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EU: Georgia Crisis Fortifies Importance Of Turkey

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  • EU: Georgia Crisis Fortifies Importance Of Turkey

    EU: GEORGIA CRISIS FORTIFIES IMPORTANCE OF TURKEY

    The Associated Press
    September 19, 2008

    HELSINKI, Finland: The Georgian crisis has strengthened the strategic
    importance of Turkey both in the Caucasus and for the European Union,
    the bloc's enlargement chief said Friday.

    EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said Turkey was "engaged in very
    active and evidently successful diplomacy" in its neighboring regions.

    Turkey has met separately with Georgian and Russian officials in an
    effort to promote peace between the two countries since their war
    in August.

    It is also helping to normalize ties between Syria and the EU and is
    mediating talks between Israel and the Palestinians in Istanbul.

    "Turkey remains a very important bridge between Europe and the
    Islamic world," Rehn told reporters during a visit to Helsinki. "In
    other words, everything that has happened in recent weeks has only
    strengthened Turkey's strategic importance from the EU's point
    of view."

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    name? Moscow is finding out He did not give any specifics, however,
    on if or when Turkey was likely to join the EU.

    Rehn said that Turkey, eager to join and currently engaged in accession
    talks with the bloc, had made "a very important initiative" in talks
    aimed at achieving stability in the Caucasus.

    "The problem in the Caucasus now is that there are many countries
    that cannot engage in bilateral talks; Russia and Georgia, Armenia
    and Azerbaijan, and just a little while ago, Turkey and Armenia,"
    Rehn said. "Turkey is very active in (regional talks) and the EU
    supports them."

    Rehn also described Turkish President Abdullah Gul's June 6
    breakthrough visit to Armenia as a sign the two countries were
    beginning to normalize relations and said the political implications
    of the visit were "significant."

    Turkey, a NATO member, has cause for alarm about how Russia's
    recognition of the Georgian breakaway regions of South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia might inspire its own separatist Kurds, or provoke Armenia
    to boost support for separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of
    Azerbaijan, which is a close Turkish ally.

    Since the Georgia conflict, Turkey has proposed a regional grouping
    for stability in the Caucasus, which would include Russia, Georgia,
    Azerbaijan and Armenia.
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