Tuesday, July 14, 2026

T.C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı : 14 Temmuz 2026, Suudi Arabistan’ın Güney Bölgesini Hedef Alan Füze Saldırısı Hk.

T.C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı : 

14 Temmuz 2026, Suudi Arabistan’ın Güney Bölgesini Hedef Alan Füze Saldırısı Hk.


Suudi Arabistan’ın güney bölgesine Husiler tarafından düzenlenen füze saldırısını en güçlü biçimde kınıyoruz.


Suudi Arabistan’ın egemenliğini ve toprak bütünlüğünü ihlal eden, bölgesel güvenlik ve istikrara yönelik ciddi tehdit oluşturan bu saldırı karşısında Suudi Arabistan’la tam dayanışma içinde olduğumuzu bir kez daha teyit ediyoruz.


Bölgemizde gerilimi daha da tırmandırabilecek adımlardan kaçınılması çağrımızı yineliyoruz.


13 Temmuz 2026, - Dışişleri Bakanlığı Sözcüsü Öncü Keçeli’nin Avrupa Komisyonu Tarafından Yeniden Bir “Kıbrıs Özel Temsilcisi” Atanması Hakkındaki Soruya Cevabı


13 Temmuz 2026, Dışişleri Bakanlığı Sözcüsü Öncü Keçeli’nin Avrupa Komisyonu Tarafından Yeniden Bir “Kıbrıs Özel Temsilcisi” Atanması Hakkındaki Soruya Cevabı


Avrupa Komisyonu tarafından yeniden bir “Kıbrıs Özel Temsilcisi” atanması kararını, geçmişteki benzer atamalarda olduğu gibi, Avrupa Birliği’nin (AB) iç meselesi olarak değerlendiriyoruz.


AB’nin, 2004 yılında BM Kapsamlı Çözüm Planı’nı reddetmesine rağmen Kıbrıs Rum tarafını AB üyeliğine kabul ederek Kıbrıs meselesi bağlamında tarafsızlığını yitirdiğini bir kez daha hatırlatıyoruz.


Nitekim Avrupa Parlamentosu başta olmak üzere AB kurumlarının, Kıbrıs meselesi konusundaki tümüyle yanlı yaklaşımının son dönemde perçinlenerek devam ettiğini gözlemliyoruz.


Avrupa Komisyonu tarafından yeni atanan yetkilinin, AB’nin bu tarafgir tutumunun değişmesi ve Kıbrıs meselesinin çözümünün ancak Ada’daki gerçekler temelinde, egemen eşit iki devlet arasında yürütülecek müzakerelerle sağlanabileceğinin artık idrak edilmesi yönünde çaba sarf etmesini bekliyoruz


T. C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı: 12 Temmuz 2026, Suriye Halk Meclisi’nin İlk Oturumunun Düzenlenmesi Hk.

 T. C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı: 

12 Temmuz 2026, Suriye Halk Meclisi’nin İlk Oturumunun Düzenlenmesi Hk.


Suriye Halk Meclisi’nin bugün (12 Temmuz) ilk oturumunu düzenlemesini, Suriye halkının meşru hak ve beklentileri doğrultusunda siyasi sürecin ilerletilmesi ve halk egemenliğinin tesisi bakımından önemli bir adım olarak değerlendiriyor ve memnuniyetle karşılıyoruz.


Suriye toplumunun farklı kesimlerini bir araya getiren Halk Meclisi’nin, ülkede kapsayıcı bir yönetim anlayışıyla istikrar, güvenlik ve refah tesis edilmesi çabalarına değerli katkılar sunacağına ve ülkenin geleceğine şekil verecek yasama görevini en iyi şekilde icra edeceğine inanıyoruz.


Suriye halkını, Suriye’nin toprak bütünlüğü ve birliği temelinde müreffeh bir gelecek inşa etme yönündeki çabalarında desteklemeye devam edeceğiz.




Foreign Affairs - Putin Will Turn a Cease-Fire Into a Weapon A New Use for Russia’s Old Playbook in Ukraine - Michael Kimmage and Hanna Notte - July 14, 2026

 Foreign  Affairs 

Putin Will Turn a Cease-Fire Into a Weapon

A New Use for Russia’s Old Playbook in Ukraine

Michael Kimmage and Hanna Notte

July 14, 2026



2026-07-07T092220Z_1724691447_RC2V8MA1F72L_RTRMADP_3_UKRAINE-CRISIS-ATTACK-KYIV-AFTERMATH.JPG


A residential building heavily damaged by a Russian strike, Kyiv, Ukraine, July 2026

Alina Smutko / Reuters


MICHAEL KIMMAGE is Director of the Kennan Institute and the author of Collisions: The Origins of the War in Ukraine and the New Global Instability.


