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  • The geopolitical Great Game: Turkey and Russia moving closer

    The geopolitical Great Game: Turkey and Russia moving closer
    By F. William Engdahl
    Online Journal Contributing Writer

    Feb 27, 2009, 00:44

    Despite the problems of the ruble and the weak oil price in recent
    months for the Russian economy, the Russian government is pursuing a
    very active foreign policy strategy. Its elements focus on countering
    the continuing NATO encirclement policy of Washington, with often
    clever diplomatic initiatives on its Eurasian periphery.

    Taking advantage of the cool relations between Washington and longtime
    NATO ally, Turkey, Moscow has now invited Turkish President Abdullah
    Gul to a four-day state visit to discuss a wide array of economic and
    political cooperation issues.

    In addition to opening to Turkey, a vital transit route for natural gas
    to western Europe, Russia is also working to firm an economic space
    with Belarus and other former Soviet republics to firm its alliances.
    Moscow delivered a major blow to the US military encirclement strategy
    in Central Asia when it succeeded earlier this month in convincing
    Kyrgystan, with the help of major financial aid, to cancel US military
    airbase rights at Manas, also a major blow to US escalation plans in
    Afghanistan.

    In short, Moscow is demonstrating it is far from out of the new Great
    Game for influence over Eurasia.

    Warmer Turkish relations

    The Government of Prime Minister Recep Erdogan has shown increasing
    impatience with not only Washington policies in the Middle East, but
    also the refusal of the European Union to seriously consider Turkey's
    bid to join the EU. In the situation, it's natural that Turkey would
    seek some counterweight to what had been, since the Cold War,
    overwhelming US influence in Turkish politics. Russia's Putin and
    Medvedev have no problem opening such a dialogue, much to Washington's
    dismay.

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a four-day visit to the Russian
    Federation, from February 12 to 15, where he met with Russian president
    Dmitry Medvedev, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, and also travelled to
    Kazan, the capital of Tatarstan, where he discussed joint investments.
    Gul was accompanied by his state minister responsible for foreign
    trade, and minister of energy, as well as a large delegation of Turkish
    businessmen. Foreign Minister Ali Babacan joined the delegation.

    Visit to Tatarstan

    The fact that Gul's Moscow visit also included a stop in Tatarstan, the
    largest autonomous republic in the Russian Federation, whose population
    mainly consists of Muslim Tatar Turks, is a sign how much relations
    between Ankara and Moscow have improved in recent months, as Turkey has
    cooled to Washington's foreign policy. In previous years, Moscow was
    convinced that Turkey was trying to establish Pan-Turanism in the
    Caucasus and Central Asia and inside the Russian Federation, a huge
    concern in Moscow. Today clearly Turkish relations with Turk entities
    inside the Russian Federation are not considered suspicious as they
    were once, confirming a new mood of mutual trust.

    Russia elevated Gul's trip from the previously announced status of an
    `official visit' to a `state visit,' the highest level of state
    protocol, indicating the value Moscow now attaches to Turkey. Gul and
    Medvedev signed a joint declaration announcing their commitment to
    deepening mutual friendship and multi-dimensional cooperation. The
    declaration mirrors a previous `Joint Declaration on the
    Intensification of Friendship and Multidimensional Partnership,' signed
    during a 2004 visit by then-President Putin.

    Turkish-Russian economic ties have greatly expanded over the past
    decade, with trade volume reaching $32 billion in 2008, making Russia
    Turkey's number one partner. Given this background, bilateral economic
    ties were a major item on Gul's agenda and both leaders expressed their
    satisfaction with the growing commerce between their countries.

    Cooperation in energy is the major area. Turkey's gas and oil imports
    from Russia account for most of the trade volume. Russian press reports
    indicate that the two sides are interested in improving cooperation in
    energy transportation lines carrying Russian gas to European markets
    through Turkey, the project known as Blue Stream-2. Previously Ankara
    had been cool to the proposal. The recent completion of the Russian
    Blue Stream gas pipeline under the Black Sea increased Turkey's
    dependence on Russian natural gas from 66 percent up to 80 percent.
    Furthermore, Russia is beginning to see Turkey as a transit country for
    its energy resources rather than simply an export market, the
    significance of Blue Stream 2.

