Kuwait Times

Turkey accuses Russia of a new airspace violation

Erdogan eyes expanding Turkey influence on Latin America tour

-

ANKARA: Turkey yesterday accused Russia of a new violation of its airspace, warning Moscow against “irresponsi­ble behavior”. “A Su-34 plane belonging to the Russian Federation air force violated Turkish airspace at 11:46 (0946 GMT) local time yesterday (Friday),” the foreign ministry said in a statement. The allegation comes just over two months after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane on the Syrian border on November 24, saying it had violated Turkish airspace. Ankara on Friday summoned the Russian ambassador to the foreign ministry to “strongly protest and condemn” the latest alleged violation, the ministry added, without specifying where it took place. Ankara called on Russia to “act responsibl­y” and warned: “We stress once again that all the responsibi­lity for any unwanted grave consequenc­es as a result of any such irresponsi­ble behaviour will belong entirely to the Russian Federation.”Moscow and Ankara are currently experienci­ng their worst relations since the end of the Cold War. In addition to the November 24 incident which sparked a bitter diplomatic row, the two countries back opposing sides in Syria’s almost five-year civil war, with Russia the key supporter of the Damascus regime while Turkey argues that the ouster of Assad is essential to solving the Syrian crisis.

Expanding Turkey influence

Meanwhile, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan yesterday embarks on a major tour of Latin American countries in a bid to expand Ankara’s ties outside its traditiona­l sphere of influence. His visits to Peru and Ecuador are the first-ever by a Turkish president and the stop in Chile is the first since late president Suleyman Demirel travelled there back in 1995. Regional and internatio­nal issues will be on the agenda during talks with the leaders of South America, where Erdogan is also expected to attend business forums to intensify economic links. Erdogan had already in February 2015 visited Cuba, Colombia and Mexico. The Turkish president’s itinerary will take him to Chile and then Peru before wrapping up his visit in Ecuador, the presidency said, adding that the trip “shows the importance we attach to the countries of Latin America.”

‘Long-term ambition’

Turkey is seeking to diversify its partners beyond its traditiona­l sphere of influence within the bounds of the former Ottoman Empire in the Middle East and the Balkans, analysts say. “The visit is part of Turkey’s longer term ambition to expand its presence in Latin America, both to increase Turkish influence globally and also to reach out to new potential trade partners,” said Aaron Stein, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, a US think tank. With its opening to Latin America, Turkey appears to want to forge new alliances in new regions at a time of tricky ties with the United States, the European Union and Russia. One of Turkey’s major trade partners, Russia has imposed sanctions against Ankara after one of its war jets was shot down in November on the border with Syria. Stein said the trip to Latin America aimed at diversifyi­ng Turkey’s ties. “It is part of Turkey’s overarchin­g ambition to deepen its relations with a range of actors, independen­t of its alliance with the United States and individual EU member countries,” he said. “It is a continuati­on of a foreign policy trend put in place in the mid-2000s.”

‘Euro-centric system finished’

Turkey’s “multi-vector” foreign policy also covers Africa, which has been the subject of significan­tly greater interest from Turkey and visits by Erdogan in recent years. Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, a former foreign minister, is seen as the architect of this policy, pushing for a pivotal role for Turkey in global and not just regional affairs. This newlyasser­tive foreign policy by a key NATO member was slammed in some quarters for being “neo-Ottoman” and for drifting away from its Western axis. — Agencies

Erdogan’s advisor Ibrahim Kalin has attacked such criticism for seeing the world through the “lenses of a Eurocentri­c world system”.“Some even go so far as to see African and Latin American openings as diversions or‘moving away’ from the West,” he wrote in the pro-government Sabah Daily last year. “One wonders what meaning such analyses have in a world of growing interdepen­dencies and new geo-political opportunit­ies.” In a sign of its growing soft power, Turkey’s soap operas are taking Latin American countries by storm, prompting TV executives across the continent to start importing Turkish series to a region more used to exporting its own “telenovela­s”. This reverses the long-held trend of Turkey banking on Latin American prime time soap operas. — Agencies

 ??  ?? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait