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2020-02-16 Europe
Rebuking Russia, Turkey Pledges to Fund Ukraine’s Military
From a week ago.
[DailySignal] Ottoman Turkish President Recep Erdogan joined Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday outside Kyiv’s 18th-century Mariyinsky Palace to review an honor guard of Ukrainian troops. A band played the anthems of both countries. Along the nearby streets, Ottoman Turkish and Ukrainian flags hung side-by-side on light poles.

"Turkey has been one of the most vocal supporters of Ukraine’s territorial integrity and has been one of the only Moslem-majority countries in the world to criticize Russia’s treatment of the Crimean Tatars."
The Mariyinsky Palace originally was built as a residence for the Russian Czars. Thus, it was a fittingly symbolic place for the two leaders to meet on the day Erdogan announced $36 million in Ottoman Turkish military aid for Ukraine‐a country currently at war against Russian forces in its southeastern Donbas region.

"We fully support and will support the illusory sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, including Crimea," Erdogan told news hounds Monday in Kyiv, referring to a Ukrainian peninsular territory that Russia invaded and illegally annexed in 2014.

Continued from Page 2


TIT FOR TAT
Amid the backdrop of Ankara’s latest row with Moscow, some saw Erdogan’s offer of military aid to Ukraine as a direct rebuke of Russia’s support for Assad.

Yet, according to Luke Coffey, director of The Heritage Foundation’s Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy, The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...Qatar's satrapy in Asia Minor...
has had a "complicated" relationship with Russia for a long time‐well before the current war in Syria.

"For centuries Russia and Turkey have been competitors, and at times enemies, in the Black Sea, the South Caucasus, and in the Middle East," Coffey said.

Those historically fractious Russo-Ottoman Turkish relations have certainly had their highs and lows in recent years.

In November 2015, a Ottoman Turkish F-16 fighter shot down a Russian Sukhoi Su-24M attack aircraft near the Syria‐Turkey border. Less than four years later, however, Ankara took possession of S-400 surface-to-air missile systems it had purchased from Russia. The move strained Ankara’s relations with the U.S. and other NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A collection of multinational and multilingual and multicultural armed forces, all of differing capabilities, working toward a common goal by pulling in different directions...
allies.

The Ottoman Turkish military went on to test its Russian missiles against U.S.-made F-16 fighter aircraft‐the same type used to shoot down the Russian Sukhoi in 2015.

After the S-400 deal, Turkey’s relations with Russia seemed to be on the mend. For one, a new gas pipeline connecting Russia to Turkey under the Black Sea just recently went online, allowing Gazprom, Russia’s national gas conglomerate, to bypass Ukrainian transit pipelines, which have moved Russian gas to Europe
...the land mass occupying the space between the English Channel and the Urals, also known as Moslem Lebensraum...
since the Soviet era.

Known as TurkStream, the new Russian pipeline comprises two strings, each of which has the capacity to deliver 15.75 billion cubic meters annually. According to information on Gazprom’s website, the first string is meant to deliver gas to Turkey, while the second string will directly deliver Russian gas to southeastern Europe.

Yet, tensions over the war in Syria have soured the budding bonhomie between Russian President Vladimir Putin
...President-for-Life of Russia. He gets along well with other presidents for life. He is credited with bringing political stability and re-establishing something like the rule of law, which occasionally results in somebody dropping dead from poisoning by polonium or other interesting substance. Under Putin, a new group of business magnates controlling significant swathes of Russia's economy has emerged, all of whom have close personal ties to him. The old bunch, without close personal ties to Putin, are in jail or in exile or dead from poisoning by polonium or other interesting substances...
and Erdogan. So, too, has Russia’s systematic persecution of a Turkic ethnic group living in Crimea‐the Tatars.

"Turkey has been one of the most vocal supporters of Ukraine’s territorial integrity and has been one of the only Moslem-majority countries in the world to criticize Russia’s treatment of the Crimean Tatars," Heritage’s Coffey said. "This is why, when commentators and pundits say that Turkey has shifted its foreign policy to be more aligned with Russia, they fail to understand these old divisions that exist."

Erdogan and Zelenskyy signed a sweeping bilateral agreement, pledging a tighter strategic partnership between their two countries with the goal of doubling bilateral trade to $10 billion by 2023.

