Category: UK

  • Strategic Focus on Turkey Project (SFT)

    Strategic Focus on Turkey Project (SFT)

     

     

    This project is designed to adopt a distinctive approach on Turkey. Most of the research and policy work undertaken on Turkey in the US and Europe concentrates either on the complications for bilateral US-Turkey relations of the US intervention in Iraq, or on Turkey’s internal economic and political developments and their impact on the negotiations over Turkey’s accession to the European Union (EU).

    The dimension that appears to receive far less attention in current policy and contemporary academic discussions is Turkey’s pivotal geo-political and geo-economic position and, therefore, the impacts that Turkish policies will likely have upon the long-term stability and prosperity of the region that surrounds it.

    In essence, Turkey is assessed currently in the US within the prism of Iraq and in many European capitals only as a problem that the EU needs to confront. A better understanding of how Turkey can help deal with some of the biggest geo-political and geo-economic challenges facing the US, EU and beyond will assist in building a more sophisticated comprehension of Turkey’s role as a constructive partner to the US, the EU member states and other countries.

    Doğan Holding, one of Turkey’s preeminent business groups, is generously supporting this project.

    Areas of focus for SFT:

    • Turkey’s role in the Middle East
    • Turkey’s role in establishing a diversified set of energy options for the EU
    • Turkey’s role in the economic development and regional integration of the Black Sea area
    • Turkey’s relationships with the Caucasus and Central Asia and political stability in the region
    • Turkey’s contributions to EU and NATO-led peace-keeping missions and other security operations
    • Turkey’s role as a magnet for Foreign Direct Investment and as a growing investor regionally

    Advisory Board

    Chatham House is forming an Advisory Board for the project. This will be composed of individuals with extensive experience and expertise from international affairs, media, civil society and business. The Board’s purpose is to provide long-term guidance to the project.

    SFT Contact

    The Strategic Focus on Turkey Project is run by Fadi Hakura, Associate Fellow at Chatham House. If you would like to find out more about the project, please contact:

     

     

     

     

     

    Fadi Hakura
    +44 (0)7970 172541
    Email Fadi Hakura

  • Strategic Focus on Turkey Project (SFT)

    Strategic Focus on Turkey Project (SFT)

    This project is designed to adopt a distinctive approach on Turkey. Most of the research and policy work undertaken on Turkey in the US and Europe concentrates either on the complications for bilateral US-Turkey relations of the US intervention in Iraq, or on Turkey’s internal economic and political developments and their impact on the negotiations over Turkey’s accession to the European Union (EU).

    The dimension that appears to receive far less attention in current policy and contemporary academic discussions is Turkey’s pivotal geo-political and geo-economic position and, therefore, the impacts that Turkish policies will likely have upon the long-term stability and prosperity of the region that surrounds it.

    In essence, Turkey is assessed currently in the US within the prism of Iraq and in many European capitals only as a problem that the EU needs to confront. A better understanding of how Turkey can help deal with some of the biggest geo-political and geo-economic challenges facing the US, EU and beyond will assist in building a more sophisticated comprehension of Turkey’s role as a constructive partner to the US, the EU member states and other countries.

    Doğan Holding, one of Turkey’s preeminent business groups, is generously supporting this project.

    Areas of focus for SFT:

    • Turkey’s role in the Middle East
    • Turkey’s role in establishing a diversified set of energy options for the EU
    • Turkey’s role in the economic development and regional integration of the Black Sea area
    • Turkey’s relationships with the Caucasus and Central Asia and political stability in the region
    • Turkey’s contributions to EU and NATO-led peace-keeping missions and other security operations
    • Turkey’s role as a magnet for Foreign Direct Investment and as a growing investor regionally

    Advisory Board

    Chatham House is forming an Advisory Board for the project. This will be composed of individuals with extensive experience and expertise from international affairs, media, civil society and business. The Board’s purpose is to provide long-term guidance to the project.

    SFT Contact

    The Strategic Focus on Turkey Project is run by Fadi Hakura, Associate Fellow at Chatham House. If you would like to find out more about the project, please contact:

    Fadi Hakura
    +44 (0)7970 172541
    Email Fadi Hakura

  • Is Real James Bond On Facebook?

    Is Real James Bond On Facebook?

    By Sky News SkyNews – Sunday, September 28 01:29 pm

    Spies are using social networking website Facebook to try to recruit real-life James Bonds.

    The Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) has begun advertising on it as part of a campaign to find potential MI6 agents.

    The adverts have been launched in an attempt to reach a large and wide variety of people, a Foreign Office spokeswoman said.

    MI6 began recruiting openly in April 2006, using mainly radio and newspaper advertising campaigns.

    It also recruits through its website, where candidates can fill out application forms online.

    “The Secret Intelligence Service’s open recruitment campaign continues to target wide pools of talent representative of British society today,” the spokeswoman added.

    “A number of channels are used to promote job opportunities in the organisation.

    “Facebook is a recent example” she went on.

    The website, which was launched in 2004, currently has more than 100 million active users worldwide.

    Other popular social networking sites include Bebo and MySpace.

    Source: uk.news.yahoo.com, 28 September 2008

  • Clyde sells systems for Turkish satellites

    Clyde sells systems for Turkish satellites

    MARK SMITH DEPUTY BUSINESS EDITOR [email protected] 

    CLYDE Space, Scotland’s only space industry business, has struck a £150,000 deal to supply two flight model power systems to Turkey’s fledgling satellite programme.

    The deal with the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (Tubitak) will see Glasgow-based Clyde provide two flight model battery charge regulator systems for the launch of Rasat, the first Earth-observation satellite to be built and developed in Turkey.

    The 120kg spacecraft is to be launched into a “700km sun-synchronous orbit” in late 2009.

    Clyde Space, one of the world’s leading suppliers of small satellite power systems, has been capitalising on the growing demand for so-called nano and miniature satellites.

    Craig Clark, who set up Clyde Space in 2006 with the help of Scottish Enterprise, said: “We were delighted to be part of the Rasat team and to supply our small satellite battery charge regulator to Tubitak.”

    The battery charge regulator is specifically designed for use with lithium ion battery technology, and includes four 85-watt solar panel trackers and digital interface to battery and solar panel telemetry.

    Clark added: “Lithium ion is still a relatively new technology to most spacecraft manufacturers, and our knowledge and experience in this area added significant value to the Rasat engineering team.”

    Clark, who is based at Glasgow Science Park, last month revealed plans to turn his business into a multimillion-pound venture with the world’s first website selling Earth-orbiting satellites.

    The website, which was launched in August, primarily targets the US market and offers credit card sales of satellites for research purposes.

    The satellites, which put a futuristic spin on the notion of Clyde-built engineering, are all designed and manufactured at the Clyde Space base in Maryhill. The miniature satellites – most of them as small as 10cmcubed – known as cubesats and microsatellites, unfold in space like pizza boxes. They are launched into space by a rocket, then fired into orbit, where they unfold and begin gathering information.

    Source: The Herald, 26 Sep 2008

  • Ambassador Brenton: UK expects Russia to reconsider Abkhazia, S. Ossetia recognition

    Ambassador Brenton: UK expects Russia to reconsider Abkhazia, S. Ossetia recognition

    Interfax’s Interview

    British Ambassador to Russia Tony Brenton has said he hopes Russia will reconsider its position on recognizing Abkhazia’s and South Ossetia’s independence and vowed that the United Kingdom would take part in a European Union mission of military monitors in the South Caucasus.

    “I do not know the exact numbers, but I do know that we are looking for twenty, thirty, or forty participants, and I am assuming that they will be on the ground as the European community gets its people onto the ground over the next few days,” Brenton said in an interview with Interfax.

