Where is Turkish foreign policy headed in 2024?
As uncertainty, competition and conflict gain momentum within the international system, Türkiye engages in diplomacy to play a more defining role in global and regional crises.
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As uncertainty, competition and conflict gain momentum within the international system, Türkiye engages in diplomacy to play a more defining role in global and regional crises.
Having stepped up to manage the COVID-19 pandemic and worked toward a cease-fire in Ukraine and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Ankara will continue to promote stability, security and cooperation across its neighborhood in 2024.
That approach is closely related to Türkiye having to adapt to a new world where we discuss the “death of globalization and liberalism.”
At a time when great power competition leads to multipolarity, yet the new balance of power remains in the making, the country will continue to tap into its strengths: adaptability, agility and readiness to launch new initiatives.
The United States presidential election and the European Parliament elections will chart the Western world’s future course in 2024.
By contrast, Türkiye will experience that critical process under the strong leadership of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who was re-elected in May 2023.
The Turkish Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Commission signed off on Sweden’s NATO membership in late 2023. Ankara expects the Joe Biden administration to ask Congress to approve the simultaneous sale of F-16 fighter jets to Türkiye in early 2024. It goes without saying that Washington’s failure to honor that agreement, citing the opposition of some lobbyists, would severely undermine Turkish-American relations.
However, if an agreement is reached, the defense promises to give positive momentum to the country’s bilateral relations with the U.S., Canada and Sweden.
Whereas the rapprochement between Türkiye and Greece is expected to resume in 2024, a far-right victory in the European Parliament elections could hinder efforts to make Türkiye’s relations with the European Union functional again.
Ankara will keep reminding Europe how valuable working with Türkiye remains for the continent’s security architecture and strategic prospects.
Brokering a cease-fire between Russia and Ukraine will be a major focus of Turkish diplomacy in the new year, too. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s 2024 visit to the Turkish capital could serve as a platform for positive dialogue on energy, Syria and other regional issues.
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