
Senior Fellow Emirhan Darcan Published On Turkish Prisoners in the Swiss Penal System
Our Senior Fellow Emirhan Darcan has published a study on the process of resocialization of Turkish prisoners in the Swiss penitentiary system, with a focus

Our Senior Fellow Emirhan Darcan has published a study on the process of resocialization of Turkish prisoners in the Swiss penitentiary system, with a focus

Our Non-Resident Fellow Federico Donelli commented on NZZ, on Turkish defense giant Baykar Technologies acquiring Italy’s Piaggio Aerospace and what this could mean for the

Quoted in Business Insider’s article, our Senior Fellow Suleyman Ozeren shared his views about the post-Assad defense and security posture in Syria, the prospect of

While the Israeli-Hamas conflict and, more recently, the Israeli-Hezbollah conflict, have dominated discussions on the Middle East for much of the past year, the focus

A supposed Kurdish peace initiative that was floated in Turkey presents an intricate strategic landscape, promising to shape regional and domestic political dynamics. While Turkish

Our Senior Fellow Suleyman Ozeren shared his views with Paul Iddon in Business Insider about Trump’s second term and potential breakthrough for Turkey’s quest to

In recent years, Russian mercenaries in West Africa have gained considerable notoriety for, on the one hand, propping up post-coup military juntas and, on the

Our Senior Fellow Suleyman Ozeren, Ph.D. joined SkyNews to analyze the recent PKK terror attack targeting Turkish Aerospace Industries in Ankara, discussing the group’s motivations

Our Non-Resident Fellow Federico Donelli published a commentary on The Conversation on Turkey’s mounting interests in Somalia. From the article, From energy investment to security

Over a decade ago, Turkey-Syria relations have undergone a dramatic shift when then Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) decided to end their policy of ‘zero problems with the neighbors’ and interfered in the uprising in Syria. The AKP’s overly ambitious Neo-Ottomanism and revolutionary aspirations, coupled with military activism and Iranian-style proxy warfare campaigns in its neighboring country proved to be a disastrous mixture. Today, Erdogan has no other choice but to return to his Syria policy before the Arab Spring: seeking rapprochement with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.