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DAVUTOGLU (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   134010


End of Al-Assad, or of Erdogan: Turkey and the Syrian uprising / Wakim, Jamal   Journal Article
Wakim, Jamal Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In this article, I argue that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan wanted to improve relations with Syria because he wanted Turkey to play a leading role in the Arab world. This role is promoted by the United States which aims at creating an alliance between Turkey and the Arab states to block Russia, China, and Iran from having access to the East Mediterranean or the Indian Ocean. Turkey's reward would be to have access to Arab markets and oil. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad was tempted by the United States, Turkey, and conservative Arab regimes to sever his ties with Iran, which he refused to do. Therefore, the former powers supported the Syrian uprising (which started as domestic protests against dictatorship, corruption, and misrule) to topple al-Assad. However, two and half years since the Syrian uprising started, the al-Assad regime seems to be resisting the attempts of his opponents to topple it, which would mean a failure of Erdogan in his political bet and might even lead to his downfall, especially after the eruption of protests against Erdogan throughout Turkey in early June 2013.
Key Words Iran  Turkey  Syria  China  Russia  Neo-Ottomanism 
AKP  Bashar al-Assad  Erdogan  Assad Regime  United States - US  Syrian Uprising 
Davutoglu  Baath  Menderes  Ozal  Political Uprising  Turkey - Arab Alliance 
Turkey Uprising  Arab's Uprising 
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2
ID:   153459


Turkey in search of reference points / Nadein-Raevsky, V; Frolov, A   Journal Article
Frolov, A Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract A. Frolov: Having left the deplorable crisis behind, Russia and Turkey added positive energy to their bilateral relations even though unanimity on certain issues is impossible for objective reasons. For obvious reasons, these relations should be discussed in the context of the deep-cutting political and social transformations unfolding inside the Turkish society, the root of the current ups and downs of Turkish politics.
Key Words Syria  Gulen  Erdogan  ISIS  Davutoglu  Russian-Turkish Relation 
Erdoganomics  Turkish Perestroika 
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