Turkish Foreign Policy at the End of the Cold War; Roots and Dynamics

01 Haziran 2005

TURKISH YEARBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, VOLUME XXXVI, 2005.

Mustafa AYDIN

Starting with the military coup of September 12, 1980, Turkey had experienced fundamental changes in its political structure, economic system, social strata, cultura! patterns, religious expressionism, and foreign policy. With the end of the Cold War ten years after, the world entered a period of historic systemic changes. A!ong the way, Turkey moved suddenly from a staunchly pro-western isolationist existence in its immediate neighbourhood into a central posture with an intention to have an effect across a vast region extending 'from eastern Europe to western China'. This change in Turkey's stance and mentality was due to wider changes experienced within and around Turkey during the 1980s. This paper, employing theoretic and practical explanations, explores Turkey's transformation in domestic and foreign policies during the 1980s and early 1990s, in order to set the stage to the analysis of Turkish foreign policy at the end of the Cold War. It will specifically look at the nature of the political regime, socio-economic dynamics, and external environment as factors that brought about change in Turkish foreign policy in the wake of the end of the Cold War.

 

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