HANNA NOTTE is Director of the Eurasia Nonproliferation Program at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies. She is the author of the forthcoming book We Shall Outlast Them: Putin’s Global Campaign to Defeat the West.

---------


To recall the last negotiated peace with Russia is to tell a depressing tale. Russia invaded Ukraine in March 2014, annexing Crimea and then moving regular and irregular forces into the Donbas, in the country’s east. After months of war and intense interference in domestic Ukrainian affairs, Moscow signed a series of cease-fire agreements in the Belarusian capital of Minsk in September 2014 and February 2015. Russia retained and militarized the territory it had taken in Ukraine. The Minsk agreements did not solve any core problems, but Europe and the United States were able to live with them—until February 2022, when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.


The Minsk process reveals how Putin has often mixed conventional diplomacy with thuggery. Although he has assembled a formidable war machine, Putin aspires to the role of European statesman, as Joseph Stalin did before him and as various Russian tsars did before the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. Putin sees diplomacy as war by other means, and he used past negotiations over Ukraine to distract and to keep European countries off balance. He hoped to foment political breakdown in Kyiv, a loss of interest on Europe’s part, and a transatlantic relationship sundered by populism. When the desired results of the Minsk agreements did not materialize, Putin once again resorted to war.


Were Putin to eventually consent to a full or partial cease-fire, his strategy would likely be similar to what it was a decade ago. So far, the Russian leader has stubbornly refused to stop fighting until Ukraine makes substantial concessions: he has insisted that Russia seeks a comprehensive settlement and not a mere suspension of hostilities. But if Putin does agree to a truce, he will approach it as a roundabout way of reaching war aims that cannot be achieved on the battlefield. He would exploit an incomplete peace to incite political instability in Ukraine and prod pro-Russian factions in Europe into advocating business as usual with Moscow. He would hope that by allowing U.S. President Donald Trump to take credit for the cease-fire, he could widen the fissures between the United States and Europe. If Putin found the consequences of his overture disappointing, he could return to battle at any moment, having risked only the breather a cease-fire might afford Ukraine. U.S. and European officials should proceed with great caution in the laudable aim of war termination. A mere halt to the fighting in Ukraine would have little chance of ending the broader conflict. Barring a fundamental change in Putin’s calculus, it may just mark a transition to the next phase of the war.


DEAD END

Russia’s political project for Ukraine has failed spectacularly. The Kremlin never mounted the coercive power necessary to transform Ukraine into a vassal, which would have required a complete takeover and long-term occupation. In 2022, Russia invaded a large country—one with a population of over 35 million—with a mere 150,000 soldiers. Its intent at the time was to expose the Ukrainian government as feeble and illegitimate, inspire uprisings among pro-Russian constituencies, and compel the rest of Ukraine to accept a government friendly to Moscow. Four years of brutal war have done the opposite, ensuring a Ukraine hostile to Russia for years, if not generations, to come. Having expended massive amounts of manpower and materiel, Putin has no clear path to military victory. After all his effort, he has maneuvered himself into a dead end.

 

To rescue his fortunes, Putin has options for escalation, although each comes with severe limitations and risks. He could take advantage of Russia’s huge population (some 143 million people) by ordering a major mobilization. But judging by the exodus of Russians amid the partial mobilization in the fall of 2022, such a call-up would be deeply unpopular, especially in Russia’s large cities. Putin, the history buff, cannot have forgotten that a war-weary population egged on by angry soldiers toppled the tsarist government in February 1917. With his own eyes, Putin saw how an unwon war in Afghanistan weakened the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, even if he has sponsored an official rewriting of this war as a heroic venture. In short, Putin cannot ignore the domestic political constraints that stand between him and the waging of a total war.


The Russian president could try to bomb Ukraine into surrender. Exploiting Ukraine’s shortages of Patriot interceptor munitions, Russia could further increase its ballistic missile attacks on Ukrainian cities in the coming months and into the winter. Inflicting mass misery to gain the upper hand is a risky bet. It could harden Ukrainians in their resistance to Russia, as it did after Russian soldiers committed countless war crimes in the first few weeks of the 2022 invasion. The same goes for the use of nuclear weapons in Ukraine, which would antagonize China and India, countries that have thrown Russia an economic lifeline. Putin could expand strikes into Ukraine’s “strategic hinterland,” targeting defense infrastructure in European countries that support Ukraine, such as Poland or the Baltic states. Yet such actions would be perilous for Russia because of a possible military response from Europe and even the United States. Putin, who is often risk averse, would think twice before inviting that outcome.


