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Medvedev Hails Strategic Turkey Ties

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  • Medvedev Hails Strategic Turkey Ties

    MEDVEDEV HAILS STRATEGIC TURKEY TIES

    Tehran Times
    May 13 2010

    ANKARA (AFP) - Russian President Dmitry Medvedev Wednesday hailed
    "strategic" ties with NATO-member Turkey as the two sides prepared to
    seal energy deals, including a plan to build Turkey's first nuclear
    power plant.

    "Our relations have dramatically changed over the past years. Today
    they are strategic," Medvedev told a joint press conference with
    Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul.

    "This is a very special day in Turkish-Russian relations," he said
    after overseeing the signing of cooperation accords in the fields of
    combating drug-trafficking, transport and education.

    Gul said the two countries were determined to triple bilateral trade in
    five years to 100 billion dollars, a goal Medvedev said was ambitious
    but within reach.

    The crowning point of Medvedev's visit was to be a memorandum to build
    and operate a nuclear power station in Turkey, likely be signed after
    the first meeting of a "high-level cooperation council" co-chaired
    by the Russian leader and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    Russia has long looked to build Turkey's first nuclear power
    plant, but a Turkish court last year scrapped a tender won by a
    Russian-led consortium to build four reactors with a total capacity
    of 4,800-megawatts at Akkuyu, on the Mediterranean coast.

    Another highlight was a deal mutually lifting visas.

    "This agreement is ready for signing," Medvedev said. "It is a historic
    and breakthrough agreement, which will be aimed at making life easier
    for millions of people."

    Turkey's Mediterranean coast is a popular destination for Russian
    tourists.

    Russia's gas giant Gazprom and state oil firm Rosneft will also ink
    contracts. Kremlin foreign policy adviser Sergei Prikhodko said they
    would be among the "most commercially significant" deals to be signed
    but no details were immediately given.

    Another deal will involve a planned Turkish oil pipeline from the
    Black Sea port of Samsun to Ceyhan on the Mediterranean, aimed at
    reducing tanker traffic through the congested Bosphorus Strait.

    Last year, Turkey secured a Russian pledge to supply oil for the
    Samsun-Ceyhan conduit in return for backing its South Stream pipeline
    project aimed at protecting Moscow's dominant share in the European
    gas market.

    Russia wants to build a section of South Stream through Turkey's
    Black Sea waters in a new route to Europe bypassing Ukraine.

    Turkey, which backs also the European Union's rival Nabucco pipeline,
    agreed in August to allow Russian surveys for the project in its
    portion of the Black Sea.

    Despite sometimes shaky political ties, economic exchanges between
    the two countries have boomed since the fall of Communism: in 2009,
    their trade volume stood at 22.9 billion dollars, making Russia one
    of Turkey's top commercial partners.

    Russia's military intervention in Georgia in 2008 briefly strained
    relations with Turkey, which has close economic and political ties
    with the former Soviet republic, its northeastern neighbor.

    Russia is Turkey's main gas supplier, providing about 60 percent of
    Turkey's gas imports, and more than a million Russians boost Turkey's
    vital tourism sector each year.

    Medvedev and Gul said they discussed Iran's nuclear program and
    efforts for stability in the Caucasus.

    Both leaders stressed the Middle East should be free of nuclear
    weapons, while Medvedev pledged support for Turkey and Armenia's
    stalled efforts to normalize ties and overcome a history of enmity.

    Russia is ready to help resolve a territorial conflict between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan that is the main obstacle to peace efforts between
    Ankara and Yerevan, Medvedev said.

    Photo: Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (L) chats with his Turkish
    counterpart Abdullah Gul before a joint news conference at the
    Presidential Palace of Cankaya in Ankara May 12, 2010. (Reuters photo)
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