Putin to visit Turkey to
discuss Jerusalem crisis, Syria
ANKARA,
Dec. 10 (Xinhua) -- United States President Donald Trump's ground shaking
announcement on Jerusalem prompted a new wave of rapprochement between Turkey
and Russia, and the issue will be high on the agenda during Russian President
Vladimir Putin's visit to Ankara on Dec. 11.
The
Russian leader, already scheduled to visit Egypt on Monday, will travel to
Turkey on the same day for talks with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the
Jerusalem crisis and the situation in Syria.Putin and Erdogan plan to discuss
bilateral issues, including joint energy projects, as well as the conflict in
Syria and the broader situation in the Middle East, according to the Kremlin.
JERUSALEM
HIGH ON AGENDA
Sources
in Ankara told Xinhua that the two leaders will discuss "the tension
caused by the U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as
Israel's capital and the effects of this very wrong decision on an already
volatile and vulnerable region."
"The
Syrian conflict and all aspects of the Turkish-Russian bilateral relations will
also be on the table," added these sources.In announcing Putin's visit to
Egypt, the Kremlin said on Dec. 7 that Putin and Egypt's President Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi would discuss stability and security in the Middle East among other
things.
Egypt,
Turkey, and Russia have all denounced Trump's decision. Putin and Erdogan
voiced "serious concern" about it in a phone conversation on Dec. 7,
the Kremlin said.
Russia's
major role in the war in Syria, where it has given President Bashar al-Assad's
government crucial military backing, has increased its influence in the Middle
East.Putin has courted closer ties with Egypt and NATO-member Turkey as well as
other countries in the region in recent years.
"Because
of a U.S. strategy that does not take into consideration the sensitivities of
its allies, pragmatic alliances have been formed with Russia in the region, and
one of them is the Russian-Turkish one," Professor Togrul Ismayil from the
University of Economics and Technology told Xinhua.
The
Trump announcement on Jerusalem "serves entirely the interests of
Russia" in the region by even further consolidating the rapprochement
between Ankara and Moscow by exacerbating U.S.-Turkey tensions, explained
Ismayil.
"Russia
by itself has not the capability of being a major player in the Mideast, but
with the alliances that it formed with key regional powers, such as Turkey and
Iran, it is strengthening its game," explained this international politics
expert.
RUSSIAN-TURKISH
COOPERATION IN SYRIA
Russia
and Turkey back different sides in the Syria war and their relations were
severely strained after Turkish jets shot a Russian warplane down near the Turkish-Syrian
border in 2015.
But
Putin and Erdogan said they have patched things up.Meeting in Ankara in
September, they said they wanted to see progress on the Turk Stream gas
pipeline from Russia to Turkey and the Akkuyu nuclear power plant, which is being
built in Turkey with Russian collaboration.
Thousands
of Turks took to the streets due to Trump's highly controversial decision on
Jerusalem, slamming the United States and Israel. Tens of thousands of people
demonstrated in Istanbul and Ankara following the Friday prayers chanting
pro-Palestinian slogans.As other Muslim nations around the world, the U.S.
decision infuriated Turkey, and President Erdogan warned that it would force
Ankara to cut diplomatic ties with the Jewish state.
"This
could go as far as cutting our diplomatic relations with Israel. You cannot
take such a step," Erdogan told on Tuesday, adding that it would create a
"catastrophe."
Turkish-Israeli
relations have faced serious setbacks in the past. In 2011, Turkey expelled the
Israeli ambassador to Ankara and downgraded diplomatic relations after a raid
on a ship carrying aid to Palestinians in Gaza, killing 10 Turkish activists.
Full diplomatic relations were not restored until 2016.
OIC
MEETING IN ISTANBUL
In
an effort to lead the Muslim world's reaction on Jerusalem, the Turkish
president called for a summit of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)
in Istanbul for Dec. 13 to discuss the U.S. move regarding Jerusalem. Turkey is
currently holding the presidency of this organization.However, even
participants of this meeting are expected to adopt a strong worded statement,
its effects would be minimal, argued experts.
Talks
in Ankara between Putin and Erdogan will also focus on the Syrian conflict
where the Islamic State (IS) is on the brink of collapse. Russia, along with
Iran, is the key backer of Syrian President Assad.Turkey, who is Syria's
neighbor, backed the rebels seeking Assad's ouster in a conflict that lingers
since more than seven years.
However,
Moscow and Ankara have been working together since 2016 reconciliation deal
resolved a crisis caused by the shooting down of a Russian warplane over Syria.
Erdogan
until recently wasn't renouncing on its insistence of ousting the Syrian
president, but in recent months he has considerably toned down its stance and
focused mainly on opposing a Syrian Kurdish militia seen by Ankara as a terror
group.
For
Turkey, the People's Protection Units (YPG) is the Syrian extension of the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), waging an armed conflict in Turkey since 1984.
But
both the U.S. and Russia consider this militia as their allies on the ground in
Syria. Washington has provided the fighters with arms, angering Turkey, and
Russian support of the YPG strongly contrasts with Turkey's vows to clear
PKK-affiliated groups from all of northern Syria, bordering Turkey.Enditem
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