While Putin weighs his options, his lack of battlefield success coupled with the economic and social burdens of waging war have begun to reverberate in Russia. Small points of disagreement about Putin’s forever war are appearing among experts, influencers, and the rest of Russian society. Average Russians have so far acquiesced to the “special military operation” being conducted next door, but Ukraine’s deep-strike campaign has brought the war closer to home. The Kremlin’s tightening control over the Internet is generating unease in Russia. Should the war’s ugly status quo persist, domestic discontent will only grow. Such irritants hardly put his hold on power in danger, but Putin is too canny a politician to ignore them. In this war, he has often claimed that victory is around the corner, that “there is not a single place where Russian troops are not advancing.” These lies are beginning to catch up with Putin. He will not give up on his war aims, but he may agree to change tack. Should a comprehensive settlement remain elusive, he may eventually regard a cease-fire, or the appearance of one, as preferable to fighting on.


MAKING AND BREAKING BONDS

In entering a cease-fire, Putin would not have his sights set only on Ukraine. He sees Russia as a global power, and the 2022 invasion of Ukraine spoke to his sweeping ambition. He hopes to shape Russia’s “near abroad,” the countries on its borders, as he has done in Belarus; Putin keeps Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko on a tight leash. Building a network of compliant neighbors is Putin’s path to restoring Russia as a major European power. Had Putin subjugated Ukraine, Russia would have sought to negotiate the continent’s future security architecture with the United States, aspiring to a parity of sorts with Washington. Thus, Moscow would have emerged as a privileged pole in the international system. Together with China, Russia could steward the decline of the West by substantiating and promoting a multipolar world.


Over the course of the war, Moscow has capably cultivated bonds with non-Western partners. Cut off from Europe and heavily sanctioned, Russia has expanded its economic outlets in the east and south. Diplomatically isolated from Western capitals, Moscow has deepened its involvement in the BRICS—a bloc named for its first five members, Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa—and other forums. Outside of Europe and a handful of other places, Russia is still regarded as a worthwhile trading partner and an important geopolitical actor. Although it seeks and finds openings for influence around the world, it has recently struggled to capitalize on them. The war against Ukraine has consumed most of Russia’s bandwidth. Since 2022, Moscow’s position has eroded in the Middle East, with the loss of such clients as Syria’s longtime dictator Bashar al-Assad, and in the South Caucasus, where the United States has outpaced Russia diplomatically. In the Sahel, Russia’s security promises are under scrutiny. Its military presence has proved too small and ineffective to end the insurgent threat in Mali.


In Russia’s objectives vis-à-vis the United States, Putin has been making some progress. One of the aims of his 2022 invasion of Ukraine was to press the United States to reduce its military presence around Russia. At first that plan seemed to backfire, when the war brought Finland and Sweden into NATO, but since Trump’s return to the White House, the transatlantic relationship has been disintegrating. NATO’s Article 5 provision, committing the allies to collective defense, now has a credibility problem. The Trump administration no longer cares about underwriting European security, and it has announced plans to withdraw military assets from Europe sooner than Europe will be ready to replace them, undermining the continent’s capacity for self-defense. These changes, which may reflect Trump’s mercurial character, will likely have staying power beyond his time in office. For Putin, U.S. distancing from Europe is a gift. He will do what he can to ensure it continues.


While the United States is doing less to deter Russia in Europe, Europe is doing much more to bolster Ukraine. In 2026, Putin’s core problem is not Washington. It is Europe. The Kremlin traditionally mocked Europe as a disorganized mass of decadent, postnational states eager to do Washington’s bidding, but it is dawning on Moscow that this image of Europe is a caricature. Europe has stepped in to offset Trump’s withdrawal of support for Ukraine. The continent has begun emancipating itself from the United States by investing more in its own defense, including in long-range strike assets capable of hitting Russian territory. Europe remains steadfast in its refusal to negotiate with Russia at Ukraine’s expense. In Putin’s quest to dominate Ukraine, Europe is the primary non-Ukrainian obstacle standing in his way.


GIVE IN, NOT UP

Putin would agree to a cease-fire only if it advanced his original war aims. The specific terms of such a deal may be less consequential than the Russian leader’s plans for the period thereafter. Putin would surely pair support for a cease-fire with a call for elections in Ukraine. In such elections, Russia would use subversion to muddy the process, manipulate the information space, and promote narratives of corruption about Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and his political allies. Any kind of disorder could be magnified and broadcast in Europe as a reason for excluding Ukraine from European political, legal, and security institutions. Russia assumes that Europe’s commitment to Ukraine will remain solid when war is raging but will dissipate in the absence of visible violence, creating an opportunity to isolate Ukraine from Europe and thwart its EU accession talks.


