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Russia–Turkey relations

Russia–Turkey relations (Russian: Российско–турецкие отношения; Turkish: Rusya–Türkiye ilişkileri) are the bilateral relations between Russia and Turkey and their antecedent states. Relations between the two are rather cyclical. From the late 16th until the early 20th centuries, relations between the Ottoman and Russian empires were normally adverse and hostile and the two powers were engaged in numerous Russo-Turkish wars, including one of the longest wars in modern history. Russia attempted to extend its influence in the Balkans and gain control of the Bosphorus at the expense of the weakening Ottoman Empire. As a result, the diplomatic history between the two powers was extremely bitter and acrimonious up to World War I. However, in the early 1920s, as a result of the Bolshevik Russian government's assistance to Turkish revolutionaries during the Turkish War of Independence, the governments' relations warmed. Relations again turned sour at the end of WWII as the Soviet government laid territorial claims and demanded other concessions from Turkey. Turkey joined NATO in 1952 and placed itself within the Western alliance against the Warsaw Pact during the Cold War, when relations between the two countries were at their lowest level. Relations began to improve the following year, when the Soviet Union renounced its territorial claims after the death of Stalin.

Russia– Turkey relations

Russia

Turkey
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan with Russian President Vladimir Putin meeting in 2020.

Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, relations between Turkey and Russia improved significantly and the two countries came to rank among each other's largest trade partners. Russia became Turkey's largest provider of energy, while many Turkish companies began to operate in Russia. In the 1990s, Turkey became the top foreign destination for Russian tourists.

However, both countries still stand on opposite ends when it comes to foreign policy, especially in tense issues such as the Syrian Civil War, the Kosovo conflict and have opposing views on the Armenian genocide. Relations were tense following the Russian fighter jet shootdown in November 2015, becoming normalised again in 2016. As a close partner of both Russia and Ukraine, Turkey is actively attempting to broker a peaceful solution to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, and has hosted a number of high-profile negotiations between the two countries. Turkey is currently the only NATO member which is not on Russia's unfriendly countries list.

Early history edit

Slavic and Turkic peoples have been in contact for centuries along the Eurasian Steppe. Medieval Turkic kingdoms like Khazaria, Cumania, Volga Bulgaria, the Kipchak Khanate, the Khanate of Kazan, the Crimean Khanate, the Astrakhan Khanate and the Khanate of Sibir were established in parts of present-day Russia, with a continuing demographic, genetic, linguistic and cultural legacy.

The Turks in Anatolia were separated from Russia by the Black Sea and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth to the northwest and the Caucasus mountains to the east. The Turks founded the Ottoman Empire in Anatolia and began expanding outwards, while Russia was doing the same. The two empires began a series of clashes over the Black Sea basin.

The conquest of Constantinople in 1453 by the Ottomans marked the end of the Christian Byzantine Empire, and Russia became the seat of the Eastern Orthodox Church and its rulers inherited the Byzantine legacy.[1]

Clashes of empires edit

 
Punch cartoon from 17 June 1876. The Russian Empire preparing to let slip the Balkan "Dogs of War" to attack the Ottoman Empire, while policeman John Bull (UK) warns Russia to take care. Supported by Russia, Serbia and Montenegro declared war on the Ottoman Empire the next day. These clashes eventually triggered the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878.

Starting in 1549, the Ottoman Empire's support for smaller Turkic and Islamic vassal states in modern Russia (the Astrakhan Khanate, the Crimean Khanate, etc.) brought the two empires into conflict. The Black Sea was under Ottoman control when the Russians began their offensive against the Turks. In 1696 Peter the Great took Azov, but many more battles lay ahead. The Russo-Turkish War (1768-74) resulted in the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca in 1774. This treaty granted Russia passage to the Black Sea, making it possible for Russia to gain access to the Mediterranean Sea. It also allowed the Russians the privilege to intervene in the Ottoman Empire on the behalf of the Eastern Orthodox Christian populations. By the 19th century, Russia was helping Turkey's Slavic and Christian minorities to revolt against Ottoman rule. Russia did not always have in mind the goal of partitioning the Ottoman state, fearing this would aid the expansion plans of the Austrian Empire in the Balkan peninsula, which was largely Orthodox. Eventually, however, the desire for free passage through the Turkish Straits and Pan-Slavist feeling at home pushed Russia in that direction, leading to the decisive intervention in 1877–78.

The Russian goal of controlling the Straits and gaining access to the Mediterranean led to a determination to weaken the Ottoman Empire at every point. That meant further support of Austria against Germany, as Berlin was increasingly supportive of Constantinople. It meant Russian support for the Balkan states of Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Montenegro that were fighting Turkey in a series of wars around 1910. It meant encouraging Italy to wrest control of Tripoli from the Ottomans in 1911. The crisis came in the summer of 1914 when Austria threatened Serbia and Russia decided to give all out-support to Serbia. In a matter of days that led to war between Russia and France against Germany and Austria. Britain and the Ottoman Empire joined in, and the Russian army did very poorly on the Eastern front. The two empires fought each other for the last time during World War I. The Russian Caucasus campaign started on 1 November 1914 with the Russian invasion of Turkish Armenia.[2] In February 1917, the Russian advance was halted following the Russian Revolution. The Russian Caucasus Army soon disintegrated and was replaced by the forces of the newly established Armenian state. The war ended with the regimes of both empires being overthrown.[3]

Soviet Union and Turkey edit

 
The Republic Monument (1928) at Taksim Square in Istanbul, crafted by Pietro Canonica. The people standing behind Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, founder of the Turkish Republic, include Semyon Ivanovich Aralov, Ambassador of the Russian SFSR in Ankara during the Turkish War of Independence (1919–1922).[4] His presence in the monument, ordered by Atatürk, points out to the financial and military aid sent by Vladimir Lenin in 1920, during the war.[4]

Friendship between the world wars edit

The Soviet Union and the new Turkish governments were outsiders to the great powers and gravitated toward each other after World War I.[5] According to Onur Işçi:

Beginning in 1920, bitterness against the postwar international order drove Soviet-Turkish relations. Nationalist Turks and internationalist Bolsheviks laid to rest four centuries of rivalry between their imperial predecessors as they found themselves in a convergence that each side defined as anti-imperialist. At the heart of their cooperation was a geopolitical alignment that sought to shield the greater Black Sea region from Western intrusions. .... All the way up to the final hours of peace in 1939, the first principle that guided Turkish diplomacy was good neighborly relations with Moscow in the context of friendship rather than subordination.[6]

The Ottoman government signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk between the Bolshevik government of Russia and the Central Powers on March 3, 1918, but it became obsolete later that year. Russian Bolsheviks and the Soviet government were led by Vladimir Lenin, who emerged victorious from the Russian Civil War by 1921 and viewed the Turkish revolutionary (national) movement under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal as congenial to their ideological and geopolitical aspirations. Lenin's government abdicated the traditional claims of the Russian Empire to the territories of Western Armenia and the Turkish Straits.

The Soviet supply of gold and armaments to the Kemalists in 1920 to 1922 was a key factor in the latter's successful takeover of the Ottoman Empire, which had been defeated by the Triple Entente but won the Armenian campaign (1920) and the Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922).[7]

The Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic was the first state that formally recognised the Kemalist government of Turkey in March 1921 after the Republic of Armenia which signed the Treaty of Alexandropol with the Turkish revolutionaries on 2 December 1920. The Treaty of Moscow, signed on 16 March 1921 between Lenin's government and the Grand National Assembly of Turkey government (although the Sultanate was still nominally in existence), followed bilateral treaties that the Moscow government concluded with Persia and Afghanistan earlier that year (apart from those with the states on the territory of the former Russian Empire).

Under the 1921 Treaty of Moscow,[8] the two governments undertook to establish friendly relations between the countries. Under Article II, Turkey ceded Batum and the adjacent area north of the village of Sarp to Soviet Georgia (Kars Oblast went to Turkey). Article III instituted an autonomous Nakhchivan oblast under Soviet Azerbaijan's protectorate. Article V had the parties agree to delegate the final elaboration of the status of the Black Sea and the Turkish Straits to a future conference of delegates of the littoral states if the "full sovereignty" and security of Turkey and "her capital city of Constantinople" were not injured. The Treaty of Moscow was followed by an identical Treaty of Kars signed in October 1921 by the Kemalists with Soviet Armenia, Soviet Azerbaijan and Soviet Georgia, which formed part of the Soviet Union after the December 1922 Treaty on the Creation of the Soviet Union.

