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  • Turkey, Georgia explore new strategy

    Turkey, Georgia explore new strategy

    25/03/2011

    Turkey is about to initiate a passport-free zone with neighbouring
    Georgia for the first time in its history.

    By Alakbar Raufoglu for Southeast European Times -- 03/25/11

    Georgians could soon enter Turkey without passports. [Maia
    Metskhvarishvili/SETimes]

    In an unprecedented step, Turkey is drafting a strategy that will
    include passport-less travel with Georgia, an administrative official
    informed SETimes.

    "This is going to be an outstanding change for our region,"
    Turkish-Georgian Friendship Group Chairman Celal Elbay said. "Like in
    the EU, our citizens will be able to travel to each other with only
    state Ids."

    The so-called "United Caucasus" project was discussed by Turkish
    Foreign Minister Ahmed Davutoglu and Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili in Tbilisi last month.

    Since then, Elbay and his team have visited Tbilisi twice to follow up
    on Ankara's strategy of initiatives regarding the integration of the
    two countries' economies.

    "We open doors towards each other in order to bring peace and
    development and economic strength to our region," he said.

    Georgia shares longstanding historical ties and burgeoning trade with
    Turkey. Tbilisi's precarious geopolitical relationship with Russia is
    also a significant factor driving its calculations.

    Under the strategy, Georgia proposes to unify the alliance between the
    three South Caucasus countries and Turkey. Ankara's ambitions are to
    spread its Georgia initiatives throughout the Caucasus in the future.

    "Turkey and Georgia can extend mini-EU type co-operation in the
    region, by involving the other neighbouring countries, but this idea
    needs time," Sinan Ogan, chairman of the Ankara-based Turkish Centre
    for International Relations and Strategic Analysis, told SETimes.
    "Without solving the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, the
    Caucasus Union [will fail]."

    "Rather than focusing on a vision that will not be reachable in the
    foreseeable future, more energy should be expended on resolving
    existing conflicts and developing more productive bilateral relations
    in the South Caucasus," agreed Janusz Bugajski of the Centre for
    Strategic and International Studies.

    "Although the idea [Caucasus Union] may be admirable, it would be
    difficult to unify a region that is beset by inter-state conflicts,
    separatist struggles, and an interfering Russian government that seeks
    to exploit regional disputes to promote its state ambitions," he told
    SETimes.

    "Turkey and Georgia enjoy many areas of political, security, economic,
    energy, transportation and cultural co-operation, coupled with a
    border policy that will render passports irrelevant," said John
    Sitilides, a government affairs strategist with Trilogy Advisors LLC
    in Washington.

    Deepening co-operation and simplified border crossings are a far cry
    from a union of states. "The nations of the Caucasus will need to
    anchor themselves in surer sovereign structures, and more enduring
    institutional relationships," he added.

    MIT Centre for International Studies Executive Director John Tirman
    believes Turkey should strive to develop open economic relations in
    the Caucasus, but a political union is not going to happen in the next
    decade, if ever.

    "Normal diplomatic relations, free trade zones, and settlement of
    outstanding grievances need to come first," he said.

    http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/features/2011/03/25/feature-01




    From: A. Papazian
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