Russia could offer endless, circular, embarrassing negotiations over the terms of the so-called peace. It might try to sideline Baltic and other eastern European states whenever possible and to encourage more compliant Europeans to legitimize Russia’s military presence in the territory occupied at the time of the cease-fire. Russia did exactly this in 2014 and 2015. It constantly asked for recognition of the self-proclaimed Luhansk and Donetsk People’s Republics—territories in eastern Ukraine controlled by Russian-backed paramilitaries—and for tacit recognition of Russian-occupied Crimea. Although that approach came up short in Luhansk and Donetsk, it worked in Crimea, which eventually became a nonissue for Europe and the United States.


Putin would agree to a cease-fire only if it advanced his original war aims.

A parallel cease-fire objective would be to accentuate the current divisions between the United States and Europe. Putin could highlight Trump’s role as the leader who helped bring the war to an end—the man of peace in Europe. The Kremlin may even time this flattery operation to coincide with the U.S. midterm elections in November, which might boost the fortunes of Trump-backed Republicans and diminish prospects for a return to more pro-European, pro-NATO, and pro-Ukrainian policies in Washington. In the wake of a cease-fire, Russia could also offer overt or covert support to parties in Europe that might recommend normalization.


By agreeing to a cease-fire without giving up on the objectives behind the war, Putin could win a reprieve with the Russian population, and he could redirect at least some resources to shoring up Russia’s position in Africa, the Middle East, and the South Caucasus. In doing so, he might appear to heed the warnings of Russian elites who argue that Ukraine is merely one arena for Russia’s broader confrontation with the West and that throwing everything into a futile war is imprudent. A cease-fire would also allow Putin to jump at whatever opportunities the abrupt change might generate in Ukraine, Europe, or the United States. Most of all, he would be looking for political disarray in Kyiv, as he has been since 2015.


Officials in Ukraine, Europe, and the United States contemplating negotiations with Russia must think beyond a cease-fire. Should Ukraine cement a deal with Russia, something that Kyiv has understandably been pursuing, a sustainable end to the conflict will be possible only with a genuinely redefined calculus in Russia. Kyiv and its partners would need to compel Moscow to abandon its will to dominate Ukraine, an improbable development as long as Putin remains in the Kremlin. The proper response to Putin’s studied intransigence in 2026—as it should have been back in 2014 and 2015, when his ruthlessness was underestimated—is to help Ukraine attain long-term security and independence. If the fighting does stop, rather than congratulating themselves, Ukraine, Europe, and the United States should stay focused on Putin’s will to divide and conquer. It might well be the reason Russia entertains a cease-fire in the first place.


Topics & Regions: Russia Ukraine Geopolitics Security Defense & Military Strategy & Conflict War & Military Strategy War in Ukraine Vladimir Putin

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CUMHURİYET - 13.07.2026 Kurtuluş Savaşı'nı hedef almıştı: Laiklik Meclisi'nden, Yusuf Tekin'e yanıt

 CUMHURİYET - 13.07.2026 

Kurtuluş Savaşı'nı hedef almıştı: Laiklik Meclisi'nden, Yusuf Tekin'e yanıt

13.07.2026 14:19:00
Güncellenme:
Kurtuluş Savaşı'nı hedef almıştı: Laiklik Meclisi'nden, Yusuf Tekin'e yanıt

Milli Eğitim Bakanı Yusuf Tekin’in Türk ulusunun emperyalizme karşı zafer kazanıp, bağımsız cumhuriyetini kurduğu "Kurtuluş Savaşı'nı" hedef alan; “Neyden kurtuluyoruz? Ondan önce koskoca Osmanlı İmparatorluğu vardı” sözlerine karşı tepkiler sürüyor.

Bu kapsamda Laiklik Meclisi bugün yazılı açıklamada bulunarak, Bakan Tekin’e tepki gösterdi. 