On 16 December 1925, the Turkish government withdrew its delegation, which let the League of Nations Council grant a mandate for the disputed region of Mosul to Britain without its consent. Kemal countered the diplomatic reverse[9] by concluding a non-aggression pact[10] with the Soviet Union on 17 December. The pact was later amended and prolonged and then was prolonged again for another ten years on November 7, 1935.[11] The key episode was agreement on the Montreux Convention in July 1936 in which Turkey regained control over the Straits, which it was allowed to remilitarise.[12]

In parallel to the fluctuating bilateral relations, the communist leaders, party functionaries, diplomats and scholars paid close attention to the origins, evolution and transformational phases of Kemalism.[13]

 
Ottoman postcard of the Russian Embassy's summer residence in the Büyükdere neighbourhood of Istanbul, on the Bosphorus. The main building of the Russian Embassy (since 1923 the Russian Consulate) is on İstiklal Avenue, in the Beyoğlu (Pera) district.
 
Soviet stamp of Turkish poet Nâzım Hikmet Ran, who died in Moscow and was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery

World War II and postwar edit

Turkey officially remained neutral during World War II until 23 February 1945, but the Soviets viewed the Turkish continued relationship with Nazi Germany, whose warships were allowed passage through the Straits,[14] as inimical to itself.[14] On 19 March 1945, Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov advised Turkey's ambassador in Moscow that the Soviets were unilaterally withdrawing from the 1925 Non-Aggression Pact.[15] The decision was explained by asserting that "due to the deep changes that had occurred especially during World War II" the treaty did not cohere with "the new situation and needed serious improvement".[16] The Turkish government was subsequently informed by Molotov that in addition to bases in the Straits, the Soviet Union also claimed a part of eastern Turkey, which was assumed to refer to the districts of Kars, Artvin and Ardahan, which the Russian Empire (and the short-lived Democratic Republic of Armenia) had held between 1878 and 1921.[17]

At the Potsdam Conference (July 1945), Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin demanded a revision of the Montreux Convention. The Soviets' demand to be allowed to join in the defense of the Straits was rejected by Turkey, with the backing of the West.[17] In March 1947, with the proclamation of the Truman Doctrine, the United States underwrote the frontiers of Turkey (as well as Greece) and the continued existence of non-communist governments in the two countries.[17] Turkey sought aid from the United States and joined NATO in 1952. The Soviet Union and Turkey were in different camps during the Korean War and throughout the Cold War.

1990–present edit

Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Russia was now a much smaller non-Communist nation. Relations improved and on May 25, 1992, a visit to Moscow by Turkish Prime Minister Süleyman Demirel saw the signing of a Russian-Turkish treaty.

Disagreements regarding the border dispute over the Caucasus and support of each other's historic adversaries both linger. However both countries are key strategic partners in the Transcaucasian region.

In May 2009, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan flew to Sochi, Russia for a working visit with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin at which he stated, “Turkey and Russia have responsibilities in the region. We have to take steps for the peace and well-being of the region. This includes the Nagorno-Karabakh problem, the Middle East dispute, the Cyprus problem.” Putin responded that, “Russia and Turkey seek for such problems to be resolved and will facilitate this in every way,” but, “As for difficult problems from the past – and the Karabakh problem is among such issues – a compromise should be found by the participants in the conflict. Other states which help reach a compromise in this aspect can play a role of mediators and guarantors to implement the signed agreements.” Whilst on the subject of energy security Erdoğan stated that, “The agreement on gas supplies through the so-called Western route signed in 1986 is expiring in 2012. We have agreed today to immediately start work to prolong this agreement.”[citation needed]

 
Vladimir Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Ramzan Kadyrov opened Moscow's Cathedral Mosque on 23 September 2015

In May 2010, the visit by the Russian President Medvedev to Turkey saw the signing of numerous deals such as the lifting of visa requirements. A multibillion-dollar deal was signed for the construction of a nuclear power plant in Akkuyu, Mersin.[18][19][20]

According to a November 2018 INR poll, 51% of Turks view Russia favorably and 43% view it unfavorably.[21] In 2022, the independent Levada Center found that 68% of Russians have a positive attitude towards Turkey, compared to 20% who have a negative view.[22]

2015 aircraft shootdown incident edit

On 24 November 2015, within weeks of the start of the Russian military intervention in support of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, Turkish F-16 combat aircraft shot down a Russian Su-24 during an airspace dispute close to the Turkish-Syrian border. Russian President Vladimir Putin described the incident as "a stab in the back by the accomplices of terrorists" and further stated that "today's tragic events will have significant consequences including for relations between Russia and Turkey".[23]

In response, Russia imposed a number of economic sanctions on Turkey. These included the suspension of visa-free travel to Russia for Turkish citizens, limits on Turkish residents and companies doing business in Russia and restrictions on imports of Turkish products.[24] Russian tour operators were discouraged from selling Turkish package holidays and asked to stop charter flights to Turkey[24] while Russian football clubs were banned from signing Turkish players and discouraged from organizing winter training camps in Turkey.[25] The day after the jet was shot down, a Russian law-maker, Sergei Mironov, introduced a bill to the Russian parliament that would criminalize the denial of the Armenian genocide,[26] a political move that Turkey has strongly opposed when countries like France and Greece adopted similar laws.[27]

The Pan-Orthodox Council, which had been originally scheduled to be held in Istanbul's Hagia Irene in 2016 had to be shifted to Crete, Greece, after the Russian Orthodox Church indicated that it did not want to go to Turkey due to the crisis between the two countries following the downing of the Russian jet.[28][29][30][31]

Normalisation of ties and beyond: 2016–present edit

 
Angela Merkel, Emmanuel Macron, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Vladimir Putin when giving a press conference as part of Syria summit in Istanbul, Turkey.

The process of normalisation of ties between the two countries was started in June 2016 with Recep Erdoğan expressing regret to Putin for the downing of the Russian warplane.[32] Putin and Erdoğan held a telephone conversation on 29 June which was described as being productive by Russian and Turkish government officials. The Russian government later lifted the travel restrictions on Russian citizens visiting Turkey and ordered normalisation of trade ties.[33]

On 9 August 2016, the countries′ leaders held a meeting in St Petersburg, Russia, which was described by a commentator as a ″clear-the-air summit″ — the first time the pair met since they fallout over the Russian fighter jet downing by the Turkish air force as well as Erdoğan's first trip abroad since the failed coup attempt in Turkey.[34] The BBC commented that the summit, at which Erdoğan thanked Putin for his swift support during the coup attempt, ″unnerved the West″.[35]

Following the assassination of Russian ambassador to Turkey Andrei Karlov on 19 December 2016, the countries′ leaders sought to contain any possible damage to relations between the two countries.[36][37] In December 2016, the two countries initiated the Astana peace talks on Syria peace settlement, subsequently, along with Iran, agreeing to create de-escalation zones in Syria.[38][39][40]

On 9 February 2017 Russian air strike kills three Turkish soldiers by mistake.[41]

On 31 May 2017, Russia lifted most of the sanctions it had imposed on Turkey, which includes lifted restrictions on Turkish companies operating in Russia and ended a ban on employing Turkish workers in the country. It also ended an embargo on a range of Turkish imports. President Putin also restored a bilateral agreement on visa-free movement between the two countries.[42]

During Putin's visit to Ankara at the end of September 2017, the Turkish and Russian presidents said they agreed to closely cooperate on ending Syria's civil war.[43] Vladimir Putin's visit to Ankara in December that year was the third face-to-face meeting between the countries′ leaders in less than a month and their seventh in a year.[44][45]

 
Russian President Vladimir Putin, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in November 2017

In 2018, Russia criticized the Turkish invasion of northern Syria aimed at ousting U.S.-backed Syrian Kurds from the enclave of Afrin.[46]

In June 2018, the Russian government-controlled news agency Sputnik, shut down its website in Kurdish language without mentioning any particular reason for the decision. Former employees of Sputnik said that the news agency decided to shut it down at Turkey's request.[47]

In mid-August 2018, Russia and Turkey backed one another in their respective disputes with the United States. Russia condemned U.S. sanctions against Turkey over the detention of Andrew Brunson,[48] while Turkey stated its opposition to U.S. sanctions on Russia over the annexation of Crimea and interference in the 2016 U.S. elections.[48][49][50]

In addition, Turkey and Russia also shared foreign policy on the Venezuelan presidential crisis in January 2019, supporting the regime of Nicolás Maduro as the legitimate government of Venezuela, opposing Western-supported opposition government led by Juan Guaidó.[51]

 
Erdoğan and Putin at the opening ceremony of TurkStream pipeline in Instanbul on 19 November 2018

Turkish foreign minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu stated that Turkey was not going to have to choose between Russia and the United States.[52]

Russian President Vladimir Putin initially expressed comparative neutrality to the 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria, stating that Turkey has a right to defend itself, but called upon foreign militaries with what he described as an illegal presence in Syria to leave.[53][54] On 15 October, Putin declared a much harsher stance, denouncing the Turkish invasion as 'unacceptable' and deploying Russian troops to the frontline.[55][56] On 13 November, Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said that US pushed Gulf countries to finance the creation of a quasi-state on the Eastern Euphrates.[57]

On 1 October 2020, Turkey issued a statement dismissing the joint demands from France, Russia, and the United States calling for a ceasefire in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war between Armenia and Azerbaijan.[58]

On 19 March 2021, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan criticized Joe Biden for calling Russian President Vladimir Putin a killer.[59][60] According to Erdoğan, Putin gave a very smart and graceful response.[61]

Russia has expressed support for normalization of Armenia–Turkey relations for regional stability.[62][63]

In March 2022, Turkey expressed its hopes that Russia will not adopt a negative stand amid talks to resurrect the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, which were halted due to a last-minute demand by Moscow, according to Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.[64]

On 2 June 2022, Russia's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova warned that Turkey's invasion of northern Syria "would be a direct violation of Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity" and would "cause a further escalation of tensions in Syria."[65][66]

Russian invasion of Ukraine edit

On 3 February 2022, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Turkey volunteered to organize a Ukraine-Russia conference during a visit to Ukraine, as EU leaders increased up outreach to the Kremlin to calm worries of a Russian invasion.[67] On 24 February, after the invasion started, Erdoğan expressed his support for Ukraine.[68] On 25 February, on the other hand, the Republic of Turkey abstained from voting on Russia's suspension from the Council of Europe as it calls for open dialogue between the parties under any circumstances.[69] Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu also reiterated Turkey's "readiness to host negotiations that could take place between the Russian Federation and Ukraine," accordingly.[70]

On 27 February 2022, Cavusoglu stated that Turkey shifted its terminology to refer to Russia's assault on Ukraine as a "war," and committed to enforce elements of the 1936 Montreux Convention's international pact which allows Turkey to prohibit all warships of the belligerent forces, including those of the Russian navy, from entering the Bosporus and Dardanelles and thus hinder Russian vessels' transit from the Mediterranean to the Black Sea.[71] On 28 February, President Erdoğan publicly confirmed that the straits would be closed to prevent an escalation of the war, while also pledging to maintain relations with both Ukraine and Russia.[72] On March 10, Messrs Sergei Lavrov and Dmytro Kuleba, the top diplomats of the Russian Federation and of Ukraine, have personally met in the Mediterranean province of Antalya in Turkey in the first high-level contact between the two sides since the beginning of the skirmishes in April. The meeting between Lavrov and Kuleba took place on the sidelines of a significant diplomacy forum gathering professionals who deal with diplomacy such as political leaders, diplomats, opinion makers, authors and academics. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu also participated. Mr Cavusoglu has said the aim of the diplomatic meeting is "to pave the way," for a meeting between the Russian and Ukrainian presidents, which would be facilitated by Turkey's president.

 
Meeting of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Russian President Vladimir Putin at the 2022 SCO summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan on 16 September 2022
 
State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin represented Russia at the inauguration ceremony of re-elected Turkish President Erdoğan on 3 June 2023

Turkey has been actively involved in mediation efforts in the 2022 Russian-Ukrainian War due to its important relations with both countries.[73] Ukraine has asked both Israel and Turkey to set up talks with Russia for negotiations.[74][75]

Turkey has provided Ukraine with Bayraktar drones since 2019, which played a significant role in deterring Russian advances in the early stages of the 2022 Russian-Ukrainian War, but has not imposed sanctions on Russia for the conflict.[76][77]

On 17 March 2022, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu expressed hope for a humanitarian ceasefire in the southern Ukrainian port city of Mariupol, where he claimed more than 100 Turkish citizens remained.[78]

On 20 March 2022, Turkey's foreign minister stated that Russia and Ukraine were close to reaching an agreement on "important" issues, and that he hoped for a ceasefire if the two sides did not reverse their previous advances.[79]

Black Sea Grain Initiative edit

On 17 July 2022, Russian, Ukrainian and Turkish military delegations met with United Nations officials in Istanbul to start talks on the resumption of exports of Ukrainian grain from the Black Sea port of Odesa. On 22 July 2022, Russian and Ukrainian officials have signed the deal to allow grain exports from Ukrainian Black Sea ports. Under the agreement, a coalition of Turkish, Ukrainian and UN staff will monitor the loading of grain into vessels in Ukrainian ports, to allay Russian fears of weapons smuggling [80][81] before navigating a preplanned route through the Black Sea, which remains heavily mined by Ukrainian and Russian forces.[80] On 29 October 2022, Russia said it was suspending its participation in the grain deal, in response to what it called a major Ukrainian drone attack on its Black Sea fleet at the Crimean naval port of Sevastopol.[82] On 1 November 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Russia would consider resuming the grain deal after a completion of an investigation of the drone attacks.[83] On 2 November 2022, Russia stated that it would resume its participation in the initiative.[84]

Economic relations edit

 
The first direct gas pipeline between Russia and Turkey under the Black Sea was Blue Stream, which was commissioned in 2005
 
The TurkStream pipeline connects Russia and Turkey under the Black Sea

In order to contribute to Turkey’s economic development,[85] contracts have been concluded with Russia for the construction of the Akkuyu nuclear power plant and the TurkStream gas pipeline.

On May 12, 2010, the government of the Russian Federation and the republic of Turkey signed a Cooperation Agreement [86]providing for the construction of Akkuyu nuclear power plant, comprising four power units with VVER-1200 reactors with a total capacity of 4800 MW on the southern coast of Turkey in Mersin province.

In October 2016, an intergovernmental agreement for TurkStream was signed. Construction started in May 2017 and gas deliveries to Bulgaria through the pipeline began on January 1, 2020. TurksStream changes the regional gas flows in South-East Europe by diverting the transit through Ukraine and the Trans Balkan Pipeline system.[87]

In 2022, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said that Turkey could not join sanctions on Russia because of import dependency.[88] Turkey received almost half of its gas from Russia.[89] Erdoğan and Putin planned for Turkey to become an energy hub for all of Europe.[90] According to Aura Săbăduș, a senior energy journalist focusing on the Black Sea region, "Turkey would accumulate gas from various producers — Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan, [liquefied natural gas] and its own Black Sea gas — and then whitewash it and relabel it as Turkish. European buyers wouldn’t know the origin of the gas."[91]

Military relations edit

On 12 September 2017, Turkey announced that it had signed a deal to purchase the Russian S-400 surface-to-air missile system; the deal was characterised by American press as ″the clearest sign of [Recep Erdoğan]′s pivot toward Russia and away from NATO and the West" that ″cements a recent rapprochement with Russia″.[92] Despite pressure to cancel the deal on the part of the Trump administration, in April 2018 the scheduled delivery of the S-400 batteries had been brought forward from the first quarter of 2020 to July 2019.[93]

In September 2019, Russia sent the Sukhoi Su-35S and the 5th Generation stealth fighter Su-57 to Turkey for Technofest Istanbul 2019. The jets landed at Turkey's Atatürk Airport, weeks after Recep Tayyip Erdoğan went to Moscow and discussed stealth fighter with Vladimir Putin.[94]

In November 2021, Russia offered assistance to Turkey in developing new-generation fighter jet to Turkey.[95][96] Some Turkish officials have also shown interest to buy Russian jets if the US F-16 deal fails.[97][98][99][100][101]

Resident diplomatic missions edit

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Ath, Altay (2003). "Caucasus". Turkey in the First World War.
  3. ^ Michael A. Reynolds, Shattering Empires: The Clash and Collapse of the Ottoman and Russian Empires 1908–1918 (2011).
  4. ^ a b İmren Arbaç. "Symbol Figure in Russian-Turkish Rapprochement in Taksim Republic Monument". Yeditepe University.
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  6. ^ Onur Işçi, "Yardstick of Friendship: Soviet-Turkish Relations and the Montreux Convention of 1936." Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 21.4 (2020): 733-762.
  7. ^ В. Шеремет. Босфор. Moscow, 1995, p. 241.
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  10. ^ Документы вешней политики СССР. Moscow, 1961, Vol. VIII, pp. 739-741 (text of treaty).
  11. ^ Документы вешней политики СССР. Moscow, 1961, Vol. VIII, pp. 813.
  12. ^ Mango, Andrew. Turkey. Thames and Hudson, London, 1968, p. 63.
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  15. ^ БСЭ, 1st ed., Moscow, Vol. 55 (1947), col. 382.
  16. ^ Внешняя политка Советского Союза в период Отечественной войны. ОГИЗ [ru], 1947, Vol. III, p. 146.
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  21. ^ 2018 INR Poll
  22. ^ "Attitude towards countries and their citizens".
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  35. ^ Turkey's Erdogan unnerves West with Putin visit BBC, 9 August 2016.
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  43. ^ Putin, Erdogan Pledge To Closely Cooperate On Syria, Increase Trade Radio Liberty, 29 September 2017.
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Further reading edit

  • Ágoston, Gábor. "Military transformation in the Ottoman Empire and Russia, 1500–1800." Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 12.2 (2011): 281–319. online
  • Aktürk, Şener (September 2006). "Turkish-Russian Relations after the Cold War (1992-2002)". Turkish Studies. 7 (3): 337–364. doi:10.1080/14683840600891034. S2CID 143919117.
  • Armour, Ian D. (2007). A History of Eastern Europe 1740-1918. Hodder Arnold. ISBN 978-0-340-76040-6.
  • Askerov, Ali. Contemporary Russo-Turkish Relations: From Crisis to Cooperation (Lexington Books, 2018).
  • Bolsover, George H. "Nicholas I and the Partition of Turkey." Slavonic and East European Review (1948): 115-145 online.
  • Gingeras, Ryan. Fall of the Sultanate: The Great War and the End of the Ottoman Empire, 1908-1922 (Oxford UP, 2016).
  • Hall, Richard C. ed. War in the Balkans: An Encyclopedic History from the Fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Breakup of Yugoslavia (2014)
  • King, Charles. Black Sea: A History (2004), 276p. covers: 400 to 1999
  • Macfie, Alexander Lyon. The Eastern Question 1774-1923 (2nd ed. 2014).
  • Mihneva, Rumjana. "The Muscovite Tsardom, the Ottoman Empire and the European Diplomacy (Mid-Sixteenth-End of Seventeenth Century). Part 1." Études balkaniques 3+ 4 (1998): 98-129.
  • Özveren, Y. Eyüp. "A framework for the study of the Black Sea world, 1789-1915." Review (Fernand Braudel Center) (1997): 77-113. online
  • Reynolds, Michael A. Shattering Empires: The Clash and Collapse of the Ottoman and Russian Empires 1908–1918 (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
  • Rogan, Eugene. The Fall of the Ottomans: The Great War in the Middle East (2015).
  • Saul, Norman E. Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Foreign Policy (2014).
  • Seton-Watson, R. W. Disraeli, Gladstone, and the Eastern Question (1935).
  • Sumner, B. H. Russia and the Balkans 1870-1880 (1937)

External links edit

  • Making Diplomacy Work: Intelligent Innovation for the Modern World
  • (in Russian) Documents on the Russia–Turkey relationship at the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • (in English) Documents on the Russia–Turkey relationship at the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • (in Russian) Russia–Turkey relations news from Turkishnews.ru

Diplomatic missions edit

  • (in English, Russian, and Turkish) Embassy of Russia in Ankara
  • (in Turkish) Embassy of Turkey in Moscow
  • (in Russian) Consulate-General of Russia in Antalya
  • (in English, Russian, and Turkish) Consulate-General of Russia in Istanbul
  • (in Russian and Turkish) Consulate-General of Russia in Trabzon
  • (in Turkish) Consulate-General of Turkey in Kazan
  • (in Turkish) Consulate-General of Turkey in Saint Petersburg

russia, turkey, relations, russian, Российско, турецкие, отношения, turkish, rusya, türkiye, ilişkileri, bilateral, relations, between, russia, turkey, their, antecedent, states, relations, between, rather, cyclical, from, late, 16th, until, early, 20th, centu. Russia Turkey relations Russian Rossijsko tureckie otnosheniya Turkish Rusya Turkiye iliskileri are the bilateral relations between Russia and Turkey and their antecedent states Relations between the two are rather cyclical From the late 16th until the early 20th centuries relations between the Ottoman and Russian empires were normally adverse and hostile and the two powers were engaged in numerous Russo Turkish wars including one of the longest wars in modern history Russia attempted to extend its influence in the Balkans and gain control of the Bosphorus at the expense of the weakening Ottoman Empire As a result the diplomatic history between the two powers was extremely bitter and acrimonious up to World War I However in the early 1920s as a result of the Bolshevik Russian government s assistance to Turkish revolutionaries during the Turkish War of Independence the governments relations warmed Relations again turned sour at the end of WWII as the Soviet government laid territorial claims and demanded other concessions from Turkey Turkey joined NATO in 1952 and placed itself within the Western alliance against the Warsaw Pact during the Cold War when relations between the two countries were at their lowest level Relations began to improve the following year when the Soviet Union renounced its territorial claims after the death of Stalin Russia Turkey relationsRussia TurkeyTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with Russian President Vladimir Putin meeting in 2020 Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 relations between Turkey and Russia improved significantly and the two countries came to rank among each other s largest trade partners Russia became Turkey s largest provider of energy while many Turkish companies began to operate in Russia In the 1990s Turkey became the top foreign destination for Russian tourists However both countries still stand on opposite ends when it comes to foreign policy especially in tense issues such as the Syrian Civil War the Kosovo conflict and have opposing views on the Armenian genocide Relations were tense following the Russian fighter jet shootdown in November 2015 becoming normalised again in 2016 As a close partner of both Russia and Ukraine Turkey is actively attempting to broker a peaceful solution to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and has hosted a number of high profile negotiations between the two countries Turkey is currently the only NATO member which is not on Russia s unfriendly countries list Contents 1 Early history 2 Clashes of empires 3 Soviet Union and Turkey 3 1 Friendship between the world wars 3 2 World War II and postwar 4 1990 present 4 1 2015 aircraft shootdown incident 4 2 Normalisation of ties and beyond 2016 present 4 2 1 Russian invasion of Ukraine 4 2 2 Black Sea Grain Initiative 5 Economic relations 6 Military relations 7 Resident diplomatic missions 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 Diplomatic missionsEarly history editSlavic and Turkic peoples have been in contact for centuries along the Eurasian Steppe Medieval Turkic kingdoms like Khazaria Cumania Volga Bulgaria the Kipchak Khanate the Khanate of Kazan the Crimean Khanate the Astrakhan Khanate and the Khanate of Sibir were established in parts of present day Russia with a continuing demographic genetic linguistic and cultural legacy The Turks in Anatolia were separated from Russia by the Black Sea and the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth to the northwest and the Caucasus mountains to the east The Turks founded the Ottoman Empire in Anatolia and began expanding outwards while Russia was doing the same The two empires began a series of clashes over the Black Sea basin The conquest of Constantinople in 1453 by the Ottomans marked the end of the Christian Byzantine Empire and Russia became the seat of the Eastern Orthodox Church and its rulers inherited the Byzantine legacy 1 Clashes of empires editMain articles History of the Russo Turkish wars Crimean Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe and Eastern Question nbsp Punch cartoon from 17 June 1876 The Russian Empire preparing to let slip the Balkan Dogs of War to attack the Ottoman Empire while policeman John Bull UK warns Russia to take care Supported by Russia Serbia and Montenegro declared war on the Ottoman Empire the next day These clashes eventually triggered the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 Starting in 1549 the Ottoman Empire s support for smaller Turkic and Islamic vassal states in modern Russia the Astrakhan Khanate the Crimean Khanate etc brought the two empires into conflict The Black Sea was under Ottoman control when the Russians began their offensive against the Turks In 1696 Peter the Great took Azov but many more battles lay ahead The Russo Turkish War 1768 74 resulted in the Treaty of Kucuk Kaynarca in 1774 This treaty granted Russia passage to the Black Sea making it possible for Russia to gain access to the Mediterranean Sea It also allowed the Russians the privilege to intervene in the Ottoman Empire on the behalf of the Eastern Orthodox Christian populations By the 19th century Russia was helping Turkey s Slavic and Christian minorities to revolt against Ottoman rule Russia did not always have in mind the goal of partitioning the Ottoman state fearing this would aid the expansion plans of the Austrian Empire in the Balkan peninsula which was largely Orthodox Eventually however the desire for free passage through the Turkish Straits and Pan Slavist feeling at home pushed Russia in that direction leading to the decisive intervention in 1877 78 The Russian goal of controlling the Straits and gaining access to the Mediterranean led to a determination to weaken the Ottoman Empire at every point That meant further support of Austria against Germany as Berlin was increasingly supportive of Constantinople It meant Russian support for the Balkan states of Serbia Bulgaria Greece and Montenegro that were fighting Turkey in a series of wars around 1910 It meant encouraging Italy to wrest control of Tripoli from the Ottomans in 1911 The crisis came in the summer of 1914 when Austria threatened Serbia and Russia decided to give all out support to Serbia In a matter of days that led to war between Russia and France against Germany and Austria Britain and the Ottoman Empire joined in and the Russian army did very poorly on the Eastern front The two empires fought each other for the last time during World War I The Russian Caucasus campaign started on 1 November 1914 with the Russian invasion of Turkish Armenia 2 In February 1917 the Russian advance was halted following the Russian Revolution The Russian Caucasus Army soon disintegrated and was replaced by the forces of the newly established Armenian state The war ended with the regimes of both empires being overthrown 3 Soviet Union and Turkey editMain article Soviet Union Turkey relations nbsp The Republic Monument 1928 at Taksim Square in Istanbul crafted by Pietro Canonica The people standing behind Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founder of the Turkish Republic include Semyon Ivanovich Aralov Ambassador of the Russian SFSR in Ankara during the Turkish War of Independence 1919 1922 4 His presence in the monument ordered by Ataturk points out to the financial and military aid sent by Vladimir Lenin in 1920 during the war 4 Friendship between the world wars editThe Soviet Union and the new Turkish governments were outsiders to the great powers and gravitated toward each other after World War I 5 According to Onur Isci Beginning in 1920 bitterness against the postwar international order drove Soviet Turkish relations Nationalist Turks and internationalist Bolsheviks laid to rest four centuries of rivalry between their imperial predecessors as they found themselves in a convergence that each side defined as anti imperialist At the heart of their cooperation was a geopolitical alignment that sought to shield the greater Black Sea region from Western intrusions All the way up to the final hours of peace in 1939 the first principle that guided Turkish diplomacy was good neighborly relations with Moscow in the context of friendship rather than subordination 6 The Ottoman government signed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk between the Bolshevik government of Russia and the Central Powers on March 3 1918 but it became obsolete later that year Russian Bolsheviks and the Soviet government were led by Vladimir Lenin who emerged victorious from the Russian Civil War by 1921 and viewed the Turkish revolutionary national movement under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal as congenial to their ideological and geopolitical aspirations Lenin s government abdicated the traditional claims of the Russian Empire to the territories of Western Armenia and the Turkish Straits The Soviet supply of gold and armaments to the Kemalists in 1920 to 1922 was a key factor in the latter s successful takeover of the Ottoman Empire which had been defeated by the Triple Entente but won the Armenian campaign 1920 and the Greco Turkish War 1919 1922 7 The Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic was the first state that formally recognised the Kemalist government of Turkey in March 1921 after the Republic of Armenia which signed the Treaty of Alexandropol with the Turkish revolutionaries on 2 December 1920 The Treaty of Moscow signed on 16 March 1921 between Lenin s government and the Grand National Assembly of Turkey government although the Sultanate was still nominally in existence followed bilateral treaties that the Moscow government concluded with Persia and Afghanistan earlier that year apart from those with the states on the territory of the former Russian Empire Under the 1921 Treaty of Moscow 8 the two governments undertook to establish friendly relations between the countries Under Article II Turkey ceded Batum and the adjacent area north of the village of Sarp to Soviet Georgia Kars Oblast went to Turkey Article III instituted an autonomous Nakhchivan oblast under Soviet Azerbaijan s protectorate Article V had the parties agree to delegate the final elaboration of the status of the Black Sea and the Turkish Straits to a future conference of delegates of the littoral states if the full sovereignty and security of Turkey and her capital city of Constantinople were not injured The Treaty of Moscow was followed by an identical Treaty of Kars signed in October 1921 by the Kemalists with Soviet Armenia Soviet Azerbaijan and Soviet Georgia which formed part of the Soviet Union after the December 1922 Treaty on the Creation of the Soviet Union On 16 December 1925 the Turkish government withdrew its delegation which let the League of Nations Council grant a mandate for the disputed region of Mosul to Britain without its consent Kemal countered the diplomatic reverse 9 by concluding a non aggression