Sunday, July 31, 2016

Russian/Turk Alliance Fears Stoke Cold Warriors in the West

Strengthening Russo-Turkish Alliance Stokes US-Russian Cold War 

by TRNN


July 31, 2016


A possible new alliance between Russia and Turkey must be unsettling for the U.S. and for NATO. The presidents of Russia and Turkey have agreed to meet in St. Petersburg on August 9 to repair relations at a time when tensions between Turkey and NATO are increasing.



John Helmer, Russian-based Anglo-American journalist says that Russia feels threatened by US, NATO, Turkey, and the turbulence at its borders 


The other day, U.S. General Curtis Scaparotti, who is the Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, said, and I quote:

"We will watch closely how the relationship develops, and I would be concerned if they were departing from the values that are the bedrock of the Washington treaty,(meaning NATO) the rule of law."

The budding Russia-Turkey alliance represents an important development, because until now, Turkey has always been a steadfast member of NATO. However, following the July 15 coup attempt in Turkey, President Erdogan's and his allied politicians have suggested that the U.S. might have been involved in the coup attempt, while that is hard to verify at this time.

Meanwhile, Secretary of State John Kerry has criticized Erdogan's post-coup crackdown, which has led to over 1,000 arrests of officers, tens of thousands of dismissals of government employees, and the shutdown of over 130 media outlets.

Now that Russia and Turkey might become allies, it could signal an important geopolitical shift in the region, if Russia succeeds in peeling away Turkey from NATO. It would change the regional dynamics of the war in Syria, and of course, geopolitics altogether.

With us to discuss this development is John Helmer. John is the longest continuous serving foreign correspondent in Russia, and the only Western journalist to conduct his own bureau independent of single national or commercial ties. An American who has served in Jimmy Carter's White House, and then as an adviser to Greek Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou, he publishes his own widely-syndicated website, Dances With Bears. He joins us today from Moscow.

No comments: