Turkey's new role in international politics
Author(s)
Date
1994Source Title
Aussenpolitik
Print ISSN
0004-8194 (print)
Publisher
W. Bertelsmann Verlag GmbH & Co. KG
Volume
45
Issue
1/94
Pages
90 - 98
Language
English
Type
ArticleItem Usage Stats
189
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91
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Abstract
The disintegration of the Soviet Union seemed to create new opportunities for
Turkey. Independent countries emerged in the southern part of the former USSR
which were receptive to the reactivation of bonds with Turkey rooted in
their Muslim cultural tradition and, to a great extent, their affiliation to
the family of Turk peoples. Their impression was that Ankara he/,d the key
to sociopolitical modernisation and economic prosperity. As Bahri Yilmaz,
Professor at the Bilkent University in Ankara, exp/aim, the meam at
Turkey's disposal were ove"ated by far. The reduction . of the Turkish
influence this implied was compounded by growing Russian efforts to regain
lost political and military te"ain in Tramcaucasia and Central Asia.
Comequently, Ankara again finds itself primarily relying on the links with
NA TO and Western Europe which existed up until the upheavals which
reshaped the international political landscape between 1989 and 1991.
Bahri Yilmaz works on the assumption that Turkey's traditional orientation
towards the political values of the West remains unbroken.