pact 10 with the Soviet Union on 17 December The pact was later amended and prolonged and then was prolonged again for another ten years on November 7 1935 11 The key episode was agreement on the Montreux Convention in July 1936 in which Turkey regained control over the Straits which it was allowed to remilitarise 12 In parallel to the fluctuating bilateral relations the communist leaders party functionaries diplomats and scholars paid close attention to the origins evolution and transformational phases of Kemalism 13 nbsp Ottoman postcard of the Russian Embassy s summer residence in the Buyukdere neighbourhood of Istanbul on the Bosphorus The main building of the Russian Embassy since 1923 the Russian Consulate is on Istiklal Avenue in the Beyoglu Pera district nbsp Soviet stamp of Turkish poet Nazim Hikmet Ran who died in Moscow and was buried at the Novodevichy CemeteryWorld War II and postwar edit Turkey officially remained neutral during World War II until 23 February 1945 but the Soviets viewed the Turkish continued relationship with Nazi Germany whose warships were allowed passage through the Straits 14 as inimical to itself 14 On 19 March 1945 Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov advised Turkey s ambassador in Moscow that the Soviets were unilaterally withdrawing from the 1925 Non Aggression Pact 15 The decision was explained by asserting that due to the deep changes that had occurred especially during World War II the treaty did not cohere with the new situation and needed serious improvement 16 The Turkish government was subsequently informed by Molotov that in addition to bases in the Straits the Soviet Union also claimed a part of eastern Turkey which was assumed to refer to the districts of Kars Artvin and Ardahan which the Russian Empire and the short lived Democratic Republic of Armenia had held between 1878 and 1921 17 At the Potsdam Conference July 1945 Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin demanded a revision of the Montreux Convention The Soviets demand to be allowed to join in the defense of the Straits was rejected by Turkey with the backing of the West 17 In March 1947 with the proclamation of the Truman Doctrine the United States underwrote the frontiers of Turkey as well as Greece and the continued existence of non communist governments in the two countries 17 Turkey sought aid from the United States and joined NATO in 1952 The Soviet Union and Turkey were in different camps during the Korean War and throughout the Cold War 1990 present editFollowing the dissolution of the Soviet Union Russia was now a much smaller non Communist nation Relations improved and on May 25 1992 a visit to Moscow by Turkish Prime Minister Suleyman Demirel saw the signing of a Russian Turkish treaty Disagreements regarding the border dispute over the Caucasus and support of each other s historic adversaries both linger However both countries are key strategic partners in the Transcaucasian region In May 2009 Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan flew to Sochi Russia for a working visit with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin at which he stated Turkey and Russia have responsibilities in the region We have to take steps for the peace and well being of the region This includes the Nagorno Karabakh problem the Middle East dispute the Cyprus problem Putin responded that Russia and Turkey seek for such problems to be resolved and will facilitate this in every way but As for difficult problems from the past and the Karabakh problem is among such issues a compromise should be found by the participants in the conflict Other states which help reach a compromise in this aspect can play a role of mediators and guarantors to implement the signed agreements Whilst on the subject of energy security Erdogan stated that The agreement on gas supplies through the so called Western route signed in 1986 is expiring in 2012 We have agreed today to immediately start work to prolong this agreement citation needed nbsp Vladimir Putin Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Ramzan Kadyrov opened Moscow s Cathedral Mosque on 23 September 2015In May 2010 the visit by the Russian President Medvedev to Turkey saw the signing of numerous deals such as the lifting of visa requirements A multibillion dollar deal was signed for the construction of a nuclear power plant in Akkuyu Mersin 18 19 20 According to a November 2018 INR poll 51 of Turks view Russia favorably and 43 view it unfavorably 21 In 2022 the independent Levada Center found that 68 of Russians have a positive attitude towards Turkey compared to 20 who have a negative view 22 2015 aircraft shootdown incident edit Main article 2015 Russian Sukhoi Su 24 shootdown On 24 November 2015 within weeks of the start of the Russian military intervention in support of Syria s President Bashar al Assad Turkish F 16 combat aircraft shot down a Russian Su 24 during an airspace dispute close to the Turkish Syrian border Russian President Vladimir Putin described the incident as a stab in the back by the accomplices of terrorists and further stated that today s tragic events will have significant consequences including for relations between Russia and Turkey 23 In response Russia imposed a number of economic sanctions on Turkey These included the suspension of visa free travel to Russia for Turkish citizens limits on Turkish residents and companies doing business in Russia and restrictions on imports of Turkish products 24 Russian tour operators were discouraged from selling Turkish package holidays and asked to stop charter flights to Turkey 24 while Russian football clubs were banned from signing Turkish players and discouraged from organizing winter training camps in Turkey 25 The day after the jet was shot down a Russian law maker Sergei Mironov introduced a bill to the Russian parliament that would criminalize the denial of the Armenian genocide 26 a political move that Turkey has strongly opposed when countries like France and Greece adopted similar laws 27 The Pan Orthodox Council which had been originally scheduled to be held in Istanbul s Hagia Irene in 2016 had to be shifted to Crete Greece after the Russian Orthodox Church indicated that it did not want to go to Turkey due to the crisis between the two countries following the downing of the Russian jet 28 29 30 31 Normalisation of ties and beyond 2016 present edit nbsp Angela Merkel Emmanuel Macron Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Vladimir Putin when giving a press conference as part of Syria summit in Istanbul Turkey The process of normalisation of ties between the two countries was started in June 2016 with Recep Erdogan expressing regret to Putin for the downing of the Russian warplane 32 Putin and Erdogan held a telephone conversation on 29 June which was described as being productive by Russian and Turkish government officials The Russian government later lifted the travel restrictions on Russian citizens visiting Turkey and ordered normalisation of trade ties 33 On 9 August 2016 the countries leaders held a meeting in St Petersburg Russia which was described by a commentator as a clear the air summit the first time the pair met since they fallout over the Russian fighter jet downing by the Turkish air force as well as Erdogan s first trip abroad since the failed coup attempt in Turkey 34 The BBC commented that the summit at which Erdogan thanked Putin for his swift support during the coup attempt unnerved the West 35 Following the assassination of Russian ambassador to Turkey Andrei Karlov on 19 December 2016 the countries leaders sought to contain any possible damage to relations between the two countries 36 37 In December 2016 the two countries initiated the Astana peace talks on Syria peace settlement subsequently along with Iran agreeing to create de escalation zones in Syria 38 39 40 On 9 February 2017 Russian air strike kills three Turkish soldiers by mistake 41 On 31 May 2017 Russia lifted most of the sanctions it had imposed on Turkey which includes lifted restrictions on Turkish companies operating in Russia and ended a ban on employing Turkish workers in the country It also ended an embargo on a range of Turkish imports President Putin also restored a bilateral agreement on visa free movement between the two countries 42 During Putin s visit to Ankara at the end of September 2017 the Turkish and Russian presidents said they agreed to closely cooperate on ending Syria s civil war 43 Vladimir Putin s visit to Ankara in December that year was the third face to face meeting between the countries leaders in less than a month and their seventh in a year 44 45 nbsp Russian President Vladimir Putin Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in November 2017In 2018 Russia criticized the Turkish invasion of northern Syria aimed at ousting U S backed Syrian Kurds from the enclave of Afrin 46 In June 2018 the Russian government controlled news agency Sputnik shut down its website in Kurdish language without mentioning any particular reason for the decision Former employees of Sputnik said that the news agency decided to shut it down at Turkey s request 47 In mid August 2018 Russia and Turkey backed one another in their respective disputes with the United States Russia condemned U S sanctions against Turkey over the detention of Andrew Brunson 48 while Turkey stated its opposition to U S sanctions on Russia over the annexation of Crimea and interference in the 2016 U S elections 48 49 50 In addition Turkey and Russia also shared foreign policy on the Venezuelan presidential crisis in January 2019 supporting the regime of Nicolas Maduro as the legitimate government of Venezuela opposing Western supported opposition government led by Juan Guaido 51 nbsp Erdogan and Putin at the opening ceremony of TurkStream pipeline in Instanbul on 19 November 2018Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu stated that Turkey was not going to have to choose between Russia and the United States 52 Russian President Vladimir Putin initially expressed comparative neutrality to the 2019 Turkish offensive into north eastern Syria stating that Turkey has a right to defend itself but called upon foreign militaries with what he described as an illegal presence in Syria to leave 53 54 On 15 October Putin declared a much harsher stance denouncing the Turkish invasion as unacceptable and deploying Russian troops to the frontline 55 56 On 13 November Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said that US pushed Gulf countries to finance the creation of a quasi state on the Eastern Euphrates 57 On 1 October 2020 Turkey issued a statement dismissing the joint demands from France Russia and the United States calling for a ceasefire in the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh war between Armenia and Azerbaijan 58 On 19 March 2021 Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan criticized Joe Biden for calling Russian President Vladimir Putin a killer 59 60 According to Erdogan Putin gave a very smart and graceful response 61 Russia has expressed support for normalization of Armenia Turkey relations for regional stability 62 63 In March 2022 Turkey expressed its hopes that Russia will not adopt a negative stand amid talks to resurrect the 2015 Iran nuclear deal which were halted due to a last minute demand by Moscow according to Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu 64 On 2 June 2022 Russia s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova warned that Turkey s invasion of northern Syria would be a direct violation of Syria s sovereignty and territorial integrity and would cause a further escalation of tensions in Syria 65 66 Russian invasion of Ukraine edit Main article Russian invasion of Ukraine On 3 February 2022 President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey volunteered to organize a Ukraine Russia conference during a visit to Ukraine as EU leaders increased up outreach to the Kremlin to calm worries of a Russian invasion 67 On 24 February after the invasion started Erdogan expressed his support for Ukraine 68 On 25 February on the other hand the Republic of Turkey abstained from voting on Russia s suspension from the Council of Europe as it calls for open dialogue between the parties under any circumstances 69 Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu also reiterated Turkey s readiness to host negotiations that could take place between the Russian Federation and Ukraine accordingly 70 On 27 February 2022 Cavusoglu stated that Turkey shifted its terminology to refer to Russia s assault on Ukraine as a war and committed to enforce elements of the 1936 Montreux Convention s international pact which allows Turkey to prohibit all warships of the belligerent forces including those of the Russian navy from entering the Bosporus and Dardanelles and thus hinder Russian vessels transit from the Mediterranean to the Black Sea 71 On 28 February President Erdogan publicly confirmed that the straits would be closed to prevent an escalation of the war while also pledging to maintain relations with both Ukraine and Russia 72 On March 10 Messrs Sergei Lavrov and Dmytro Kuleba the top diplomats of the Russian Federation and of Ukraine have personally met in the Mediterranean province of Antalya in Turkey in the first high level contact between the two sides since the beginning of the skirmishes in April The meeting between Lavrov and Kuleba took place on the sidelines of a significant diplomacy forum gathering professionals who deal with diplomacy such as political leaders diplomats opinion makers authors and academics Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu also participated Mr Cavusoglu has said the aim of the diplomatic meeting is to pave the way for a meeting between the Russian and Ukrainian presidents which would be facilitated by Turkey s president nbsp Meeting of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin at the 2022 SCO summit in Samarkand Uzbekistan on 16 September 2022 nbsp State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin represented Russia at the inauguration ceremony of re elected Turkish President Erdogan on 3 June 2023Turkey has been actively involved in mediation efforts in the 2022 Russian Ukrainian War due to its important relations with both countries 73 Ukraine has asked both Israel and Turkey to set up talks with Russia for negotiations 74 75 Turkey has provided Ukraine with Bayraktar drones since 2019 which played a significant role in deterring Russian advances in the early stages of the 2022 Russian Ukrainian War but has not imposed sanctions on Russia for the conflict 76 77 On 17 March 2022 Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu expressed hope for a humanitarian ceasefire in the southern Ukrainian port city of Mariupol where he claimed more than 100 Turkish citizens remained 78 On 20 March 2022 Turkey s foreign minister stated that Russia and Ukraine were close to reaching an agreement on important issues and that he hoped for a ceasefire if the two sides did not reverse their previous advances 79 Black Sea Grain Initiative edit Further information Black Sea Grain Initiative On 17 July 2022 Russian Ukrainian and Turkish military delegations met with United Nations officials in Istanbul to start talks on the resumption of exports of Ukrainian grain from the Black Sea port of Odesa On 22 July 2022 Russian and Ukrainian officials have signed the deal to allow grain exports from Ukrainian Black Sea ports Under the agreement a coalition of Turkish Ukrainian and UN staff will monitor the loading of grain into vessels in Ukrainian ports to allay Russian fears of weapons smuggling 80 81 before navigating a preplanned route through the Black Sea which remains heavily mined by Ukrainian and Russian forces 80 On 29 October 2022 Russia said it was suspending its participation in the grain deal in response to what it called a major Ukrainian drone attack on its Black Sea fleet at the Crimean naval port of Sevastopol 82 On 1 November 2022 Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Russia would consider resuming the grain deal after a completion of an investigation of the drone attacks 83 On 2 November 2022 Russia stated that it would resume its participation in the initiative 84 Economic relations edit nbsp The first direct gas pipeline between Russia and Turkey under the Black Sea was Blue Stream which was commissioned in 2005 nbsp The TurkStream pipeline connects Russia and Turkey under the Black SeaIn order to contribute to Turkey s economic development 85 contracts have been concluded with Russia for the construction of the Akkuyu nuclear power plant and the TurkStream gas pipeline On May 12 2010 the government of the Russian Federation and the republic of Turkey signed a Cooperation Agreement 86 providing for the construction of Akkuyu nuclear power plant comprising four power units with VVER 1200 reactors with a total capacity of 4800 MW on the southern coast of Turkey in Mersin province In October 2016 an intergovernmental agreement for TurkStream was signed Construction started in May 2017 and gas deliveries to Bulgaria through the pipeline began on January 1 2020 TurksStream changes the regional gas flows in South East Europe by diverting the transit through Ukraine and the Trans Balkan Pipeline system 87 In 2022 Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that Turkey could not join sanctions on Russia because of import dependency 88 Turkey received almost half of its gas from Russia 89 Erdogan and Putin planned for Turkey to become an energy hub for all of Europe 90 According to Aura Săbăduș a senior energy journalist focusing on the Black Sea region Turkey would accumulate gas from various producers Russia Iran and Azerbaijan liquefied natural gas and its own Black Sea gas and then whitewash it and relabel it as Turkish European buyers wouldn t know the origin of the gas 91 Military relations editOn 12 September 2017 Turkey announced that it had signed a deal to purchase the Russian S 400 surface to air missile system the deal was characterised by American press as the clearest sign of Recep Erdogan s pivot toward Russia and away from NATO and the West that cements a recent rapprochement with Russia 92 Despite pressure to cancel the deal on the part of the Trump administration in April 2018 the scheduled delivery of the S 400 batteries had been brought forward from the first quarter of 2020 to July 2019 93 In September 2019 Russia sent the Sukhoi Su 35S and the 5th Generation stealth fighter Su 57 to Turkey for Technofest Istanbul 2019 The jets landed at Turkey s Ataturk Airport weeks after Recep Tayyip Erdogan went to Moscow and discussed stealth fighter with Vladimir Putin 94 In November 2021 Russia offered assistance to Turkey in developing new generation fighter jet to Turkey 95 96 Some Turkish officials have also shown interest to buy Russian jets if the US F 16 deal fails 97 98 99 100 101 Resident diplomatic missions editRussia has an embassy in Ankara and consulates general in Istanbul Antalya and Trabzon Turkey has an embassy in Moscow and consulates general in Saint Petersburg Kazan and Novorossiysk nbsp Embassy of Russia in Ankara nbsp Consulate General of Russia in Istanbul nbsp Embassy of Turkey in Moscow nbsp Consulate General of Turkey in Saint Petersburg nbsp Consulate General of Turkey in Kazan nbsp Consulate General of Turkey in NovorossiyskSee also edit nbsp Russia portal nbsp Turkey portal nbsp Politics portalEastern Question on weakening role of Ottoman Empire Turks in Russia Russians in Turkey List of ambassadors of Turkey to Russia Incirlik Air Base Turkey European Union relations Turkey in NATO Turkey United States relations Soviet Union Turkey relationsReferences edit Ziring Lawrence 1981 Iran Turkey and Afghanistan A Political Chronology United States Praeger Publishers ISBN 0 03 058651 8 Ath Altay 2003 Caucasus Turkey in the First World War Michael A Reynolds Shattering Empires The Clash and Collapse of the Ottoman and Russian Empires 1908 1918 2011 a b Imren Arbac Symbol Figure in Russian Turkish Rapprochement in Taksim Republic Monument Yeditepe University Samuel J Hirst Anti Westernism on the European Periphery The Meaning of Soviet Turkish Convergence in the 1930s Slavic Review 72 2013 32 53 Onur Isci Yardstick of Friendship Soviet Turkish Relations and the Montreux Convention of 1936 Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 21 4 2020 733 762 V Sheremet Bosfor Moscow 1995 p 241 Dokumenty vneshnej politiki SSSR Moscow 1959 Vol III pp 597 604 John P Kinross Ataturk a biography of Mustafa Kemal father of modern Turkey New York 1965 p 464 Dokumenty veshnej politiki SSSR Moscow 1961 Vol VIII pp 739 741 text of treaty Dokumenty veshnej politiki SSSR Moscow 1961 Vol VIII pp 813 Mango Andrew Turkey Thames and Hudson London 1968 p 63 Vahram Ter Matevosyan Turkey Kemalism and the Soviet Union Problems of Modernization Ideology and Interpretation London and New York Palgrave Macmillan 2019 a b BSE 1st ed Moscow Vol 55 1947 col 381 BSE 1st ed Moscow Vol 55 1947 col 382 Vneshnyaya politka Sovetskogo Soyuza v period Otechestvennoj vojny OGIZ ru 1947 Vol III p 146 a b c Mango Andrew Turkey Thames and Hudson London 1968 p 69 Erdogan to visit Russia next month report says Today s Zaman 2009 04 25 Erdogan seeks Russian backing in Karabakh peace effort Today s Zaman 2009 05 16 Putin to visit Turkey next month Today s Zaman 2009 05 20 2018 INR Poll Attitude towards countries and their citizens Turkey shoots down Russian warplane on Syria border BBC News November 24 2015 Retrieved November 24 2015 a b Turkey Russia jet downing Moscow announces sanctions BBC News 28 November 2015 Russian clubs banned from signing Turkish players BBC News 29 November 2015 Russian deputies seek accountability for Armenia genocide denial Reuters 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 12 07 Greece Third Country to Criminalize Denial of the Armenian Genocide Asbarez com Retrieved 2015 12 07 Orthodox Council moved from Turkey to Greece over Russia crisis Hurriyet Daily News 19 April 2016 Heneghan Tom December 18 2015 Last minute politics overshadow historic pan Orthodox council The Washington Post Retrieved February 23 2021 Achmatova Nina January 28 2016 Patriarch of Moscow pan Orthodox Synod to be held in Crete