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Iran, Turkey unity can solve many regional problems: Envoy

Rostam

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Iran, Turkey unity can solve many regional problems: Envoy

Iran’s outgoing ambassador to Ankara has described Iran and Turkey as two powerful countries in the region, saying their unity can solve many regional problems.


“Iran and Turkey can solve many regional problems through unity...but some countries are trying to prevent this,” Bahman Hosseinpour said in a ceremony on Saturday.

Reflecting on mutual economic ties, Hosseinpour said the expansion of economic relations between the two countries can contribute to further development of Tehran-Ankara cooperation in different areas.


The outgoing Iranian ambassador also stated that over the past five years, the volume of trade between the two countries has increased from USD5 billion to USD23 billion.

Iran and Turkey have sharply increased their trade ties over the past years.

The value of the Iran-Turkey trade exceeded USD16 billion in 2011 and surpassed USD22 billion by the end of 2012.

According to official data released by the Turkish Statistical Institute in November 2012, Iran was the third major trade partner of Turkey in the first three quarters of 2012.

Turkey’s imports from Iran hit their highest monthly total in March 2012 at over USD1.63 billion.

Meanwhile, the highest monthly exports from Turkey to Iran were recorded in July 2012 at more than USD2.15 billion.

The two countries plan to increase the level of their bilateral trade volume to USD30 billion by 2015.

PressTV - Iran, Turkey unity can solve many regional problems: Envoy
 
Economic interdependency is the most efficient and natural way to secure peace, friendship and prosperity amongst nations...
 
There is no doubt that both Turkey and Iran have a lot to gain if they solve their main issues. Both are the powerhouses of the Middle East and stand to gain immensly if they can talk rather than fight each other. Anatolia and the Iranian plateau have both historically produced the Empires that dominated the Middle East, Byzantines/Ottomans and Parthians/Sassanids/Safavids respectively, quite simply because they can support a large population base whilst being proximate to the Levant and Mesopotamia. However if they will exhaust each other then there is an unexpected third powerbase as well which is comparebly insignficant to Anatolia and the Iranian plateau but which nevertheless shook the Byzantine and Sassanid Empires in the 7th century.
 
There are some big issues,

Sunni against Shia started by Iran.
The nuclear issue(until proven its for energy use and not a nuclear bomb)
The sanctions.
Most of all the trust(the Iranian regime doesnt trust the turkish and vice versa)
These i believe are the main issues.
Solve them and you got a powerpack.
 
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