Turkey and the United States of America: a study of their strategic relations after the Cold War 1991-2000
Abstract
Research into international relations reveals that states in the international community seek, to varying degrees, to align, to one degree or another, their theoretical and idealistic ideological propositions, and what the realities and facts impose on international relations. This is evident through the importance that countries attach to issues that affect them directly or indirectly and which constitute the main arenas of their foreign political movement.Turkey, like the United States and other countries, has its main regional arenas within the constituent environment of its geographical borders, and the interactions that take place in it within the framework of international relations, especially those that involve regional indications and indicators that can affect and affect Turkish national interests.Therefore, whatever Turkeys view of its relations with the United States, its political, security, or economic-military introductions, inputs, and motives were dealt with through a conscious and coherent process to translate them into distinct relations with the United States, those relations that had been established, from the perspective of the perspective Turkish, on many strategic considerations.