The Bush administration is slowly recognizing that without Turkey’s full commitment and leadership, there cannot be any real perspective for peace in the Middle East. Yesterday, Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried testified before the House Foreign Affairs Committee and presented the new "Shared Vision" between the US and Turkey. The new policy suggest a stronger partnership, probably more lobbying in Brussels to get 2014 as an EU accession date, promoted already both by the Turkish government and business groups are already promoting as an accession target date. Energy transport and security is also a key-component in the US-Turkey relationship, and is becoming increasingly important to the EU.
Secretary Rice has instructed me to shift the focus of the U.S.-Turkey relationship from one of simply managing challenges to one where the United States and Turkey are working cooperatively to advance a broad range of issues, putting in action our shared interests and common values. Our shared interests include stability and freedom in Iraq and Afghanistan, democratic reform in the broader Middle East, energy security across Eurasia, and Turkey’s deeper anchoring in Europe.
On the energy security issue, the plan is to further invest in the already existing pipelines that link Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey and expand this network to Europe, for instance through the Nabucco natural gas pipeline that would ultimately end in Austria (maybe that will melt down their anti-Turkish feelings a little bit) and the emerging Turkey-Greece-Italy pipeline. There are also negotiations for gas exports from Iraq to Europe via Turkey.
As these natural gas projects develop, they will emerge as a Southern Corridor of infrastructure that will offer fair and transparent competition to Gazprom’s massive network of gas pipelines that is in place - and expanding - in Northern Europe. The Southern Corridor can change Eurasia’s strategic map by offering Europe its best hope for large volumes of natural gas supplies that will allow diversification away from a deepening reliance on one supplier or network. Turkey, if it continues to act as a partner with its neighbors, including by reaching a commercially attractive gas transit agreement with Azerbaijan, will be the centerpiece of this grand strategic effort.
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Mar 16th, 2007