‘YENİ TARİH YAZIMININ ÖRNEKLERİ’

Meclisten yapılan açıklamada Tekin’in sözlerinin sıradan bir terminolojik tercih olmadığı vurgulanarak; “Bu yaklaşım, Cumhuriyet’in kurucu felsefesine, anti-emperyalist bağımsızlık mücadelesine ve laikliğe yönelik sistematik bir karşı-devrimci saldırının, siyasi iktidarın yetkili ağızlarınca itiraf edilmesidir. Siyasi iktidarın Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı, 8. sınıf ders kitaplarından son Osmanlı Padişahı Vahdettin’in İngiliz gemisiyle ülkeden kaçtığını çıkarmıştır. Tarihsel gerçeklerden kopuk bu ifadeler, karşı-devrimin en tehlikeli saldırılarından biri olan yeni bir tarih yazımının örneklerindedir” denildi.

‘ÖZGÜR YURTTAŞ OLMAYA UZANAN KOPUŞ’

Açıklamada; Osmanlı İmparatorluğu’nun son döneminin kapitülasyonlar ve Düyunuumumiye aracılığıyla siyasi ve ekonomik egemenliğin emperyalizme devredildiği, Anadolu halkının cehalet ile yoksulluğa terk edildiği bir çöküş dönemi olduğu vurgulandı.

Bu kapsamda Kurtuluş Savaşı’nın emperyalizme karşı tam bağımsızlık mücadelesi olduğunun kaydedildiği metinde; “Teokratik hanedanlığa karşı halk egemenliğinin inşasıdır. Kul olmaktan çıkıp, özgür yurttaş olmaya uzanan bir kopuştur. Cumhuriyet’in kuruluşunun ileriye doğru devrimci bir sıçrama olduğunu reddeden, onu Osmanlı’nın basit bir devamı ya da restorasyonu gibi göstermeyi çalışan yeni-Osmanlıcı tarih yazıcıları, Kurtuluş Savaşı’nın özünden rahatsızlık duymaktadır” ifadeleri kullanıldı.

‘EMPERYALİZMDEN KURTULMA İRADESİ KÖK SALMIŞTIR’

“Türkiye topraklarında; siyasi iktidar ve destekçileri ile emperyalizmden kurtulma iradesi yüz yılı aşkın zamandır kök salmıştır” denilen açıklamada; şunlar kaydedildi:

“Bu irade gerekirse ‘ikinci kurtuluş savaşı’ ile ayağa kalkacaktır. Açıktır ki, 24 yıllık siyasi iktidar, ülkemizde, emperyalizmin planları doğrultusunda siyasal İslamcı, Osmanlıcı, gerici, piyasacı bir rejim kurmakla görevlendirilmiştir. Bu dönüşümün en temel başlıklarından biri ise gelecek kuşakları teslim almak üzere eğitim sistemidir. Ankara’da düzenlenen emperyalizmin suç aygıtı NATO toplantısıyla birlikte Türkiye’yi adeta müstemleke haline getiren siyasi iktidarın işbirlikçi karakteri utanç verici uygulamalarla açığa çıkmıştır. Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı’nda oturan şahıs; MESEM’ler gibi emek ve çocuk öğüten sistemi kurmuş, tarikat ve cemaatleri sadece yetkin kişilerin görev yapması gereken okullara sokmuştur. Eğitim sistemini Cumhuriyet değerlerinden kopararak, daha fazla dinselleştirmeye kafa yoran bu şahıs, karma eğitime karşı çıkmaktadır.”

‘CUMHURİYET’İN DEVRİMCİ MİRASINI YÜKSELTECEYİZ’

Laikliğin; yurttaş olmanın güvencesi olduğunun anımsatıldığı metinde; “Cumhuriyet devriminin, aydınlanmanın ve emeğin tarihsel kazanımlarının adım adım tasfiye edilmesine seyirci kalmayacağız. Okullarımızı bilim ve aydınlanma yuvaları olmaktan çıkarıp, siyasi iktidarın hedeflerine hizmet eden piyasacı ve gerici ideolojik laboratuvarlara dönüştürme girişimine karşı en güçlü yanıtı; laikliği, tam bağımsızlığı, bilimsel düşünceyi ve Cumhuriyet’in devrimci mirasını inatla yükselterek vereceğiz. Karanlığa, dogmalara ve sömürüye karşı; aklın, evrensel bilimin ve emeğin onurlu mücadelesi büyütülecektir” denildi.

İsviçre'de yayınlanan Post gazetesinden alıntı : "Eski Başkonsolos Gürsel Demirok’tan Avrupa’daki Türkiye Kökenlilere Çağrı: “Yeni Köprüler Kurulmalı”" 13 Temmuz 2026

 

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  3. Eski Başkonsolos Gürsel Demirok’tan Avrupa’daki Türkiye Kökenlilere Çağrı: “Yeni Köprüler Kurulmalı”

Eski Başkonsolos Gürsel Demirok’tan Avrupa’daki Türkiye Kökenlilere Çağrı: “Yeni Köprüler Kurulmalı”

Eski Başkonsolos Gürsel Demirok’tan Avrupa’daki Türkiye Kökenlilere Çağrı: “Yeni Köprüler Kurulmalı”

Türkiye’nin Zürih eski Başkonsolosu Gürsel Demirok, Avrupa’da yaşayan Türkiye kökenli siyasetçilerle ilişkilerin günlük siyasi tartışmaların ötesinde, uzun vadeli bir devlet politikası çerçevesinde ele alınması gerektiğini vurguladı.

ZÜRİH – Türkiye Cumhuriyeti’nin Zürih eski Başkonsolosu Gürsel Demirok, kaleme aldığı “Avrupa’ya yeni köprüler kurmak” başlıklı köşe yazısında, Avrupa’da giderek güçlenen Türkiye kökenli siyasetçilerin, akademisyenlerin ve kanaat önderlerinin Türkiye ile ilişkilerinin daha kurumsal bir zemine taşınması gerektiğini ifade etti.

Medyagünlüğü’nde geçtiğimiz hafta yayımlanan “Avrupa’daki Türkiye kökenli siyasetçiler” başlıklı yazısına gelen okuyucu yorumlarını değerlendiren Demirok, Avrupa ülkelerinin parlamentolarında görev yapan Türkiye kökenli siyasetçilerin sayısındaki artışın önemli bir gelişme olduğunu belirtti.

Ancak Demirok’a göre, Avrupa’da yetişen yeni kuşak siyasetçilerin önemli bir bölümü, yaşadıkları ülkelerin siyasi ve kültürel iklimi içinde şekilleniyor. Bu durumun zaman zaman Türk diasporasını ilgilendiren konulara mesafeli durmalarına yol açtığı yönünde değerlendirmeler yapılıyor.

“Diaspora günlük siyasetin konusu olmamalı”

Okurlarından gelen görüşlere geniş yer veren Demirok, en dikkat çekici mesajlardan birinin, Türkiye’nin yurt dışındaki vatandaşlarına yönelik politikalarının günlük siyasi tartışmaların değil, uzun vadeli bir devlet politikasının parçası olması gerektiği yönündeki değerlendirme olduğunu aktardı.

Bir okuyucunun şu sözlerini paylaşan Demirok, bu yaklaşımın üzerinde düşünülmesi gerektiğini vurguladı:

“Türkiye’nin Avrupa’daki insanlarına yönelik politikası günlük siyasetin değil, devlet politikasının konusu olmalıdır. İç siyasetteki kutuplaşma yurt dışındaki vatandaşlarımıza taşınmamalıdır. Birleştirici bir dil kullanılmalı; siyasetçiler, iş insanları, akademisyenler, bilim insanları ve sivil toplum temsilcileri ortak değerlerde buluşturulmalıdır.”

“Avrupa’daki Türkiye kökenli nüfus 6 milyonu aştı”

Bugün Avrupa’da yaşayan Türkiye kökenli nüfusun 6 milyonu geçtiğine dikkat çeken Demirok, bu topluluğun yalnızca ekonomik hayatta değil; siyaset, bilim, kültür, sanat ve kamu yönetimi alanlarında da önemli başarılara imza attığını belirtti.

Almanya’dan Hollanda’ya, İsviçre’den Belçika’ya, Avusturya’dan Fransa ve İsveç’e kadar birçok ülkede Türkiye kökenli milletvekillerinin, belediye başkanlarının, bakanların ve Avrupa Parlamentosu üyelerinin görev yaptığını hatırlatan Demirok, spor alanında da benzer başarı hikâyelerinin yaşandığını ifade etti.

Murat Yakın örneği

Yazısında İsviçre Milli Takımı Teknik Direktörü Murat Yakın’ın başarılarına da değinen Demirok, Deutsche Welle’nin Yakın’ın hayat hikâyesine ilişkin değerlendirmesine yer verdi.

Türkiye’den İsviçre’ye göç eden bir ailenin çocuğu olan Murat Yakın’ın, zorlu yaşam koşullarından dünya futbolunun zirvesine uzanan başarı hikâyesinin, Avrupa’daki Türkiye kökenlilerin potansiyelini gösteren önemli örneklerden biri olduğunu ifade etti.

Somut öneriler sıraladı

Demirok, Avrupa’daki Türkiye kökenli siyasetçilerle daha güçlü ilişkiler kurulabilmesi için çeşitli önerilerde bulundu.

