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Turkish ambitions in Central Asia


Thanks to its long-standing relations with the region’s Turkic states, Ankara plays an important role in one of the most crucial energy and geopolitical hubs in the world.

Thanks to its long-standing relations with the region’s Turkic states, Ankara plays an important role in one of the most crucial energy and geopolitical hubs in the world.

When the USSR officially dissolved in 1991, Ankara threw a party. The Turkish Republic was suddenly faced with vast prairies (actually steppes) of opportunity in post-Soviet Central Asia. “The next century will be a Turkish century”, the then president Turgut Özal predicted at the time. This new world was particularly enthralling for nationalists. The pan-Turkish dream of freeing the ‘imprisoned Turks’ in communist Turkestan and creating a common land that would stretch from the Mediterranean all the way to China was now close at hand.

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