Turkey's Position in the Idlib Equation

Regional actors taking position in the Syrian town of Idlib seems to be changing the balances in the whole region

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Turkey's Position in the Idlib Equation
Turkey and the Wave of Instability

Turkey and the Wave of Instability

It does not make sense for the U.S. and the EU to problematize their relations with Turkey on an ideological basis; instead, they need a new perspective that focuses on rational interests and long-term stability in the region

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The American elite who entrusted Turkey's politics to the anti-Turkey lobby is losing Turkey, plain and simple

This report analyzes the extent of the use of drone technology by terror organizations, and makes recommendations regarding how to remove this new threat.

Although FETÖ has been crippled already, it is not possible to rule out the short- and long-term threats

US Still Lacks a Proper Foreign Strategy

Since Trump took over the presidency, there has been a lack of strategy in U.S. foreign policy

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US Still Lacks a Proper Foreign Strategy

Current Trump's Middle East security policies are military-directed and the light footprint option seems the best strategy for future U.S. security policy.

If Trump wants to put Turkish-U.S. relations back on track, he must stop carrying out Obama's YPG policy

Acting as a stabilizing force in a volatile region requires constant economic and technological prowess

Experts still have unanswered questions about the Gulf Arab countries' decision both in timing and nature that led to this crisis.

A strong advocate of maintaining Iraq's territorial integrity, Turkey believes that the formal disintegration of its southern neighbor could create a domino effect in the Middle East.

With or without Obama's policies, it is high time for the Trump administration to do something in the Middle East

The crisis in the Gulf region has been occupying the international agenda while the years-long problems in the Middle East are still waiting to be resolved

Barzani sees the independence referendum as a political opportunity for the KRG, but at such a conjuncture, it seems to lead a more complicated region

There was no surprise in seeing open or covert U.S. support for various military coups, taking sides in civil wars, or instigating military invasions to "liberate" countries

Unfortunately, the ambitions of regional powers stop them from addressing pressing problems. The Qatar crisis is a case in point.

Turkish policy makers backing Doha is a highly significant approach to reconcile Qatar and its opposition

SETA Foreign Policy Studies Director Ufuk Ulutaş said that the recent Gulf crisis is an attempt to redesign Middle East politics and it is not about the alleged support of terrorism by Qatar, but rather a result of Qatar following its own terms in regional matters.

The United States wants to get involved in the Syrian crisis again rapidly and effectively.