Bu kapsamda:

* TBMM bünyesinde Avrupa’daki Türkiye kökenli siyasetçilerle sürekli temas kuracak bir “Parlamenter Diplomasi Platformu” oluşturulması,
* Dışişleri Bakanlığı ile Yurtdışı Türkler ve Akraba Topluluklar Başkanlığı koordinasyonunda her yıl “Avrupa Türkiye Kökenli Siyasetçiler Forumu” düzenlenmesi,
* Üniversiteler, belediyeler, ticaret odaları ve düşünce kuruluşlarının ortak projeler geliştirmesi,
* Avrupa’da siyaset yapmak isteyen genç Türkiye kökenlilere yönelik liderlik ve değişim programlarının desteklenmesi

önerileri öne çıktı.

“En önemli ilke ayrım yapmamak”

Demirok, bütün bu çalışmalar yürütülürken siyasi görüş ayrılıklarının ön plana çıkarılmaması gerektiğini vurgulayarak, “İktidara yakın ya da uzak, muhafazakâr ya da sosyal demokrat, sağcı ya da solcu ayrımı yapılmadan ortak kültürel bağlar ve karşılıklı saygı temelinde hareket edilmelidir” değerlendirmesinde bulundu.

Uluslararası ilişkilerin artık yalnızca hükümetler arasında yürümediğini belirten Demirok, parlamentoların, yerel yönetimlerin, üniversitelerin, düşünce kuruluşlarının ve diaspora topluluklarının da diplomasinin vazgeçilmez aktörleri hâline geldiğini ifade etti.

Köşe yazısını, “Ortak geçmişten beslenen, karşılıklı güven üzerine kurulan ve geleceğe birlikte bakan yeni köprüler kurabilmek dileğiyle” sözleriyle tamamlayan Demirok, Avrupa’daki Türkiye kökenli siyasetçilerin yeni diplomasi anlayışının önemli unsurlarından biri olduğunun altını çizdi.

Bu haber toplam 808 defa okunmuştur

RESPONSİBLE STATECRAFT - A new US-Iran war would end where the last one did - Trita Parsi - Jul 13, 2026

 

RESPONSİBLE  STATECRAFT


Iran war

A new US-Iran war would end where the last one did

The fundamentals won't change: Iran can threaten Hormuz, the United States can punish Iran, and neither can secure its objectives through force.


Analysis | Middle East
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For all practical purposes, the U.S.-Iran Memorandum of (Mis)Understanding is over. The dispute over how to manage the Strait of Hormuz in the interim has pushed the two sides back into open war. But to what end?

There is little reason to believe another round of fighting can alter the fundamentals enough to change the reality from which the two sides must ultimately negotiate. If they are fortunate, the MOU’s collapse may yield another round of talks in which the allure of reshaping facts on the ground through force has finally faded.

As I have written elsewhere, the dispute over the Strait turns, at least on the surface, on Paragraph 5 of the MOU: whether Iran is responsible for safe passage throughout the Strait for the duration of the agreement, or only for the waterway’s northern corridor.

Beneath the surface, however, lies a more fundamental strategic disagreement. Even before the MOU was signed, Tehran believed Washington's objective was to establish a southern shipping corridor through Omani waters that would gradually erode Iran's control over the Strait. Such a corridor would require Oman's cooperation, which may explain why Trump at one point threatened to bomb Oman unless it abandoned its proposal for joint management of the Strait, with administrative fees collected by Muscat and Tehran.

The corridor would remain operational even if war resumed and Iran sought once again to close the Strait. From Tehran's perspective, Washington used the MOU to strengthen this alternative route, and the U.S. military's escort of commercial shipping without coordinating with Iran marked a significant step in that direction. If successful, the strategy would deprive Iran of its most important source of leverage — which is precisely why it appeals to Washington.

This is why Tehran has insisted that all ships transiting the Strait — regardless of the corridor they use — coordinate with Iran, consistent with its reading of Paragraph 5 of the MOU. Washington, by contrast, argues that the MOU merely assigns Iran responsibility for ensuring the safe passage of commercial vessels, without granting it operational control over all maritime traffic.

Before the funeral of former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, the two sides explored a compromise under which ships would coordinate their transit with both Iran and a designated Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) state. As I wrote in my Substack, “Under such an arrangement, ships would notify Tehran while also reporting to a GCC maritime authority, balancing Iran's demand for oversight with Washington's desire to avoid granting Tehran exclusive control.” But no agreement was reached before diplomacy was suspended for the duration of the funeral.

