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Kremlin: Ankara should have no illusions over its EU bid because no one wants to see Türkiye in Europe

"Türkiye can orient itself to the West, we know that in the history of the Republic of Türkiye, there were periods of intensive orientation to the West, and there were periods of less intensive ones. But we also know that... no one wants to see Türkiye in Europe, I mean the Europeans. And here our Turkish partners should not wear rose-tinted spectacles either," Dmitry Peskov told a daily news briefing.

Reuters WORLD
Published July 11,2023
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Türkiye should be under no illusion that it might one day be allowed to join the European Union, the Kremlin said on Tuesday, as Moscow stressed its desire for strong relations with Ankara despite disagreements, including over NATO enlargement.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was responding to a question about NATO member Türkiye's decision to lift its opposition to Sweden joining the alliance on the eve of a two-day NATO summit in Lithuania.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has sought to maintain cordial ties with both Moscow and Kyiv during the 16-month war in Ukraine. He has refused to join Western sanctions against Russia over the invasion and has invited Russian President Vladimir Putin to visit Türkiye in August.

Türkiye had held up Sweden's accession, accusing the Nordic country of not doing enough to crack down on people Ankara sees as terrorists. On Monday, however, Erdoğan dropped his objection to Sweden becoming NATO's 32nd member.

Russia sees NATO expansion as a threat to its own security, but Peskov played down a reporter's suggestion that Türkiye was pivoting away from Russia and towards the West.

"Türkiye can orient itself to the West, we know that in the history of the Republic of Türkiye there were periods of intensive orientation to the West, there were periods of less intensive ones," he told a daily news briefing.

"But we also know that... no one wants to see Türkiye in Europe, I mean the Europeans. And here our Turkish partners should not wear rose-tinted spectacles either," he said.

He was alluding to long-standing EU resistance to admitting Türkiye, a large, Muslim country adjoining the Middle East. It first applied to join the bloc in 1987.

Erdoğan said on Monday that the EU should open the way for a resumption of stalled talks on Türkiye's bid to join the bloc in exchange for Ankara endorsing Sweden's application to join NATO, but European leaders said they could not accept such a linkage.

Peskov said Russia understood that Türkiye had to fulfil its obligations as a NATO member over Sweden, but he added that Moscow wanted to continue to build mutually beneficial relations with Ankara despite "all disagreements".

Türkiye is currently trying to persuade Russia to extend a deal it helped broker along with the United Nations last summer that allows Ukraine to export grain via the Black Sea. Moscow is angry over the implementation of aspects of the deal and says it may not allow its extension beyond July 17.

Türkiye also helped last year to broker prisoner exchanges between Russia and Ukraine, and the Kremlin says Putin highly appreciates Erdoğan's efforts to mediate in the war.

The Kremlin is also keen to build a new hub in Türkiye for exports of Russian gas, as Moscow reroutes shipments in response to European moves since the start of the war to sharply cut reliance on Russian energy.