AsiaNews Retrieved February 23 2021 Sobranie Patriarhov v Stambule Nezavisimaya Gazeta 30 December 2014 Luhn Alec Black Ian 2016 06 27 Erdogan has apologised for downing of Russian jet Kremlin says The Guardian Retrieved 2016 07 14 Russia closes crisis chapter with Turkey Al Jazeera 2016 06 29 Retrieved 2016 07 14 Erdogan and Putin discuss closer ties in first meeting since jet downing Turkish president holds talks in St Petersburg with Russian counterpart thanking him for support in wake of last month s coup attempt The Guardian 9 August 2016 Turkey s Erdogan unnerves West with Putin visit BBC 9 August 2016 Why killing of Russian diplomat may well bring Turkey and Russia closer Putin and Erdogan are likely to find common ground in their desire to blame third parties for death of Andrei Karlov The Guardian 19 December 2016 Russian president guarantees envoy s murder won t damage Russia Turkey ties Hurriyet Daily News 23 December 2016 Peregovory v Astane po uregulirovaniyu konflikta v Sirii RIA Novosti 3 May 2017 Sovmestnoe zayavlenie ministrov inostrannyh del Islamskoj Respubliki Iran Rossijskoj Federacii Tureckoj Respubliki po soglasovannym meram napravlennym na ozhivlenie politicheskogo processa s celyu prekrasheniya sirijskogo konflikta Moskva 20 dekabrya 2016 goda www mid ru Retrieved 11 July 2017 Russia Turkey and Iran continue cooperation on de escalation zones in Syria TASS 23 June 2017 Syria war Russian friendly fire kills Turkish soldiers BBC News 9 February 2017 Retrieved 20 February 2017 Hille Kathrin 1 June 2017 Russia lifts most sanctions imposed on Turkey after downing of jet Financial Times Putin Erdogan Pledge To Closely Cooperate On Syria Increase Trade Radio Liberty 29 September 2017 Tokyay Menekse December 11 2017 Putin Erdogan meet for third time in less than a month Arab News Retrieved February 23 2021 Russian Turkish talks kremlin ru 11 December 2017 Russia expects Turkey to hand over Afrin to Assad Hurriyet Daily News 9 April 2018 Russian Sputnik shuts down Kurdish website at Turkey s request a b Russia s Lavrov in Turkey calls U S sanctions policy illegitimate Reuters 2018 08 14 Retrieved 2019 05 15 Turkey never supported anti Russian sanctions top diplomat TASS 14 August 2018 Turkey Shifts Toward Russia as Sanctions Sour U S Relations Foreign ministers slam Western sanctions as Erdogan plans boycott of U S electronic goods WSJ 14 August 2018 Turkey condemns coup attempt in Venezuela Turkey News Hurriyet Daily News Retrieved 2019 05 15 PBS NewsHour 2018 06 04 Turkey doesn t have to choose between U S and Russia foreign minister says archived from the original on 2021 12 21 retrieved 2019 05 15 Explainer Turkish operation may redraw map of Syrian war once again Reuters 9 October 2019 via www reuters com Putin calls for foreign militaries to leave Syria The Hill 12 October 2019 Sevastopulo Demetri Williams Aime Pitel Laura Foy Henry 16 October 2019 US delegation to press Turkey for Syrian ceasefire Financial Times Hubbard Ben Troianovski Anton Gall Carlotta Kingsley Patrick 15 October 2019 In Syria Russia is Pleased to Fill an American Void The New York Times Dohuk Russia accuses US of creating quasi state in Syria World News Bagirova Nailia Hovhannisyan Nvard October 2020 Turkey rebuffs Russia France and U S over Nagono Karabakh ceasefire moves reuters com Reuters Archived from the original on 2020 10 01 John Haltiwanger 2021 03 19T15 29 02Z Erdogan Says It s Unacceptable That Biden Called Putin a Killer Businessinsider com Retrieved 2021 11 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Unacceptable Erdogan slams Biden over killer Putin comment Politics News Al Jazeera Retrieved 2021 11 25 Erdogan rebukes Biden s snipe at Putin says Russian leader offered intelligent response World TASS Retrieved 2021 11 25 Russia ready to mediate in normalization of Armenian Turkish ties diplomat Russian Politics amp Diplomacy TASS Retrieved 2021 11 25 Russia pledges support for normalization of Turkey Armenia relations Turkey News Hurriyetdailynews com Retrieved 2021 11 25 Turkey hopes Russia will not take negative stance in Iran nuclear talks Reuters Reuters Reuters 13 March 2022 Retrieved 13 March 2022 Russia urges Turkey not to launch offensive in northern Syria Al Jazeera 2 June 2022 Russia alarmed US worried as Turkey announces new military operation in northern Syria India Narrative 3 June 2022 Erdogan offers Ukraine Russia peace summit to defuse crisis Al Jazeera AL Jazeera and News Agencies 3 February 2022 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Gumrukcu Tuvan 2022 02 24 Erdogan saddened by Russian invasion Ukraine urges Turkey to shut straits Reuters Retrieved 2022 02 26 Gumrukcu Tuvan 25 February 2022 Erdogan says NATO Western reaction to Russian attack not decisive Reuters Retrieved 27 February 2022 AFP 26 February 2022 Turkey Urges Russia to End Conflict in Ukraine The Moscow Times Retrieved 27 February 2022 Turkey to implement pact limiting Russian warships to Black Sea Reuters 27 February 2022 Retrieved 27 February 2022 Erdogan says Turkey cannot abandon ties with Russia or Ukraine Reuters 28 February 2022 Retrieved 28 February 2022 As Israel Turkey relations shift attention turns to Russia and Ukraine opinion The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 2022 03 12 Ukraine is working with Israel and Turkey to set up talks with Russia says negotiator Reuters 13 March 2022 Retrieved 2022 03 13 Kyiv working with Turkey Israel for Russia talks Zelenskyy advisor Daily Sabah 13 March 2022 Retrieved 2022 03 13 Isachenkov Vladmir Bilginsoy Zeynep 5 August 2022 Putin hosts Erdogan for talks on trade Ukraine Syria AP News Falk Thomas 11 March 2022 What do we know about Ukraine s use of Turkish Bayraktar drones Al Jazeera English Turkey says hopes for humanitarian ceasefire in Ukraine s Mariupol Reuters Reuters Reuters 17 March 2022 Retrieved 17 March 2022 Turkey says Russia and Ukraine nearing agreement on critical issues Reuters Reuters Reuters 20 March 2022 Retrieved 20 March 2022 a b Russia Ukraine sign UN backed grain export deal Al Jazeera English 22 July 2022 Dikmen Yesim Kucukgocmen Ali 2022 07 13 Turkey Russia Ukraine U N meet on grain exports Reuters Retrieved 2022 07 13 Ljunggren David 2022 10 30 Russia halts Ukraine Black Sea grain exports prompting food crisis concerns Reuters Retrieved 2022 10 30 Putin to Erdogan Resumption of grain deal can be considered after Sevastopol attack probe Reuters 2022 11 01 Retrieved 2022 11 02 Putin We could quit grain deal again but would not block grain for Turkey Reuters 2022 11 02 Retrieved 2022 11 03 M Rt1n Sl n 2022 10 06 The contradictions of Turkish international relations Ost Konflikt Retrieved 2023 05 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Akkuyu NPP Construction Project AKKUYU NUKLEER A S www akkunpp com Retrieved 2023 05 09 TurkStream natural gas pipeline to impact region s gas flow Daily Sabah 23 October 2019 Russia Ukraine conflict France raises Russian sanctions busting with Turkey Al Arabiya 6 September 2022 Ukraine War Complicates Turkey s Gas Challenge Energy Intelligence 2022 03 09 Erdogan Agrees to Putin s Plan for Turkey to Be Russian Gas Hub VOA News 20 October 2022 Erdogan plays energy card in Turkish election with Putin s help Politico 4 May 2023 Turkey Signs Russian Missile Deal Pivoting From NATO The New York Times Europe 12 September 2017 Turkey will reportedly start getting Russia s advanced missile defense system in 2019 despite US efforts to block it Business Insider 21 August 2018 Russia Is Trying to Sell Turkey Its Own Stealthy New Fighter After U S Revoked Access to F 35 2019 Time Bloomberg 27 August 2019 Retrieved 27 August 2019 Russia offers Turkey assistance in developing new gen fighter jet Daily Sabah 14 November 2021 Can Russia help Turkey build its fifth generation TF X stealth fighter Turkey may buy Russian jets if US F 16 deal fails Report World News wionews com 2021 10 18 Retrieved 2021 11 25 Turkey Russia mull fighter jet submarine partnership Daily Sabah 30 September 2021 Turkey may buy Russian latest military aircraft if US refuses to sell F 16 fighters Military amp Defense TASS Retrieved 2021 11 25 Serdar Resul Disappointed by the US Turkey cautiously looks to Russia Recep Tayyip Erdogan News Al Jazeera Retrieved 2021 11 25 Detsch Jack 2021 10 21 Turkey Could Move Further Away From U S With Russian Defense Buy Foreignpolicy com Retrieved 2021 11 25 Further reading editAgoston Gabor Military transformation in the Ottoman Empire and Russia 1500 1800 Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 12 2 2011 281 319 online Akturk Sener September 2006 Turkish Russian Relations after the Cold War 1992 2002 Turkish Studies 7 3 337 364 doi 10 1080 14683840600891034 S2CID 143919117 Armour Ian D 2007 A History of Eastern Europe 1740 1918 Hodder Arnold ISBN 978 0 340 76040 6 Askerov Ali Contemporary Russo Turkish Relations From Crisis to Cooperation Lexington Books 2018 Bolsover George H Nicholas I and the Partition of Turkey Slavonic and East European Review 1948 115 145 online Gingeras Ryan Fall of the Sultanate The Great War and the End of the Ottoman Empire 1908 1922 Oxford UP 2016 Hall Richard C ed War in the Balkans An Encyclopedic History from the Fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Breakup of Yugoslavia 2014 King Charles Black Sea A History 2004 276p covers 400 to 1999 Macfie Alexander Lyon The Eastern Question 1774 1923 2nd ed 2014 Mihneva Rumjana The Muscovite Tsardom the Ottoman Empire and the European Diplomacy Mid Sixteenth End of Seventeenth Century Part 1 Etudes balkaniques 3 4 1998 98 129 Ozveren Y Eyup A framework for the study of the Black Sea world 1789 1915 Review Fernand Braudel Center 1997 77 113 online Reynolds Michael A Shattering Empires The Clash and Collapse of the Ottoman and Russian Empires 1908 1918 Cambridge University Press 2011 Rogan Eugene The Fall of the Ottomans The Great War in the Middle East 2015 Saul Norman E Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Foreign Policy 2014 Seton Watson R W Disraeli Gladstone and the Eastern Question 1935 Sumner B H Russia and the Balkans 1870 1880 1937 External links editMaking Diplomacy Work Intelligent Innovation for the Modern World in Russian Documents on the Russia Turkey relationship at the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in English Documents on the Russia Turkey relationship at the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Russian Russia Turkey relations news from Turkishnews ru nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Relations of Russia and Turkey Diplomatic missions edit in English Russian and Turkish Embassy of Russia in Ankara in Turkish Embassy of Turkey in Moscow in Russian Consulate General of Russia in Antalya in English Russian and Turkish Consulate General of Russia in Istanbul in Russian and Turkish Consulate General of Russia in Trabzon in Turkish Consulate General of Turkey in Kazan in Turkish Consulate General of Turkey in Saint Petersburg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Russia Turkey relations amp oldid 1199740927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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