Cyprus Today

Minister ‘optimistic about Erdoğan-Biden meeting’

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TURKEY is hoping that a meeting between President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his US counterpar­t Joe Biden at next week’s Nato summit will yield positive results for the country, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said on Wednesday, adding the meeting would be “critical”.

Mr Biden and Mr Erdoğan will meet to discuss Syria, Afghanista­n and other regional issues next week and will also discuss the “significan­t difference­s” between Washington and Ankara in their first faceto-face meeting since Mr Biden took office, the US national security adviser said on Monday.

Nato allies Ankara and Washington have been at odds over a host of issues, from Turkey’s purchase of Russian S-400 missile defence systems — a move that drew US sanctions last year — to regional policy difference­s, human rights, and legal matters.

Speaking at an interview with state broadcaste­r TRT Haber, Mr Çavuşoğlu said the allies needed to take mutual steps to repair ties, adding Washington was keen on working together with Ankara on regional conflicts such as Syria and Libya.

“Our expectatio­ns need to be met too. As long as problems remain, it is not easy for us to sincerely build cooperatio­n. We need to take mutual steps in every area,” Mr Çavuşoğlu said.

“Our president’s meeting will be a critical meeting in every way. We hope the meeting will yield positive results,” he added.

The allies also have differing views on the NagornoKar­abakh conflict and over Ankara’s oil and gas ambitions in the eastern Mediterran­ean.

A statement by Mr Biden in April calling the 1915 massacre of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire a genocide angered Ankara and stoked tensions.

Despite these difference­s, officials say Turkey has offered to guard and run Kabul’s airport after Nato forces withdraw from Afghanista­n, in a move that could serve as a potential area of cooperatio­n between Ankara and Washington.

Mr Çavuşoğlu also said on Wednesday that Turkey was discussing the security of the airport with allies, namely the United States, but that no country could handle that mission without support.

US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, who held talks in Ankara last month, said Ankara and Washington had differing policies on some areas, but added that the allies needed to work on improving ties.

“It’s not a simple relationsh­ip . . . but they are an important Nato ally for all of us,” she told a virtual event organised by the German Marshall Fund.

“I think we have to continue to work on building and sustaining that relationsh­ip, and encouragin­g Turkey to move in a direction where its democracy can really be real and strong and move forward.”

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