    Russia is also eager to play a major part in Turkey's attempts to
    diversify its energy sources. A Russian-led consortium won the tender
    for the construction of Turkey's first nuclear plant recently, but as
    the price offered for electricity was above world prices, the future of
    the project, awaiting parliamentary approval, remains unclear. Prior to
    Gul's Moscow trip, the Russian consortium submitted a revised offer,
    reducing the price by 30 percent. If this revision is found legal under
    the tender rules, the positive mood during Gul's trip may indicate the
    Turkish government is ready to give the go-ahead for the project.

    Russia's market also plays a major role for Turkish overseas
    investments and exports. Russia is one of the main customers for
    Turkish construction firms and a major destination for Turkish exports.
    Similarly, millions of Russian tourists bring significant revenues to
    Turkey every year.

    Importantly, Turkey and Russia may start to use the Turkish lira and
    the Russian ruble in foreign trade, which could increase Turkish
    exports to Russia, as well as weakening dependence on dollar mediation.

    Post-Cold War tensions reduced

    However, the main message of Gul's visit was the fact of the
    development of stronger political ties between the two. Both leaders
    repeated the position that, as the two major powers in the area,
    cooperation between Russia and Turkey was essential to regional peace
    and stability. That marked a dramatic change from the early 1990s,
    after the collapse of the Soviet Union, when Washington encouraged
    Ankara to move into historically Ottoman regions of the former Soviet
    Union to counter Russia's influence.

    In the 1990s in sharp contrast to the tranquillity of the Cold War era,
    talk of regional rivalries, revived `Great Games' in Eurasia,
    confrontations in the Caucasus and Central Asia were common. Turkey was
    becoming once more Russia's natural geopolitical rival as in the 19th
    Century. Turkey's quasi-alliance with Ukraine, Azerbaijan, and Georgia
    until recently led Moscow to view Turkey as a formidable rival. The
    regional military balance developed in favor of Turkey in the Black Sea
    and the Southern Caucasus. After the disintegration of the USSR, the
    Black Sea became a de facto `NATO lake.' As Russia and Ukraine argued
    over the division of the Black Sea fleet and status of Sevastopol, the
    Black Sea became an area for NATO'S Partnership for Peace exercises.

    By contrast, at the end of the latest Moscow visit, Gul declared,
    `Russia and Turkey are neighboring countries that are developing their
    relations on the basis of mutual confidence. I hope this visit will in
    turn give a new character to our relations.' Russia praised Turkey's
    diplomatic initiatives in the region.

    Medvedev commended Turkey's actions during the Russian-Georgian war
    last summer and Turkey's subsequent proposal for the establishment of a
    Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform (CSCP). The Russian
    president said the Georgia crisis had shown their ability to deal with
    such problems on their own without the involvement of outside powers,
    meaning Washington. Turkey had proposed the CSCP, bypassing Washington
    and not seeking transatlantic consensus on Russia. Since then, Turkey
    has indicated its intent to follow a more independent foreign policy.

    The Russian aim is to use its economic resources to counter the growing
    NATO encirclement, made severe by Washington's decision to place
    missile and radar bases in Poland and the Czech Republic aimed at
    Moscow. To date, the Obama administration has indicated it will
    continue the Bush `missile defense' policy. Washington also just agreed
    to place US Patriot missiles in Poland, clearly not aimed at Germany,
    but at Russia.

    Following Gul's visit, some press in Turkey described Turkish-Russian
    relations as a `strategic partnership,' a label traditionally used for
    Turkish-American relations. Following Gül's visit, Medyedev will go to
    Turkey to follow up the issues with concrete cooperation proposals. The
    Turkish-Russian cooperation is a further indication of how the once
    overwhelming US influence in Eurasia has been eroded by the events of
    recent US foreign policy in the region.

    Washington is waking up to find it confronted with Sir Halford
    Mackinder's `worst nightmare.' Mackinder, the `father' of 20th Century
    British geopolitics, stressed the importance of Britain (and after
    1945, the USA) preventing strategic cooperation among the great powers
    of Eurasia.

    F. William Engdahl is author of A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil
    Politics and the New World Order (Pluto Press), and Seeds of
    Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation
    (www.globalresearch.ca). This essay is adapted from a book he has just
    completed, titled Full Spectrum Dominance: The Geopolitical Agenda
    Behind Washington's Global Military Buildup (release date estimated
    Autumn 2008). He may be contacted through his website,
    www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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