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ANKARA: President Erdogan's Visit To Ukraine

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  • ANKARA: President Erdogan's Visit To Ukraine

    PRESIDENT ERDOGAN'S VISIT TO UKRAINE

    Daily Sabah, Turkey
    March 20 2015

    CEMIL ERTEM

    President Recep Tayyip Erdoðan's visit to Ukraine is taking place at
    a critical time. Just a few days ahead of his visit, Erdoðan held a
    telephone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin. During
    the conversation, which was a "sincere" one according to Kremlin
    Palace sources, the two leaders addressed various aspects of bilateral
    cooperation and the course of important decisions that were taken
    at the fifth session of the High-Level Russian-Turkish Cooperation
    Council in Ankara on Dec. 1, 2014. The two leaders, who verbalized
    their will on the further improvement of Turkish-Russian relations,
    focused on joint energy projects, including the Turkish Stream, as
    well as exchanging ideas about the resolution of the Ukraine crisis,
    ways of ending the conflict and the problems facing Crimean Tatars.

    Erdoðan touched briefly upon the 1915 incidents, saying that Turkey
    wants the Armenian issue be approached from an objective historical
    perspective. He also noted that Armenia ignores Turkey's calls for
    peace and does not have a positive approach to Turkey's proposal
    to form a common history commission. Erdoðan's remarks show that
    Russia is following his visit to Ukraine more closely than the West,
    and this visit is also of importance for Russia, considering that
    the foundation of the Trans-Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline (TANAP)
    was laid in Kars just a few days before Erdoðan's visit and the
    inauguration ceremony was attended by Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev and Georgian President Giorgi Margvelashvili.

    The direct transmission of Azeri gas to Europe through Georgia and
    Turkey is not only a move that involves energy, but it is also an
    important step for Europe to expand toward its east. Furthermore,
    the TANAP project is a response to Germany, which considers Europe
    as its own market, and its economic policies that date back to the
    20th century. Today, the TANAP project has become the most important
    project of the Southern Gas Corridor (SGC). Russia's rejection of the
    South Stream and substitution with the Turkish Stream means that it
    accepts the reality of SGC. Only if Russia accepts the reality of SGC
    and implements complementary policies can it respond to Europe's siege
    policies - which Putin seems to have understood. This is why Erdoðan's
    visit to Ukraine is important for Russia as well. Certainly, projects
    like the TANAP do not only bring integration in the field of energy,
    they also contribute to peace processes and reduce frozen conflict
    areas by strengthening integration in energy security, economy and
    politics. It should be noted that a Turkey that is constructive and
    influential in Europe and the Caucasian region will pave the way for
    a situation where everyone wins. Turkey is the only country in the
    region to prioritize a permanent peace process in the region covering
    the Middle East and Caucasia.

    Another project complementing the TANAP is the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars (BTK)
    railway line project, which is the most important line of the New
    Silk Road. Just like TANAP, BTK does not only cover three countries,
    it is also becoming one of the major commercial carriage projects of
    Asia and Europe, and particularly of Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan ports.

    Central Asia is connected to Turkey (Marmaray) via BTK through the
    Caspian region. This line, along with the SGC, will connect Chinese
    ports to Europe through Turkey.

    The world economy and politics are moving toward greater integration.

    We are moving toward a kind of capitalism where structural
    differences such as economic efficiency, technology, labor costs,
    infrastructure, environment and education are gradually disappearing
    with globalization. For the survival of the system, even in the medium
    term, these discrepancies need to be eliminated, although the previous
    period (system paradigm) was based on them. The differences between
    developed and underdeveloped countries or regions was the requirement
    and consequence of this system. Now we are living behind this as
    customs unions, free trade agreements, the assimilation of standards,
    the free circulation of labor, and the spread of infrastructural
    investments that will remove the differences in productivity, have
    begun emerging simultaneously. The regions that can achieve all this
    first will come to the fore and use their wealth.

    Here, two main capital accumulation fields come to the fore in the
    short term - energy and human capital. As outlined above, a major step
    toward such an integration in energy will be taken by ensuring the
    security of natural gas pipelines and by putting SGC into effect as
    a price and supply regulator and market maker. Now, northern Europe
    is retrograding in the field of human capital. Asia Minor, starting
    with Turkey, is poised to determine developments in terms of human
    capital and the circulation of skilled labor in the region in the
    upcoming period. From this historical perspective, Erdoðan's visits
    to conflict areas such as Ukraine, are of strategic importance.

    http://www.dailysabah.com/columns/cemil-ertem/2015/03/20/president-erdogans-visit-to-ukraine




    From: A. Papazian
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