Accounts of what transpired in Muscat over the weekend naturally differ, but three proposals emerged. Iran advanced a variation of the earlier compromise: a dual-notification system for all vessels transiting the Strait. Qatar proposed three channels—an Iranian corridor in the north, an Omani corridor in the south, and a neutral corridor in the middle. For Tehran, this was a nonstarter, as it would effectively restore the Strait to its pre-February status.

According to Tehran, the United States and Oman favored separate management of the Iranian and Omani corridors: Iran could require coordination for vessels using its corridor, while Oman's would remain unrestricted.

Tehran saw this as an attempt to formalize what it had long suspected was Washington's strategy: creating a southern corridor through the Strait beyond Iran's influence, leaving Tehran no means of challenging it short of war with Oman. Iran also contends that Muscat advanced the proposal only under intense U.S. pressure, noting that Oman had previously supported a joint management system.

Washington disputes this account. U.S. officials maintain they were open to several arrangements, provided commercial vessels could transit the Strait safely. According to the American version, the talks unraveled only after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi consulted Tehran regarding a joint Iranian-Omani statement declaring the Strait open. From Washington's perspective, negotiations had been progressing until Araghchi was overruled by hardliners in the IRGC, who chose confrontation over compromise.

Whether such a fracture proved decisive in this instance is unclear. What is clear is that the outlook of Iranian strategists has hardened markedly in recent weeks as they have become increasingly convinced that Trump intends to restart the war. Several developments have reinforced that belief. First, Trump's rhetoric shifted dramatically: he called the Iranians "scum," declared the ceasefire over, and said he might resume bombing to "finish the job."

Second, as I argued here, Tehran believes Washington brokered the Lebanese-Israeli agreement — which contradicts the U.S.-Iran MOU by conditioning Israel's withdrawal from Lebanon on Hezbollah's disarmament — to enable Israel to retain key positions that would weaken Hezbollah's ability to support Iran in the next war.

Third, White House officials leaked the U.S. demand that Tehran declare the Strait open and, at least implicitly, accept responsibility for attacks on shipping. Rather than seeing the leak as political posturing to make Trump appear tough, Tehran increasingly viewed it as a deliberate attempt to derail the talks and steer the crisis back toward military confrontation.

Taken together, these developments convinced Tehran that Washington was preparing to resume the war. From that perspective, Iran's best option was to close the Strait immediately. Rather than an attempt to extract additional concessions or an instance of overplaying its hand, Tehran's decision appears to have been driven by the fear of losing its most important source of leverage before the next round of fighting.

In the view of Iranian decision-makers, closing the Strait would not trigger war because war was already coming. (If their assessment was incorrect, however, Tehran’s own actions have likely created a self-fulfilling prophecy by taking actions that made a military response from Washington next to inevitable).

Still, much indicates that another round of war will not fundamentally change realities on the ground or the balance between the US and Iran. Trump, in particular, does not have time on his side when taking into account both economic and political realities, and even some military factors.

By almost every meaningful measure, the global oil inventory position is materially weaker today than it was before the February war. Since the end of February, observed global oil inventories have fallen by roughly 360–370 million barrels, with only about 21 million barrels rebuilt after the U.S.–Iran MOU — recovering just 5% of the wartime draw.

More importantly, the apparent recovery reflects oil in transit rather than replenished storage: oil on water increased by 117 million barrels, while onshore inventories fell by 96 million barrels. OECD inventories declined by another 62 million barrels in June alone, including roughly 44 million barrels released from government emergency stocks.

The United States also enters any renewed conflict with a substantially smaller strategic cushion. It has fallen from about 415 million barrels before the war to roughly 337 million barrels, while commercial crude, gasoline and distillate inventories all remain below their five-year seasonal averages. Consequently, Washington has significantly less capacity than in February to absorb another major disruption to global oil flows.

In addition, the United States is now only four months away from the midterm elections, dramatically shortening Trump's economic and political pain threshold. In February, the administration could plausibly argue that the oil shock was temporary and that prices would normalize before voters went to the polls. A renewed conflict today would push its most visible economic consequences directly into the campaign: higher gasoline prices, inflation, interest rates, and rising food, airline, freight, and utility costs.

As a Pentagon source told me last year, Iran builds missiles faster than the United States produces missile interceptors. And while Washington must divide its attention and resources among multiple theaters — from Ukraine to Taiwan — Iran has only one.

Thus, although the United States could, given enough time, degrade Iran's ability to threaten shipping in the Persian Gulf, there is little reason to believe it could do so before the economic and political costs became prohibitive for Trump. It is essentially the same strategic reality he confronted in February. The difference is that he lacked the benefit of hindsight then. Now he has it — though it does not appear to have mattered.