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Turkey’s foreign policy has come full circle in the last year. Far from confronting Washington on a range of issues, Ankara is embracing its membership in NATO while working closely with ...
From purchasing F-35s to mediating in Gaza, from stabilizing Syria to countering Iran, Turkey is set to emerge as a linchpin in Trump’s transactional foreign policy.
More than 10 years ago, then-Prime Minister Erdogan made a decisive foreign policy pivot. No longer would Turkey grovel at the gates of the European Union, begging to be let in.
Turkey is not only failing in Central Asia, the Eastern Mediterranean and Europe but everywhere, Ilhan Uzgel, the country’s shadow foreign minister, wrote on April 22 in a column entitled “As ...
Speaking of Turkish foreign policy, Foreign Policy has a contribution from the Turkish Foreign Minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, who explains the formal guiding principles that Turkey is following when ...
Turkey’s geography and membership in NATO have long given the country an influential voice in foreign policy, but the assertive policies of President Erdogan have complicated its role.
At a time of growing uncertainty about the future of the international order, middle powers seem to be having a moment. Along with countries such as Brazil, Indonesia, and Saudi Arabia, Turkey is ...
Turkey sets new Western tilt in foreign policy as economy weighs By Huseyin Hayatsever , Can Sezer and Burcu Karakas July 11, 2023 6:00 PM UTC Updated July 12, 2023 ...
As a recent Foreign Policy Research Institute report has argued, Washington should be cautious and “seek to cooperate with Ankara where it perceives a direct benefit from doing so.” More importantly, ...
Episode Reading: Nicholas Danforth and Aaron Stein, Turkey’s New Foreign Policy: Ankara’s Ambitions, Regional Responses, and Implications for the United States, (Philadelphia: Foreign Policy Research ...
A former spymaster is now steering Turkey's pivotal role in the world as it sits between east and west as its new foreign minister. He seems to be working to make a stormy region a little more stable.
In 2008 Turkey aligned itself with 88% of the EU’s foreign-policy decisions and declarations. By 2016 that share had fallen by half to 44%. Last year it was only 7%.