Kremlin confirms Putin and Erdogan to meet in Russia early August
By AFP
MOSCOW: The Kremlin confirmed on Wednesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan plan to meet in Russia in early August.
"A
meeting between Putin and Erdogan is being prepared and worked out.
They agreed that the meeting will be in the first 10 days of August,"
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists.
"It will be in Russia, but the city and the date are still being firmed up," Peskov said.
This
will be the leaders´ first face-to-face meeting since late June when
Russia said Erdogan apologised for Turkey shooting down a Russian
fighter jet in November last year.
The downing of the fighter jet on the Syrian border had shattered ties between the erstwhile allies.
Turkish state media had reported on Sunday that the leaders would meet in the first week of August without giving a location, quoting presidential sources.
Putin called Erdogan on Sunday
to express his support after the end of a failed putsch in Turkey and
the Kremlin said the two leaders confirmed plans to meet in the near
future.
Turkey said Monday it has detained two pilots who played a role in downing the Russian plane over links to the failed putsch.
Turkey-Russia Pact Threatens Western Interests in The Middle East
by Con Coughlin • July 25, 2016 at 5:00 am
Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has embarked on a campaign to reach out to countries such
as Russia, which he regards as a viable alternative to the U.S. in
protecting Turkey's interests in the region.
The
deepening diplomatic pact between Turkey and Russia represents yet
another damning indictment of the Obama Administration's ability to
maintain relations with Washington's traditional allies in the Middle
East.
Western
diplomats regard the decision by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
to restore relations with Moscow last month as part of a
carefully-coordinated attempt by Ankara to build a new power base in the
region.
For
decades Turkey, a key NATO member, has said that it wants to forge
closer ties with the West, to the extent that Turkish diplomats insist
that Ankara is still serious about joining the European Union.
But
the increasingly hard-line Islamist approach taken by Mr Erdogan in the
wake of the failed military coup, which has seen tens of thousands of
judges, academics and journalists forced from their jobs, has caused the
Turkish government to realise the prospects of maintaining relations
with its Western allies are remote so long as it continues with the
current crack-down.
This
had led Mr Erdogan to embark on a campaign to reach out to countries
such as Russia, which he regards as a viable alternative to the U.S. in
protecting Turkey's interests in the region.
The
Turkish leader's disillusionment with U.S. President Barack Obama
predates the tensions caused by the military coup and Turkey's demand
that Washington extradites the exiled Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen,
whom Ankara accuses of orchestrating the failed military coup.
The
fall-out between Mr Erdogan and Mr Obama dates back to the American
president's failure to follow up on his threat to launch military action
against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad if he used chemical weapons
against his own people in Syria's brutal civil war.
From
the outset of the conflict, Mr Erdogan has been committed to the
overthrow of the Assad regime, which is accused of supporting Kurdish
separatist groups. It is for this reason that the U.S. has accused
Turkey of turning a blind eye to the activities of Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria (ISIS) terrorists on its lengthy border with Syria.
Indeed,
the big stumbling block preventing Turkey from having better relations
with Russia was that Moscow was helping to keep the Assad regime in
power through the military intervention by Russian forces that began
last year.
But
in recent months the Kremlin has hinted that keeping Assad in power is
not its primary concern. Rather its main objective in Syria is to
protect its strategically-important military bases in the country.
This
has led to suggestions that, in return for building closer relations
with Turkey, Moscow might be prepared to do a deal whereby Assad is
removed from power and Russia's military interests in the country are
safeguarded.
And
if that outcome could be achieved, then Turkey and Russia would be able
to forge a powerful partnership, one that would pose a serious threat
to Western interests in the Middle East and beyond.
Laura J Alcorn
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Tuesday, July 26, 2016
WLL TURKEY ABANDON NATO IN FAVOR OF RUSSIA?
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