Category: Regions

  • Turkey’s Gul sees hope beyond Armenia soccer match

    Turkey’s Gul sees hope beyond Armenia soccer match

    Reuters, Saturday September 6 2008 By Paul de Bendern

    ANKARA, Sept 6 (Reuters) – Turkish President Abdullah Gul expressed hope on Saturday that a landmark soccer match between Turkey and Armenia would aid a “rapprochement” of neighbouring nations at odds for nearly 100 years.

    Gul spoke on departure for Yerevan, where he will attend Saturday evening’s World Cup qualifier at the Hrazdan stadium and become the first Turkish leader to step foot in Armenia.

    “This match is important beyond being the first match between the Turkish and Armenian national teams,” he told a news conference. “It has a significance that will present important opportunities.”

    Football Feed Article | Football | guardian.co.uk.

  • Gul invites Sargsian to Istanbul match

    Gul invites Sargsian to Istanbul match

    Turkish President Gul said that he was pleased to visit Yerevan, adding that they evaluated the national match opportunity in a good way.

    Sunday, 07 September 2008 10:17

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul met with his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sargsian in Yerevan on Saturday.

    Gul visited Yerevan to watch the World Cup qualifying match between the national soccer teams of Turkey and Armenia.

    Following the meeting, Gul told reporters that he was pleased to visit Yerevan, adding that they evaluated the national match opportunity in a good way.

    World Bulletin [ Gul invites Sargsian to Istanbul match ].

  • The EU, Turkey and Russia: An Unlikely Troika

    The EU, Turkey and Russia: An Unlikely Troika

    Michael Werbowski (minou)

    Published 2008-09-06 04:57 (KST)

    Russia’s strategic comeback, or the Georgian crisis in the Caucasus, might be a blessing in disguise for Turkey, as a realignment of power in Russia’s favor could hasten accession negotiations between Ankara and Brussels. Why? Because the European Union, for obvious trade and energy reasons (aside from defense ones), needs Turkey as a solid strategic partner now more than ever.

    NATO’s Demise and the EU’s Rise

    The multilateral Ordungsmacht, or stabilizing power, that was NATO in the 20th century’s bipolar world, today looks crippled by transatlantic divisions, partly stemming from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Additional fractures over Georgia’s and Ukraine’s status (with the United Kingdom and the United States pushing for further NATO expansion into former Soviet space, while France, Germany and Italy remain very frosty to the idea) have split the cohesiveness of the erstwhile defensive military organization. Overall, NATO looks overstretched, overcommitted, and underequipped. It has so far skillfully concealed these divisions and shortcomings.

    Furthermore, NATO is always on the offensive against its perceived enemies (oil-rich Russia, and radical Islam — also in oil-rich regions). In the 21stcentruy, NATO clearly seeks to play the role of the global cop, with station headquarters in Washington. This is unacceptable to the Russians.

    In Munich in 2007, the West seemed deaf to Moscow’s warnings about putting a missile defense system in their backyard and about NATO’s eastward push. In the summer of 2008, taking advantage of the waning months of a weak and directionless Bush presidency, Russia has made itself heard by using military force in Georgia.

    Moscow has always had legitimate security concerns in the area that stretches from the Black to the Caspian seas. However, if the EU one day begins to carry more diplomatic and military weight in the region, it will do so only with Turkey’s approbation and cooperation. A greater EU role in Europe’s underbelly to the southeast might be more palatable to the tetchy Russian bear.

    A Semipermanent Seat for Turkey at the EU Conference Table

    Russia’s Georgian blitzkrieg triggered the collapse of the post-Cold War order that began in 1989. In this new regional configuration, whereby Russia calls the shots in its “near abroad,” the EU must act as a counterweight in Eurasia to the remerging hegemon. It is for this reason that Turkey can no longer remain on the sidelines of European integration. It must be given a seat at the table of European foreign policy consultations.

    I am not suggesting full EU membership for Turkey by the end of this decade or in the distant future, for that matter. But within the context of an EFDP (European foreign and defense policy), Turkey may one day become an indispensable player. Brussels must face up to this new reality.

    The EU’s ties with Russia often overshadow its ties with Turkey. But this is a flawed policy in the long term. As Mesut Tastekin, a doctoral candidate at Gazi University, points out, areas of great geopolitical concern to the EU are also “risk areas” that include Turkey and are part of Ankara’s purview of interest. Thus, the EU and Turkey have overlapping strategic concerns when it comes to the overall stability of the Black Sea, the Mediterranean and even the Caspian Sea regions.

