Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish counterpart
Recep Tayyip
Erdogan on Tuesday looked to rebuild ties as they met for the first
time since Ankara downed one of Moscow’s warplanes in November.
Erdogan’s visit to Putin’s hometown of Saint Petersburg is also his
first foreign trip since the failed coup against him last month that
sparked a purge of opponents and cast a shadow over Turkey’s relations
with the West.
“Your visit today, despite a very difficult situation regarding
domestic politics, indicates that we all want to restart dialogue and
restore relations between Russia and Turkey,” Putin said after the two
leaders shook hands.
Erdogan, who has said the trip represents a “new milestone”, told
Putin that ties had entered a “very different phase” and thanked the
Kremlin leader for his backing after the coup attempt.
The shooting down of a Russian fighter jet by a Turkish F-16 over the
Syrian border last fall saw a furious Putin slap economic sanctions on
Turkey and launch a blistering war of words with Erdogan that seemed to
irrevocably damage burgeoning ties.
But in late June, Putin surprisingly accepted a letter expressing
regret over the incident from Erdogan as an apology and quickly rolled
back a ban on the sale of package holidays to Turkey and signalled
Moscow would end measures against Turkish food imports and construction
firms.
Now in the wake of the failed July 15 coup attempt, there are fears
in Western capitals that NATO-member Turkey could draw even closer to
Moscow — with Erdogan bluntly making it clear he feels let down by the
United States and the European Union.
Putin was one of the first foreign leaders to phone Erdogan offering
support after the coup attempt and shares none of the scruples of EU
leaders about the ensuing crackdown.
In the latest sign of rocky relations with the West, Turkey’s justice
minister on Tuesday warned that the United States will “sacrifice
relations” unless it extradites Pennsylvania-based preacher Fethullah
Gulen, blamed by Ankara for the failed coup.
Back to business? -Relations between Turkey and Russia two powers
vying for influence in the strategic Black Sea region and Middle East have historically not been straightforward.
Yet before the plane downing crisis, Moscow and Ankara managed to
prevent disputes on Syria and Ukraine harming strategic cooperation on
issues like the TurkStream gas pipeline to Europe and a Russian-built
nuclear power station in Turkey.
Those projects were all put on ice with trade between the two
countries falling 43 percent to $6.1 billion in January-May this year
and Turkey’s tourism industry seeing visitor numbers from Russia fall by
93 percent.
Now with Russia mired in economic crisis due to Western sanctions
over Ukraine and low oil prices along with Turkey’s outlook flagging,
both men want to get business started again.
Turkish media said Erdogan’s entourage was made up of over half a
dozen ministers including his son-in-law energy minister Berat Albayrak
and the powerful head of the country’s National Intelligence
Organisation (MIT) Hakan Fidan.
Friends for real? -The earlier uptick in relations between Turkey
and Russia was built on a macho friendship between Putin and Erdogan,
two combative leaders in their early 60s credited with restoring
confidence to their nations in the wake of financial crises but also
criticised for clamping down on human rights.
But after such a bitter dispute which saw Putin accuse Erdogan of
stabbing Russia in the back and profiting from an illegal oil trade with
the Islamic State group it will take a lot for the pair to reheat
relations.
Russia, which is conducting a bombing campaign in support of
Erdogan’s foe President Bashar al-Assad in Syria, transformed the
balance of the Syrian civil war last September when it intervened
militarily, to Turkey’s consternation.
Erdogan has insisted that Assad must still go a position opposed by
Putin but told Russian media that the conflict at the heart of the
falling out with Moscow could now become the focus for renewed
cooperation between the two sides.
“Russia is a main, key and very important player in establishing
peace in Syria,” Erdogan said in comments translated into Russian. “The
problem needs to be solved with the help of joint steps between Russia
and Turkey.”
Source:NAN
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