Rysslands attack: Turkiet förbereder hemlig invasion
Ordkriget mellan Ryssland och Turkiet fortsätter. Nu hävdar Kreml att det finns tydliga tecken på att Turkiet i hemlighet förbereder sig för att invadera Syrien, skriver nyhetsbyrån AFP.
Samtidigt säger ryske utrikesministern Sergej Lavrov i en intervju med italienska tidningen Limes att man inte tänker glömma att Turkiet ”hjälper terrorister”, skriver Moscow Times.
Han påpekade också att Ryssland ännu inte fått någon formell ursäkt av Turkiet för det nedskjutna stridsplanet vid landets gräns i november.
bakgrund
Relationen mellan Ryssland och Turkiet
Wikipedia (en)
Russia–Turkey relations (Russian: Российско–турецкие отношения, Turkish: Rusya–Türkiye ilişkileri) is the bilateral relationship between the Russian Federation and the Republic of Turkey and their predecessor states.
From the late 16th to the early 20th centuries, relations between the Ottoman and Russian empires were often strained, as the two powers were engaged in a number of Russo-Turkish wars. However, in the 1920s, as a result of the Bolshevik Soviet assistance to Turkish revolutionaries during the Turkish War of Independence, the governments of Moscow and Ankara developed warm relations. In 1932 the Turkish Republic took its first foreign loans from the Soviet Union, and the first 5-year economic and industrial development plan of Turkey (1934–1938) was largely modeled after the 5-year plans of the Soviet Union, which seemed to perform well during the Great Depression; despite setbacks such as the Soviet famine of 1932–33, which was largely hidden from the outside world. The good relations between Moscow and Ankara lasted until Joseph Stalin demanded Soviet bases on the Turkish Straits after the Montreux Convention in 1936, most notably at the Potsdam Conference in 1945. 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.
Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, relations between Turkey and Russia quickly improved and the two countries eventually started 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 this period, Turkey became the top foreign destination for Russian tourists. However, the warm bilateral relations of the past two decades have been severely strained after the November 2015 jet shootdown incident, when a Turkish F-16 combat aircraft shot down a Russian Su-24 during an airspace dispute close to the Turkish-Syrian border.
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