    As Tastekin asserts, “Turkey stands at the crossroads of the regions which are regarded in the document [the European security strategy document elaborated by Brussels in 2003] as important regions for European security such as the Balkans, the Mediterranean, the near east and the Caucasus.”

    Turkey as the Great Mediator Between East and West

    Turkey has been taken for granted for far too long, despite its growing and obvious geopolitical importance in Brussels. For instance, EU leaders gathered last week to discuss the brief war between Russia and Georgia. Next, a similar emergency EU meeting will tackle the same issue. Yet Turkey, as an “associative member” of the EU, is absent from these crucial consultations.

    This is no mere omission or oversight; it is a great diplomatic error.

    Ankara has proven its diplomatic skills playing the part of the “honest broker” between Syria and Israel. Furthermore, the country has made several good will gestures (most likely with helpful prompting from Brussels) to normalize relations with Nicosia over the issue of a divided Cyprus. And most remarkable of all, by sending the Turkish head of state to Yerevan, the country has made a grandiloquent move to heal the century-old wound between the Turks and the Armenians.

    These are truly impressive and daring diplomatic maneuvers. They will likely bear fruit for Turkey and for its neighbors and serve to strengthen European stability as well. For this reason the EU must consider Turkey a serious strategic partner in its future relations with Russia. In the aftermath of the Georgian-Russian conflict, ignoring Turkey at EU foreign policy making forums is no longer viable.

    Michael Werbowski is a Prague-based journalist who pursued post-Communist studies at the University of Leeds, U.K. He would like to thank Beykent University and the staff of its journal of strategic studies for their kind support and cooperation for making this article possible.

    Source: www.ohmynews.com, 06.09.2008

  • Watch Senators Obama and McCain – LIVE

    Watch Senators Obama and McCain – LIVE

    : Watch Senators Obama and McCain LIVE  / saatler newyork saati ile verilmisdir, Turkiyenin & saat gerisindedir

     

     

    Dear Kayaalp BUYUKATAMAN, President CEO TurkishForum

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    Saturday, September 6

    Watch Senator Barack Obama at 8:30 a.m. ET
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    Since this morning, we have received more than 10,000 questions from AARP supporters asking how the senators will tackle the health care and financial security challenges facing the nation.  We’ll be asking some of those questions directly to them – but every question not asked will be personally delivered to Senators Obama and McCain.

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    Watch the webcast and then visit AARP’s blog, ShAARPsession, to tell us what you think.

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  • Statement of the Turkish Presidency on Trip to Armenia

    Statement of the Turkish Presidency on Trip to Armenia

    EMBASSY OF

     

    THE REPUBLIC OF TURKEY

    Washington, D.C.

    PRESS RELEASE
    Statement of the Turkish Presidency on Trip to Armenia

    Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian has invited President Abdullah Gul to Yerevan to watch a soccer game to be played between the Turkish and Armenian national teams in a World Cup group qualifier.

    This match presents significant opportunities beyond a mere sporting event. Especially at a critical time when developments in the region worry the peoples of the Caucasus, all parties should make best use of such an opportunity. A visit on this occasion may also contribute to a new climate of friendship in the region. With that understanding H.E. President Gul has accepted the invitation.

    It is believed that the match will present an opportunity to remove the impediments to rapprochement between the two peoples with common history, and to prepare a new ground. We hope that the visit will give the two peoples a chance to better understand each other.

  • Soccer diplomacy lifts hopes of Turkey-Armenia thaw

    Soccer diplomacy lifts hopes of Turkey-Armenia thaw

    By Hasmik Mkrtchyan and Paul de Bendern

    YEREVAN/ANKARA, Sept 5 (Reuters) – A soccer match in Yerevan’s Hrazdan stadium on Saturday could herald a fresh start in relations between Armenians and Turks that have been marred by hostility for nearly 100 years.

    President Abdullah Gul will become the first Turkish leader ever to set foot in neighbouring Armenia when, at the invitation of his Armenian counterpart, he flies to Yerevan to watch his national side play Armenia in a World Cup qualifying match.

    The visit has huge symbolic importance for two countries which have no diplomatic ties and whose relationship is haunted by the killings of hundreds of thousands of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey during World War One.

    If they can move beyond the symbolism to re-establish normal relations, that could have huge significance for Turkey’s role as a regional power, for energy flows from the Caspian Sea and for Western influence in a South Caucasus region where Russia flexed its muscles last month by sending troops into Georgia.

    “Football diplomacy will become a new term in the international community’s lexicon,” if after Saturday’s match there is a real improvement in relations, former Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian told Reuters.

    Football Feed Article | Football | guardian.co.uk.