    Times New Roman;”> “I hope that your readers will note that this will be a fantastic operation. The European community, the European Union from a standing start on the 8th of September has put together a big peacekeeping observer operation in the course of three weeks. That is a strong demonstration of the will of the European Union to contribute to getting the tensions down and to getting peace back in the region,” he said.

    Brenton described Russia’s recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as “a big mistake, because the effect of it is that it makes it much more complicated for us to find a long-term solution to tensions between Georgia and Russia and between Georgia and Abkhazia and Georgia and South Ossetia.”

    “It is a pity that Russia said it is irreversible,” Brenton said.
    “I hope that, on reflection, Russia will think again, because the precedent we have for this is the president of Turkey recognizing North Cyprus, and it has landed Turkey for a period of thirty years with a small enclave unrecognized anywhere else in the world and placing on Turkey an economic and political burden. It would be very sad to see Abkhazia and South Ossetia in the same situation,” he said.

    Commenting on Russia’s proposal that an embargo should be imposed on weapon supplies to Georgia, Brenton said, “I do not think that Russia has formally made a proposal to that effect. I think that we would want to see Georgia having the capacity to defend itself in the future and having normal armed forces. I am sure we would not want to see, on the other hand, a sort of military buildup in the region which led to the problems of the 7th and 8th of August,” he said.

    Brenton urged the beginning of a discussion on launching a peace process “with nobody setting too many preconditions.”

    The immediate issue is the implementation of the 8th of September agreement [reached at negotiations between Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and French President Nicolas Sarkozy]. Once that agreement is fully implemented, then I hope the political tensions will begin to calm down and we will begin to be able to discuss the resumption of contacts of various sorts,” he said.

    “I know that the French presidency of the EU, for example, has made it clear that on the assumption that the 8th of September agreement is implemented, the European Union will then resume the negotiations on the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement with Russia,” he said.

    “NATO has not yet reflected on what the conditions have to be for the resumption of NATO-Russia contacts,” he said.

    Source: www.interfax.com

  • PM urges financial responsibility

    PM urges financial responsibility

    Gordon Brown has called for an end to the “age of irresponsibility”, ahead of White House talks with President Bush on the global financial crisis.

    The prime minister told the UN General Assembly that “co-ordinated” solutions to the economic downturn were needed.

    Mr Brown advocated a “new global order, founded on transparency, not opacity”.

    US talks on a $700bn (£380bn) bail-out plan to revive the finance sector have ended in stalemate. Mr Brown is due to meet President Bush at 2120 BST.

    ‘Not just national’

    The prime minister has voiced his support for the proposals put forward by the US government.

    He told the UN: “This cannot just be national anymore. We must have global supervision…

    “The age of irresponsibility must be ended. We must now become that new global order founded on transparency, not opacity.”

    On Thursday, the prime minister urged world leaders not to use the financial crisis as an excuse to abandon efforts against global poverty.

    Desire for stability

    Mr Bush has proposed the US government take on the debts of struggling financial firms in an attempt to keep them afloat and also prevent a recession.

    The prime minister said quick action was needed to stabilise the economic situation and that longer-term reforms to the world’s financial system were also needed.

    “While the problem comes out of America, it has consequences for all of us and every family will want to know that we are doing everything in our power to ensure that there is stability,” he said.

    Other issues on the agenda for the White House meeting are thought to include Iraq, Afghanistan and the situation in Georgia.

    Meanwhile, a survey of 1,012 people for BBC Two’s Daily Politics show suggests 36% trust Mr Brown and Chancellor Alistair Darling most to steer the UK’s economy through the downturn.

    Some 30% opted for Conservative leader David Cameron and shadow chancellor George Osborne, while 5% chose Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg and Treasury spokesman Vince Cable.

    The poll, conducted ComRes on 24th and 25 September, suggests that 24% of people do not know which party offers the best option on the economy. 

    To watch Video: 7636165.stm

     

    BBC 26 September 2008