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Turkey: A new emerging gas player with resources and infrastructure
Photo by Mustafa Kamaci/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Turkey: A new emerging gas player with resources and infrastructure

    With its recent deepwater exploration success in the Black Sea and prominent geographic location for interregional hydrocarbon pipelines, Turkey can play a material role in shaping the geopolitical landscape today, especially in the natural gas sector. The country will face a strategic conundrum, whether to utilize newly discovered gas resources entirely for domestic needs and thereby reduce gas imports that come with political baggage as well as foreign currency expenditures, or export gas to capture foreign revenue that Ankara desperately needs.

    June 15, 2022

    Amid dust storms and drought, Turkey and Iran are at odds over transboundary water management
    Photo by MORTEZA JABERIAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Amid dust storms and drought, Turkey and Iran are at odds over transboundary water management

    Water is slowly emerging as yet another potential cause for dispute between Ankara and Tehran. As of late, the two neighboring states have been at loggerheads over a number of issues, including Syria and Iraq, where they have opposing interests. After years of quiet diplomatic juggling, the issue of transboundary water management is gradually taking center stage in the two countries’ relations, a development that could, in the medium run, have serious repercussions for regional security.

    June 13, 2022

    New Turkey-Uzbekistan Strategic Partnership Accelerates Turkey’s Rise as a Eurasian Agenda-Setter
  • Commentary
  • New Turkey-Uzbekistan Strategic Partnership Accelerates Turkey’s Rise as a Eurasian Agenda-Setter

    The March 2022 elevation of the Turkey-Uzbekistan relationship to a “Comprehensive Strategic Partnership” provides the Ankara-led Organization of Turkic States with a new geopolitical heft. To preserve its autonomy in the face of Beijing’s growing regional dominance, Tashkent has turned to Ankara to act as a countervailing force in both economic and security affairs. Combined with the expanding Turkey-Pakistan strategic partnership, this makes Turkey a rising Eurasian agenda setter that will impact the strategic calculus of both Beijing and Washington.

    The impact of the war in Ukraine on regional cooperation in the South Caucasus
    Photo by FRANCOIS WALSCHAERTS/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The impact of the war in Ukraine on regional cooperation in the South Caucasus

    Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the South Caucasus has been unable to find a model for regional cooperation or form regional organizations. The relative calm that followed the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, especially after the signing of the November 2020 cease-fire agreement, renewed hopes that this might change. Significant challenges to regional cooperation remain, however, and Russia’s war with Ukraine has only complicated matters further.

    June 8, 2022

    The impact of the war in Ukraine on Russian-Turkish relations and Black Sea security: Three potential scenarios
    Photo by Diego Herrera Carcedo/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The impact of the war in Ukraine on Russian-Turkish relations and Black Sea security: Three potential scenarios

    As Russia’s war in Ukraine continues, where things go from here is far from certain, but it is worth considering the range of possibilities. These three scenarios highlight the potential challenges and opportunities that Putin, Erdoğan, and, to a lesser degree, Zelenskyy may face depending on how the conflict plays out, as well as what is at stake for other countries in the Black Sea region.

    May 26, 2022

    Turkey back at the barricades
    Photo by KENZO TRIBOUILLARD/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Turkey back at the barricades

    In recent months, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has been on a charm offensive. But that spring in Turkey’s diplomacy may now be reverting to winter as Ankara has blocked Swedish and Finnish accession to NATO even as a key arms deal is pending with Washington and U.S. relations with Greece are at a high.

    Russia is violating the spirit of Montreux by using civilian ships for war
    Photo by Yörük Işık: Russian Ministry of Defense-owned Oboronlogistika’s cargo vessel Pizhma.
  • Analysis
  • Russia is violating the spirit of Montreux by using civilian ships for war

    On Feb. 28, Turkey triggered the Montreux Convention, not used since World War II, and closed the Turkish Straits to military ships. This one move interrupted Russia’s maritime logistical supply line to Syria, interfered with its ability to rotate naval assets in the Mediterranean, and prevented Moscow from bringing additional warships to the Black Sea. Russia can no longer supply its Syria operation or deliver defense exports to its customers using navy ships. However, close observation of traffic through the Turkish Straits reveals that Russia is continuing its naval operations in the Mediterranean and Black seas.

    May 18, 2022

    Monday Briefing: Lebanese elections bring change
  • Commentary
  • Monday Briefing: Lebanese elections bring change

    Read MEI’s weekly briefing featuring expert analysis of key regional developments for the week ahead.

    May 16, 2022

    Iran, Turkey, and the future of the South Caucasus
    Photo by Fatih Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran, Turkey, and the future of the South Caucasus

    Since late September 2021, Tehran and Baku have engaged in a process of de-escalation, largely focused on economic cooperation and regional transportation links. Such efforts should be welcomed, but underlying geopolitical tensions, especially the Iranian-Turkish competition for influence in the South Caucasus, can still derail them at any moment.

    We cannot ignore Syria’s emergence as a narco-state
    Photo by FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • We cannot ignore Syria’s emergence as a narco-state

    Syria has emerged in recent years as a narco-state of regional and possibly global significance. Having destroyed much of the country, crippled the national economy, and reduced itself to pariah status, Syria’s regime and core components of its security apparatus have fronted a secretive industrial complex for the manufacture of a popular amphetamine known as Captagon.

    Why Jordan won't alleviate the Rukban crisis
    Photo by KHALIL MAZRAAWI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Why Jordan won't alleviate the Rukban crisis

    Last month, members of Congress called on the Biden administration to address the eight-year-long humanitarian crisis at Rukban, a desolate informal displacement camp in the eastern Syria desert, just miles from the U.S.-led coalition base at the al-Tanf garrison (ATG). Since 2015, Syria, Jordan, Russia, and the United States have refrained from claiming responsibility for the camp, resulting in a protracted period of inaction with severe humanitarian consequences.

    April 21, 2022

    Jordan is walking a diplomatic tightrope on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
    Photo by Hannibal Hanschke - Pool/Getty Images)RS/Hannibal Hanschke/Pool
  • Analysis
  • Jordan is walking a diplomatic tightrope on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

    In spite of Jordan’s close ties to the United States and Europe, Amman has found itself walking a diplomatic tightrope in the wake of Russia’s invasion of neighboring Ukraine in late February.

    April 5, 2022