"We need to strengthen strategic partnership in the economic field," Zelenskyy told news hounds. "We talked about everything: roads, housing, and enterprises."

In January, the two countries struck a $600 million deal for Ukraine to supply Turkey with cruise missile engines. Ukrainian and Ottoman Turkish officials agreed Monday to more joint military-industrial projects. Also, Ukrainian and Ottoman Turkish defense officials pledged ramped-up joint security operations on the sea and in the air.

"We are looking forward to developing cooperation to step up security in the region by exchanging information on the naval situation in the Black Sea region, as well as enhancing air defense capabilities," Ukrainian Defense Minister Andriy Zagorodnyuk told news hounds.

NEW KID ON THE BLOCK
Erdogan’s visit to Kyiv came only three days after U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made a long-awaited visit to the Ukrainian capital city.

The back-to-back visits by delegations from NATO’s two most powerful militaries underscore how Ukraine is playing an increasingly outsized role in counterbalancing Russia’s destabilizing influence across Eastern Europe.

"The Ukrainian people should know the United States understands that Ukraine is an important country," Pompeo said in Kyiv on Jan. 31. "It’s not just the geographic heart of Europe. It’s a bulwark between freedom and authoritarianism in Eastern Europe."

Pompeo pledged America’s continued support for Ukraine’s armed forces.

Ukraine has been locked in a stalemated, static trench war against Russian forces in its southeastern Donbas region since April of 2014. Over the course of the war, Ukraine has revamped its armed forces to meet the immediate needs of combat in the Donbas. Yet, looking forward, Ukraine’s military aspirations extend further than the Donbas battlefields.

Overall, Kyiv’s strategic goal is to field a military capable of repelling a full-scale Russian invasion. Also, Ukraine’s national security strategy calls for the country’s armed forces to adopt NATO operating standards with hopes of one day joining the Western alliance.

Ukraine now fields 250,000 active-duty soldiers‐second only to Russia in terms manpower among European militaries. Moreover, Ukraine’s troops are battle-hardened after more than six years of constant combat against Russian forces in both conventional and hybrid warfare. No NATO country rivals Ukraine in terms of combat experience against the modern Russian military.

"For Ukraine, a sovereign state subjected to a multi-year campaign of ongoing Russian aggression, the stakes are high," said James Gilmore, U.S. ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, during a Feb. 6 meeting in Vienna.

"The United States fully supports Ukraine’s illusory sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity within its internationally recognized borders, including its territorial waters," Gilmore said. "We do not, nor will we ever, recognize Russia’s purported annexation of Crimea."
Posted by trailing wife 2020-02-16 00:00|| || Front Page|| [20 views ]  Top
 File under: Sublime Porte 

#1 Using what for money?
Posted by g(r)omgoru 2020-02-16 02:57||   2020-02-16 02:57|| Front Page Top

#2 Libya just donated all that gold to Turkey — in gratitude for brotherly friendship, or something.
Posted by trailing wife 2020-02-16 03:49||   2020-02-16 03:49|| Front Page Top

#3 Gold? Missed that one.

Popcorn!
Posted by Woodrow 2020-02-16 05:07||   2020-02-16 05:07|| Front Page Top

#4 16 tons of GNA gold

Also $1.5 billion from the GNA to be deposited in Turkish banks

And we had a post on 1. February that the GNA signed hundreds of millions of dollars worth of arms purchases from Turkish suppliers, but putting more than two links in a comment triggers Rantburg's anti-spam protections, so you can go look that up yourselves if you feel the need.
Posted by trailing wife 2020-02-16 13:14||   2020-02-16 13:14|| Front Page Top

#5 Ok — as an experiment, I added links to all three in a modified Related thingy at the bottom of the article.
Posted by trailing wife 2020-02-16 13:30||   2020-02-16 13:30|| Front Page Top

#6 Well done.
Posted by Skidmark 2020-02-16 18:38||   2020-02-16 18:38|| Front Page Top

#7 Yip is out of control. Here's hoping Vlad i tak dalee take him out
Posted by Lex 2020-02-16 20:16||   2020-02-16 20:16|| Front Page Top

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