Erdogan says “to my friend Putin, thank you”, as Barack Obama and NATO watch in horror
The
real bromance is not between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, but may
be between Erdogan and Putin.
Alex
Christoferou
9
August, 2016
As
the US media and Hillary Clinton campaign float the ridiculous idea
of a Trump-Putin bromance in order to scare up American voters
into supporting “corrupt
Hillary” and
her war monger ways, real deals are being made between real leaders.
Joke
is on NATO, Obama, and Hillary…the
real bromance is not between Trump and Putin, but may be between
Erdogan and Putin.
One
thing is for sure, as Turkey and Russia turn a new page in what is a
complicated relationship…NATO, Obama, and the neo-liberal/neocon
war hawks are scratching their heads trying to figure out how
Vladimir outsmarted them once again.
Here
are some of the quotes both leaders had during their joint press
conference, which is bound to send the entire western progressive
peanut gallery into a tailspin.
- “I’d like to thank president Erdogan for opportunity to restore relations between our countries.”
- “We’ve had constructive discussion on the bilateral relations.”
- “First of all, despite political situation at home, president Erdogan found time to visit St. Petersburg.”
- ‘Talks in St.Petersburg are very important for future of the Russia-Turkey relations.’
- ‘Russia will gradually lift the restrictions it had imposed against Turkish companies’
- “After the press conference, we shall have an opportunity to speak to the heads of large companies from both Russia and Turkey. I mean the gradual lifting of the special economic measures, restrictions introduced earlier against Turkish companies.”
- “I believe that we have all the necessary prerequisites and opportunities for restoring our relations between our two countries to the full extent and Russia is ready and willing to do that.”
- ‘Russia wants to fully restore ties with Turkey, to which end it is drafting a 2016-19 mid-term program of cooperation in areas including the economy and science.’
- “As for restoring our relations to their full extent: do we want that? Yes we do, and we will be doing just that. After certain restrictions had been imposed in our relations, certain transformations have taken place since, and we will need to keep them in mind as we restore our trade and economic cooperation.”
- ‘The sides decided to draft a mid-term program economic, technical and scientific cooperation for the next three years.’ — “We hope to be able to come up with it within a week.”
- “We’ve also exchanged opinions on the situation in Europe. We will properly discuss crisis in Syria later.”
- “We have experienced many challenges in our relations recently, but we should restore our relations on pre-crisis level for citizens’ sake.”
- “Dear friends, ladies and gentlemen, I’d like to express my deep respect to president Putin. Today we had very comprehensive negotiations.”
- “Relations between Russia and Turkey can now be restored on the level we had before crisis.”
- “Restrictions imposed on Turkish companies will be lifted and we’ll be able work in Russia again.”
- ‘Turkey wants to bring ties with Russia to pre-crisis levels with cooperation in the defense industry sector and energy projects including the Turkish Stream gas pipeline and the Akkuyu nuclear plant.’
- “Our countries are committed and determined to getting our relationship to a pre-crisis level or even to a better position, we have the political will to do that. As a result of the negotiation we had today, political, cultural and economic relations between Russia and Turkey can finally be restored to the appropriate level we used to enjoy before the crisis.”
- “I would like to emphasize that we are willing to provide strategic investment status to the Akkuyu project, and we have just reached an understanding on this issue with President Putin. We also intend to promote cooperation in the area of defense industry and defense production.”
- “The relations between Russia and Turkey are about more than just trade and economic cooperation. We hope that their restoration will help bring peace and stability in the region.”
- “The next day after attempted coup in Turkey President Putin called me, it show the importance of relations between our countries.”
- “I’d like to say to my friend Putin thank you, I’d like to express my respect and love to the press.”
- “During today negotiations we didn’t discuss situation in Syria.”
- “We believe that the Syrian crisis can be resolved only through diplomatic decision.”
Via: http://sputniknews.com/politics/20160809/1044088269/putin-erdogan-meeting-press-conference.html
West On Edge As Erdogan Meets With Putin: "Turkey's Relations With The US Are The Worst In 50 Years"
9
August, 2016
The
bad blood between Turkey and Russia over the November downing of a
Russian fighter jet over Turkey is all but forgotten as Turkish
president Recep Tayip Ergodan is to meet with “his friend”
Vladimir Putin in the latter's home town of St. Petersburg in hopes
of turning a fresh page in the two countries’ relations. It will be
their first meeting since diplomatic relations between the two
nations turned icy cold late last year. In a slap to the face of its
Western friends, as
the FT puts it,
instead of visiting a Nato ally, Erdogan's first trip abroad since
surviving last month’s coup attempt the Turkish president is going
to Vladimir Putin’s Russia.
