Author (Person) | Larrabee, Stephen |
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Series Title | Insight Turkey |
Series Details | Vol.13, No.1, January 2011, p1-10 |
Publication Date | January 2011 |
ISSN | 1302-177X |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
The United States has to deal with a very different Turkey today than the Turkey during the Cold War. The disappearance of the Soviet threat has reduced Turkey’s dependence on the United States for its security and deprived the U.S.-Turkish security partnership of a clear unifying purpose. At the same time, Turkey’s geographic role and interests have expanded. Turkey now has interests and stakes in various regions it did not have two decades ago. It is thus less willing to automatically follow the U.S.’s lead on many issues, especially when U.S. policy conflicts with Turkey’s own interests. This does not mean that Turkey is turning its back on the West or the United States. Turkey still wants—and needs—strong ties with the United States. But the terms of engagement have changed. Ankara is a rising regional power and is no longer content to play the role of junior partner. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.insightturkey.com/ |
Countries / Regions | Turkey |