Cooperation, Competition, and Compartmentalization: Russian-Turkish Relations and Their Implications for the West

May 14, 2021, 10:00-11:00 am
Online

Join the Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI) for a panel discussion on Russian-Turkish relations and their implications for the West.

The relationship between Russia and Turkey has become one of the most important bilateral relationships in Eurasia today. Moscow and Ankara have worked to emphasize areas of cooperation and “compartmentalize” areas of difference. Policymakers in Western capitals will need to develop an understanding of the drivers of the Russian-Turkish relationship and their effects on Western interests. Join FPRI’s Aaron Stein and authors of FPRI’s latest Black Sea Strategy Paper, “Cooperation, Competition, and Compartmentalization: Russian-Turkish Relations and Their Implications for the West”, Robert E. Hamilton and Anna Mikulska, as they discuss the main takeaways of the report.

Speakers

Colonel (Retired) Robert E. Hamilton, Ph.D.,  Associate Professor of Eurasian Studies at the U.S. Army War College and Black Sea Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute

Anna Mikulska, Ph.D., Senior Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute and nonresident fellow in energy studies at the Baker Institute.

Aaron Stein, Director of Research at the Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI)