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Turkey Will Emerge As Major Regional Power, Stratfor Says

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  • Turkey Will Emerge As Major Regional Power, Stratfor Says

    TURKEY WILL EMERGE AS MAJOR REGIONAL POWER, STRATFOR SAYS

    March 6, 2015 10:37

    Turkish tanks near the Syrian border

    Photo: REUTERS

    Yerevan /Mediamax/. By 2025, Turkey will emerge as the major regional
    power, and Turkish-Iranian competition will increase as a result.

    It is stated in the Decade Forecast published by Stratfor U.S.

    analytics center on developments in the world within 2015-2025.

    "We have entered a period in which the decline of the nation-states
    created by Europe in North Africa and the Middle East is accelerating.

    Power is no longer held by the state in many countries, having devolved
    to armed factions that can neither defeat others nor be defeated. This
    has initiated a period of intense internal fighting.

    The United States is prepared to mitigate the situation with air
    power and limited forces on the ground but will not be able or
    willing to impose a settlement. Turkey, whose southern border is made
    vulnerable by this fighting, will be slowly drawn into the fighting",
    the document reads.

    "As the reality sinks in, it will emerge that, because of its location,
    only one country has an overriding interest in stabilizing Syria
    and Iraq, is able to act broadly -- again because of its location --
    and has the means to at least achieve limited success in the region.

    That country is Turkey. At this point, Turkey is surrounded by
    conflicts in the Arab world, in the Caucasus and in the Black Sea
    Basin. Turkey will not be ready for a completely independent policy in
    the Middle East and will pay the price for a U.S. relationship. That
    price will open the path to extending the containment line to Georgia
    and Azerbaijan", noted the U.S. analysts.

    "Whatever its reluctance, Turkey cannot withstand years of chaos
    across its border, and there will be no other country to carry the
    burden. Iran is not in a position geographically or militarily to
    perform this function, nor is Saudi Arabia. Turkey is likely to try
    to build shifting coalitions ultimately reaching into North Africa
    to stabilize the situation. Turkish-Iranian competition will grow
    with time, but Turkey will keep its options open to work with both
    Iran and Saudi Arabia as needed. Whatever the dynamic, Turkey will
    be at the center of it.

    This will not be the only region drawing Turkey's attention. As Russia
    weakens, European influence will begin inching eastward into areas
    where Turkey has historical interests, such as the northern shore of
    the Black Sea. We can foresee Turkey projecting its power northward
    certainly commercially and politically but also potentially in some
    measured military way. Moreover, as the European Union fragments and
    individual economies weaken or some nations become oriented toward
    the East, Turkey will increase its presence in the Balkans as the
    only remaining power able to do so.

    Before this can happen, Turkey must find a domestic political balance.

    It is both a secular and Muslim country. The current government has
    attempted to bridge the gap, but in many ways it has tilted away
    from the secularists, of whom there are many. A new government will
    certainly emerge over the coming years. This is a permanent fault line
    in contemporary Turkey. Like many countries, its power will expand in
    the midst of political uncertainty. Alongside this internal political
    conflict, the military, intelligence and diplomatic service will need
    to evolve in size and function during the coming decade. That said,
    we expect to see an acceleration of Turkey's emergence as a major
    regional power in the next 10 years", Stratfor concludes.

    http://www.mediamax.am/en/news/region/13409/#sthash.hxoh6fBe.dpuf

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