Deputy
Turkish Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmuş has expressed hope that a congratulatory
message sent by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to Russia’s Vladimir Putin for a Russian national holiday will mark “a major
step along the normalization process.”
Kurtulmuş’s
remarks came at an iftar he hosted June 14 for correspondents who cover the
Prime Ministry and a few hours after Erdoğan’s message to Putin, sent on June
12 on the occasion of Russia Day, was leaked.
“I hope
that with the letters of Mr. President and Mr. Prime Minister, a major step
will be taken in this normalization process. This is also a declaration of
Turkey’s decision on the normalization process, it should be seen like this.
Inshallah [God willing], the crisis between Turkey and Russia that emerged with the aircraft crisis
will improve and results are obtained,” Kurtulmuş said, referring to Turkey’s
downing of a Russian plane along the Syrian border in
November 2015.
In his
message to Putin, Erdoğan expressed a wish for an improvement in ties between
the estranged Black Sea neighbors, Turkish presidential
sources said.
In the
message, Erdoğan said he wished for the relations “to rise to the deserved
level,” the presidential sources said June 14.
“However,
this does not mean that Turkey and Russia agree on all political issues or they
have solved all the regional problems. Differences of opinion may continue on
many issues, notably the Syria issue. In consequence, what really matters is
the building of peace between the two neighboring countries and being able to
overcome the issues that may potentially cause disturbance,” the deputy prime
minister said.
The full
contents of Erdoğan’s letter were not made public. In Moscow, Kremlin
spokesperson Dmitry Peskov confirmed that Erdoğan had sent Putin the message,
saying it was received “via diplomatic channels,” the Ria-Novosti news agency
reported.
Turkey’s
downing of the Russian jet sparked an unprecedented crisis
in the two nations’ relationship, which has been exacerbated by Moscow’s role
in the Syrian war.
On June
14, Kurtulmuş delivered the current version of the Nov. 24, 2015, incident to
the correspondents.
“After
being warned repeatedly because of the activity on the border, such an accident
occurred there. Thus, from the very beginning, both Mr. President and we have
stated that the identity of the plane was not known at the moment when it was
shot down but if the was known, then the consequence would have perhaps been
different,” he said.
Kurtulmuş,
the former ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) government spokesperson
before a cabinet change in May, said he has repeatedly noted at press
conferences following cabinet meetings that “Turkey can’t do without Russia and Russia can’t do without Turkey; they cannot discard each other that
easily.”
“Therefore
the essentiality is that the relations between these two neighboring countries,
who have profound economic, political, cultural and other relations, are
normalized,” he added.
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