the municipality of the
    town where it was held was highly concerned about what was happening,
    and Ukraine's Security Service openly demonstrated interest in it.
    Furthermore, neither local nor any other mass media were able to
    access the hotel where the conference was held, and the participants
    who left the hotel refused interviews and contacts in general.

    However, all this would have been understood were there not for one
    circumstance. A thorough plan of fragmentation of Russia and return of
    Crimea under Ukraine's control was presented during the conference. It
    was not a recommendation developed in the result of research but a
    thorough program.

    But the most interesting thing happened after the conference. Some
    Ukrainian experts of Kiev cooperating with local political and
    analytical centers of the West turned out to be aware of this action.
    They had been invited to the conference but refused to attend.


    http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/comments/view/32931#sthash.jnDRJeVn.dpuf




    From: A. Papazian
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