01589nas a2200181 4500000000100000008004100001653001300042653002100055653001600076653002000092653003000112653001100142100001800153245004400171300001000215490000700225520117500232 2023 d10aCaucasus10aenergy resources10ageopolitics10ainterdependence10ainternational competition10aTurkey1 aMustafa Aydin00aTurkey’s Caucasus Policies, 2000-2022 a79-900 v223 a
The emergence of newly independent states in the Caucasus at the end of the Cold War presented challenges to Turkey while enlarging its role. The collapse of the Soviet Union removed the century-old Soviet/Russian threat, simultaneously creating a power vacuum on Turkey’s borders. While Turkey had traditionally avoided involvement in regional politics, it has since been drawn into the volatile new politics of the region. In this environment, Turkey became an important actor in the region due to its strong historical ties, the attraction of its geographic position linking the region to Europe, and its economic, political, and security relationships with Azerbaijan and Georgia. Over the past thirty years, Turkey has become one of the prominent players in a region where its involvement has again increased recently after the Second Karabakh War. Although its re-engagement with Armenia is progressing slowly, and geopolitical changes and economic and political conditions in the region are unlikely to stabilize for some years, it is evident that Turkey will continue to create new networks of interdependency between Ankara and the regional capitals.