
Domestic political trends are pushing Turkey toward a societal setup that is incompatible with EU and Western standards.

If Tunisia’s top-down strategy to boost investment and private-sector growth is to succeed, a bottom-up approach is also needed to address the country’s most urgent challenges.

Turkey is perceived in the West as rolling back its rule-of-law architecture and being on the road to autocracy. The EU has a number of ways in which it can respond.

The world reacts to the election of Donald Trump and its potential implications.

A new gas deal offers a tactical advantage for Turkey and a strategic boon for Russia, which will continue to dominate energy supplies to the EU.

The EU faces a series of dramatic challenges in the Mediterranean area; however, internal structural changes to the union have diminished its foreign policy abilities.

Brussels and Ankara have a long to-do list ahead of them. But domestic politics on both sides could interfere with this schedule.

Despite recent—and harsh—rhetoric, one hopes that Brussels and Ankara find the common ground to work on their many mutual interests.

The EU’s future role in Syria will be a litmus test of a genuine common foreign and security policy.

At a meeting in Saint Petersburg between the Russian and Turkish presidents, an opportunistic convergence of minds could emerge between the two leaders.