‘What a table it was indeed’
Recent gatherings around two tables, one in Ankara and the other in Moscow, bring to mind a line from a famous Turkish poem: 'What a table it was indeed'
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Two tables attracted a lot of attention last week. What was put on those tables – one long and the other round – reminded many people of the famous line by Turkish poet Edip Cansever: “What a table it was indeed.”
On Feb. 7, French President Emmanuel Macron, Europe’s self-proclaimed leader in the post-Angela Merkel era, took a seat at Russian President Vladimir Putin’s extraordinarily long table in an attempt to resolve the Ukraine crisis.
On Feb. 12, the leaders of six Turkish opposition parties, led by the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), gathered around a round table to exchange views on “restoring the parliamentary system.”
Indeed, the shape of a table, like the identity of those seated around it, speaks volumes.
Putin’s long table conveys the message that Russia is a great power on par with the United States and China. It also exemplifies how extremely difficult it is for Macron to talk Putin into anything. My sense is that the long table reflects Moscow’s dissatisfaction with its inability to negotiate terms with Washington, as it wanted, and is an indication that the Ukraine crisis will not end soon.
If the crisis between Moscow and Kyiv leads to war, there will be many repercussions for European states, starting with Ukraine and Russia, including a humanitarian catastrophe, an energy crisis and an array of security threats. That is why Putin’s long table featured many symbols and files – just the kind of table the aforementioned poet once described.
Meanwhile, the Russian military is not only increasing its footprint but also the frequency of its exercises. In addition to its troops in Crimea and along the Donbass border, Moscow deployed 30,000 soldiers, 9K720 Iskander missiles and S-400 systems to Belarus, where it built field hospitals.
NATO, in turn, deployed additional troops to Bulgaria, Romania and Poland.
As intense diplomatic efforts continue in the hopes of ending the crisis, it appears many more tables will be set before a solution is found.
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