Russian President Putin comes to Ankara to talk Syria, missiles

Russian President Vladimir Putin will travel to Ankara on Sept. 28 to meet President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan with a wide range of topics on the agenda: The Astana process on a cease-fire in Syria, the independence referendum held by the Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), and Ankara's purchase of Russian S- 400 missile defense systems.

Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Sept. 27 said the trip had "extremely pragmatic" goals, according to Russia's official TASS news agency.

"Russia and Turkey are in close cooperation in the economic, military, technical and cultural area," Peskov said.

The visit is expected to cement rapidly developing bilateral relations, which were strained for two years after Turkey shot down a Russian military jet in November 2015 due to an airspace violation, but ties have still not fully recovered.

Erdoğan and Putin are expected to discuss the issue of de-escalation zones in the north western province of Idlib, where guarantors of the ceasefire deal - Turkey, Iran, and Russia - will assume a monitoring role in the rebelheld province.

In September Turkey, Russia, and Iran agreed on deploying hundreds of observers around the province to check de-escalation efforts.

During Putin's visit the Turkish side is expected to raise concerns over recent Russian airstrikes on rebel-stronghold, in which Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said several civilians and moderate opposition members were killed.

Turkey and Russia also recently sealed an agreement on the procurement of the Russian S-400 missile defense system, causing concern among

Turkey's NATO allies, who say the Russian air defense system is incompatible with the NATO system.

Economic ties between the two countries...

Continue reading on: