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For the last seventy years, experts have tried to define the nature
of Turkey’s partnership with the US. While Turkish-US relations
have always been susceptible to different crises, they enjoyed a
brief “golden era” in the 1950s. This book argues that a false
nostalgia about that period - when the strategic interests of two
countries fully converged - has distorted analyses by scholars and
policymakers ever since. To provide a more accurate assessment,
this book look at the patterns of crises between the two countries
throughout history and how these relate to the current points of
tension in Turkish-American relations today. It coins a new
conceptual framework to understand the Turkey-US partnership: the
“vulnerable partnership”. The book outlines the key causes of
this vulnerability, showing that for the last 70 years, there have
been recurring frictions and faultlines that have been repeated
across different political periods. These especially involve the US
congress, public opinion, Russia, and crises in the Middle East.
Based on journalistic, archival and scholarly sources, the topic of
the book is at the intersection foreign policy studies, Middle East
politics, the history of Turkish-American relations, and foreign
policy making.
This edited volume, comprising chapters by leading academics and
experts, aims to clarify the complexity of Turkey's Kurdish
question. The Kurdish question is a long-standing, protracted
issue, which gained regional and international significance largely
in the last thirty years. The Kurdish people who represent the
largest ethnic minority in the Middle East without a state have
demanded autonomy and recognition since the post-World I wave of
self-governance in the region, and their nationalist claims have
further intensified since the end of the Cold War. The present
volume first describes the evolution of Kurdish nationalism, its
genesis during the late nineteenth century in the Ottoman Empire,
and its legacy into the new Turkish republic. Second, the volume
takes up the violent legacy of Kurdish nationalism and analyzes the
conflict through the actions of the PKK, the militant pro-Kurdish
organization which grew to be the most important actor in the
process. Third, the volume deals with the international dimensions
of the Kurdish question, as manifested in Turkey's evolving
relationships with Syria, Iraq, and Iran, the issue regarding the
status of the Kurdish minorities in these countries, and the debate
over the Kurdish problem in Western capitals.
This edited volume, comprising chapters by leading academics and
experts, aims to clarify the complexity of Turkey's Kurdish
question. The Kurdish question is a long-standing, protracted
issue, which gained regional and international significance largely
in the last thirty years. The Kurdish people who represent the
largest ethnic minority in the Middle East without a state have
demanded autonomy and recognition since the post-World I wave of
self-governance in the region, and their nationalist claims have
further intensified since the end of the Cold War. The present
volume first describes the evolution of Kurdish nationalism, its
genesis during the late nineteenth century in the Ottoman Empire,
and its legacy into the new Turkish republic. Second, the volume
takes up the violent legacy of Kurdish nationalism and analyzes the
conflict through the actions of the PKK, the militant pro-Kurdish
organization which grew to be the most important actor in the
process. Third, the volume deals with the international dimensions
of the Kurdish question, as manifested in Turkey's evolving
relationships with Syria, Iraq, and Iran, the issue regarding the
status of the Kurdish minorities in these countries, and the debate
over the Kurdish problem in Western capitals.
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