In
a dramatic pivot by Turkey, the summit has taken on broader
geopolitical significance. “The west is criticising Erdogan over
his crackdown in the wake of the coup, and Erdogan is denouncing them
over that,” said Alexei Malashenko, an analyst at the Moscow
Carnegie Centre. “This tension between Turkey and its Nato allies
is extremely beneficial to Russia.” The rapprochement between
Moscow and Ankara began in June, before the coup attempt, when the
Kremlin accepted Mr Erdogan’s apology for the downing of the
aircraft over Turkey’s shared border with Syria. Within days,
officials from both countries had begun talks to roll back sanctions
Russia imposed on Turkey following the incident the FT adds.
Since
then broader issues have pushed Moscow and Ankara closer together,
"including
the desire to teach the west a lesson and shared interests in dealing
with the regional security threat."
Ankara also welcomed the fact that Moscow gave its unequivocal
backing to Turkey following the failed coup.
“We
appreciate the fact that the Russian Federation assumed a clear
position on this issue,” Ibrahim Kalin, Mr Erdogan’s spokesman,
told Russian news agency Tass last week. This tone contrasts with
Ankara’s rhetoric towards its allies. Mr Erdogan has repeatedly
lashed out at the US for its response to the coup attempt and its
failure to extradite Fethullah Gulen, the 75-year-old former imam
accused of masterminding the plot from his self-imposed exile in
Pennsylvania — a charge he strongly refutes.
Meanwhile,
there has been an inexplicable deterioration in Turkey's foreign
relations with the west. Just hours after a visit to Turkey last week
by Joseph Dunford, head of the US military, aimed at soothing
tensions, Erdogan unleashed some of his harshest remarks so far. “I’m
calling on the US: what kind of strategic partner are we, that you
can still host someone whose extradition I have asked for?” he
said. He went on to accuse the west of supporting terrorism and said
the “script” for the plot “was written outside” Turkey.
One
Turkish diplomat in Moscow said: “Our
relations with the US are the worst in 50 years . . .
and that definitely makes engaging Russia an attractive option.”
Needless
to say, For Putin, the tension between the Nato allies is welcome —
Moscow has for two decades condemned Nato expansion and recently
stepped up its criticism that the alliance was a threat to Russia. Mr
Malashenko talks of a “revival of the theory that Russia and Turkey
should be close because both are former empires . . .
simultaneously European and somehow unique.”
Meanwhile,
Ankara appears to expect much from the much anticipated meeting,
suggesting that the Kremlin has all the leverage ahead of today's
summit.
“This
will be a historic visit, a fresh start. I believe that a new page
will be opened [during]... the negotiations with my friend Vladimir
[Putin],” President Erdogan told TASS news agency in an exclusive
interview ahead of the visit, adding that “there is yet much for
our countries to do together.”
Erdogan’s
statement was echoed by Turkish ambassador to Russia Umit Yardim, who
told RIA Novosti: “I can definitely say that it will be a historic
meeting. We were preparing it for nearly one month.” He said the
two leaders are expected to meet tête-à -tête and then come out
with a “roadmap” to help bring Russia-Turkey relations “to a
brand new level.”
While
Ankara is obviously eager to improve ties with Moscow, which have
seen a dramatic downturn as of late, Russia has maintained a more
reserved and pragmatic approach. “The Syrian crisis will be
discussed in depth and we hope that Turkey’s position will become
more constructive,” Yury Ushakov, Vladimir Putin’s foreign policy
aide, told reporters on Friday.
Moscow
and Ankara still largely disagree on Syria, as Turkey wants President
Bashar Assad to be ousted, while Russia supports him and the Syrian
army in their fight against Islamists. Russia’s Defense Ministry
has accused Turkey of aiding Islamic State (IS, previously ISIS/ISIL)
in the past, citing data indicating that the militants are being
re-supplied and re-armed from Turkey. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov
said on Tuesday: “We have a serious conversation ahead on how, at
what pace, and in what sequence we will work on restoring our
relations.”
Erdogan, Putin talks expected to boost trade relations http://v.aa.com.tr/624992
The
talks will likely center on “current economy-related issues” and
the Syrian crisis. “You may feel free to forecast that an in-depth
conversation on regional affairs, including Syria, will also take
place,” he stressed.
