Foreign policy could lock up AKP-CHP talks
As the Turkish military plays with time to fulfil a government directive to intervene in Syria in order to establish a security strip there, foreign policy issues? importance rise in the agenda of coalition talks between the incumbent Justice and Development Party (AK Parti) and the social democratic Republican People?s Party (CHP), which are expected to start later this week.
Before the Syrian angle had surfaced, Prime Minister Ahmet Davuto?lu?s hard choice was whether or not to continue the Kurdish peace dialogue with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers? Party (PKK) and focus on coalition possibilities with the CHP or drop it and focus on coalition talks with the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).
The Syrian angle is directly related with the Turkish stance regarding the presence of PKK?s sister in Syria, the Democratic Union Party (PYD) and the Islamic state of Iraq and Levant (ISIL), so foreign policy and security issues seem to be considered as part of the same package.
In preliminary assessments before the talks, Kemal K?l?çdaro?lu, the CHP leader, has told to his close aides he could give up the idea of being a coalition partner, if the CHP could make a visible difference in government policies, according to party sources.
?We cannot give a picture to voters that the CHP is now sharing the responsibility of what we have been criticizing for all these years? K?l?çdaro?lu reportedly said. ?That is why we have to listen to Davuto?lu carefully and make up our minds accordingly.?
K?l?çdaro?lu thinks foreign policy is a leading topic that can tell people a difference was made with the CHP?s inclusion in power. The first action CHP thinks to make is an immediate shift in the Syrian policy, which can make that difference visible...
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