By
The downing of a Russian Su-24 bomber jet on November 24 by a Turkish F-16
fighter on the Turkish-Syrian border, where the two air forces have been
playing high-speed cat-and-mouse games for months, opened a new and dangerous
phase in an international crisis that’s long been brewing on low-boil. Although President Recep Erdoğan’s Turkey and President Vladimir
Putin’s Russia are ancestral foes, in recent years the countries had enjoyed a
cordial relationship with substantial trade between them and significant
alignments on many security issues, notwithstanding the former’s NATO
membership going back to the early Cold War. As the Middle East has gone up in
flames since the Arab Spring, a Russo-Turkish partnership might have gone a
long way in preventing wider conflagration. Alas, any regional cooperation
between Ankara and Moscow has broken up on Syrian rocks, with the two countries
pursuing contrary goals in that sad country, which has experienced the torments
of hell since its civil war began in spring 2011. While Mr. Putin has backed
its proxy—the Assad dictatorship in Damascus—to the hilt, Mr. Erdoğan has
quietly supported anti-Assad guerrilla groups with equal determination…..To Read More…..
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