Relations
between the two countries began to thaw in late June after Erdogan
sent a letter to the Kremlin that was viewed in Moscow as offering an
apology for downing Russia’s jet. The letter, quoted by the
Kremlin, said Turkey was “ready for any initiatives to relieve the
pain and severity of the damage done.” Moscow said it acknowledges
that Turkey is serious about restoring closer relations between the
two countries. “The Turkish President is coming to St. Petersburg,
despite a relatively complicated situation at home,” Ushakov
asserted.
* *
*
And
while Turkey pivots to Russia, the bigger question is what happens to
Turkish relations with the west next. Western diplomats, cited by the
FT, worry that Ankara could use Russia as a lever in its relations
with the west, including over Syria. Turkey cut off power to the
Incirlik air base, from which the US launches bombing raids against
Isis, for a week after the coup.
Russian
and Turkish diplomats said they expected Turkey would now tone down
public criticism of Bashar al-Assad, Syria’s president, and
privately acquiesce to Moscow’s position that his regime is one of
the guarantors of preserving Syrian statehood at least during a
transition period. Ankara has backed rebels battling forces loyal to
Mr Assad, while Russia supports the Syrian leader’s regime. In
return, Turkey will hope that Mr Putin will agree to moderate his
support for Syria’s Kurds, although one Russian foreign policy
expert said any policy revision would be “tricky” in practice.
“Ties with the Kurds run deep throughout Russia’s diplomatic
community, and we will never give up this asset,” he said.
Despite
shared interest over regional issues, officials in Moscow and Ankara
also remain guarded in guessing the outcome of their leaders’
meeting. “One should not expect things to very quickly return to
the level where they were before the [fighter jet] incident,” said
Dimitry Peskov, Mr Putin’s spokesman who spent eight years as a
diplomat in Ankara. “It will take time to restore trust.”
Mr
Malashenko said the test of whether the reconciliation was strategic
or a tactical ruse would be evident in the pace at which
Turkish-Russian economic ties were restored. One European diplomat
said: “Erdogan
can lash out all he likes but he needs us. He knows he cannot trust
Putin. How many Turkish-Russian wars have there been over the last
three hundred years? How many did the Turks win?”
* *
*
Perhaps
said diplomats are a tad too optimistic on the legacy ties that bind.
Earlier today, Turkey struck a major blow to Europe's critical
migrant deal that is keeping millions of Syrian refugees out of
Europe, when it announced that the EU’s demand that Turkey must
overhaul its terror laws in return for visa-free travel is
“impossible” in the aftermath of last month’s attempted coup,
the country’s EU minister has warned.
In
an interview
with the Financial Times,
Omer Celik, dealt a fresh blow to the fragile deal between the EU and
Ankara that has helped stem the flow of refugees and migrants to
European shores. For the EU to ease visa requirements for 79m Turkish
citizens — one of a series of incentives promised in return for
Turkey’s help with the refugee crisis — Turkey needs to amend its
sweeping terror legislation in line with EU law and guidance from the
Council of Europe.
Celik
said that Turkey was open to discussions about counterterror law with
European partners and could commit to reforms in the longer term. He
warned, however, that it was “impossible” in the short term after
the government was almost overthrown by alleged supporters of
Fethullah Gulen, an exiled cleric who Turkey has branded a terrorist.
He strongly denies the accusation. Celik said Turkey had survived “a
coup attempt by a terrorist organisation”, adding: “We have the
PKK, Daesh [Isis] and other groups launching attacks so it would not
be intelligent to make an amendment in the terrorism law at this
point.”
The
bottom line is that suddenly the migrant deal appears close to
collapse, perhaps with the "gentle nudging" of Russia. One
EU diplomat based in Ankara said it was not clear that the collapse
of the agreement would even make a difference. “It is not the Turks
who are stopping the refugees. It is the fact that the Balkan route
is closed — and that the processing in Greece is taking so long,”
said the source. According to official figures, before the agreement,
about 1,740 migrants were crossing from Turkey’s Aegean coast to
the chain of nearby Greek islands every day. In June, the daily
average was 48.
That
said, we may very soon find out just how closed the Balkan route is
if and when Erdogan pulls the plug. The last thing Europe already on
edge following a surge in refugee terrorism- and certainly Merkel's
tumbling popularity - needs, is another million migrants taking
advantage of Germany's "open door" policy.
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