PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Turkey
Geography
Area: 780,580 sq. km.
Cities: Capital--Ankara (pop. 4.0
million). Other cities--Istanbul (8.8
million), Izmir (2.3 million), Bursa (2.1
million), Adana (1.8 million).
Terrain: Narrow coastal plain surrounds
Anatolia, an inland plateau becomes increasingly
rugged as it progresses eastward. Turkey
includes one of the more earthquake-prone areas
of the world.
Climate: Moderate in coastal areas, harsher
temperatures inland.
People
Nationality: Noun--Turk(s). Adjective--Turkish.
Population (2005): 71.5 million.
Annual population growth rate (2004 est.):
1.33%.
Ethnic groups: Turkish, Kurdish, other.
Religions: Muslim 99%, Christian, Bahai and
Jewish.
Languages: Turkish (official), Kurdish, Zaza,
Arabic, Armenian, Greek.
Education: Years compulsory--8.
Attendance--97.6%. Literacy--86.5%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--39.4/1,000.
Life expectancy--68.5 yrs.
Work force (23 million): Agriculture--35.6%;
industry--17.5%; services--42.2%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: October 29, 1923.
Constitution: November 7, 1982.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of
state), prime minister (head of government),
Council of Ministers (cabinet--appointed by the
president on the nomination of the prime
minister). Legislative--Grand National
Assembly (550 members) chosen by national
elections at least every 5 years. Judicial--Constitutional
Court, Court of Cassation, Council of State, and
other courts.
Political parties in Parliament: Justice and
Development Party (AK), Republican People’s
Party (CHP), and True Path Party (DYP).
Suffrage: Universal, 18 and older.
National holiday: Republic Day, October 29.
Economy
GDP: (2003) $241.1 billion; (2004) $300.6
billion; (2005) $361.5 billion.
Annual real GDP growth rate: (2003) (+) 5.8%;
(2004) (+) 8.9%; (2005) 7.4%
GDP per capita: (2003) $3,412; (2004) $4,187;
(2005) $5,016.
Annual inflation rate /CPI: (2003) 18.4%; (2004)
9.3%; (2005) 7.7%.
Natural resources: Coal, chromium, mercury,
copper, boron, oil, gold.
Agriculture (11.8% of GNP): Major cash crops--cotton,
sugar beets, hazelnuts, wheat, barley, and
tobacco. Provides more than 40% of jobs, 6% of
exports.
Industry (24.9% of GNP): Major growth sector,
types--automotive, electronics, food
processing, textiles, basic metals, chemicals,
and petrochemicals.
Trade: Exports (merchandise)--(2003)
$46.8 billion; (2004) $63.1 billion: textiles
and apparel, iron and steel, electronics,
tobacco, and motor vehicles. Imports
(merchandise)--(2003) $68.7 billion; (2004)
$96.5 billion; (2005) $116 billion: petroleum,
machinery, motor vehicles, electronics, iron and
steel, plastics. Major partners--Germany,
U.S., Italy, France, Russian Federation, Italy,
Japan, Netherlands, U.K.
PEOPLE
Modern Turkey spans bustling cosmopolitan
centers, pastoral farming villages, barren
wastelands, peaceful Aegean coastlines, and
steep mountain regions. More than half of
Turkey's population lives in urban areas that
juxtapose Western lifestyles with
traditional-style mosques and markets.
Turkey has been officially secular since
1924, although 99% of the population is Muslim.
Most Turkish Muslims belong to the Sunni branch
of Islam, but a significant number are Alevi
Muslims. Questions of the goals of political
Islam and the aftermath of the 1984-99 PKK
Kurdish insurgency continue to fuel public
debate on several aspects of Turkish society,
including the role of religion, the necessity
for human rights protections, and the
expectation of security. Turkish citizens of
Kurdish origin constitute an ethnic and
linguistic group. Estimates of their population
range up to 12 million.
HISTORY
Mustafa Kemal, celebrated by the Turkish State
as a Turkish World War I hero and later known as
"Ataturk" or "father of the Turks," led the
founding of the Republic of Turkey in 1923 after
the collapse of the 600-year-old Ottoman Empire
and a three-year war of independence. The
empire, which at its peak controlled vast
stretches of northern Africa, southeastern
Europe, and western Asia, had failed to keep
pace with European social and technological
developments. The rise of national consciousness
impelled several captive nations to seek to
regain lost independence, leading to the
empire's fragmentation. This process culminated
in the disastrous Ottoman participation in World
War I as a German ally. Defeated, shorn of much
of its former territory, and partly occupied by
forces of the victorious European states, the
Ottoman structure was repudiated by Turkish
nationalists whom Mustafa Kemal brought together
under his tight leadership. The nationalists
expelled invading Greek forces from Anatolia
after a bitter war. After the proclamation of
the Republic of Turkey the temporal and
religious ruling institutions of the old empire
(the sultanate and caliphate) were abolished.
The leaders of the new republic concentrated
on consolidating their power and modernizing and
Westernizing what had been the empire's
core--Anatolia and a small part of Thrace.
Social, political, linguistic, and economic
reforms and attitudes decreed by Ataturk from
1924-1934 continue to be referred to as the
ideological base of modern Turkey. In the
post-Ataturk era, and especially after the
military coup of 1960, this ideology came to be
known as "Kemalism" and his reforms began to be
referred to as "revolutions." Kemalism comprises
a Turkish form of secularism, strong
nationalism, statism, and to a degree a western
orientation. The continued validity and
applicability of Kemalism are the subject of
lively debate in Turkey's political life. The
current ruling AK Party comes from a tradition
that challenges many of the Kemalist precepts
and is driven in its reform efforts by a desire
to achieve EU accession.
Turkey did not enter World War II on the
Allied side until shortly before the war ended
and became a charter member of the United
Nations. Difficulties faced by Greece after
World War II in quelling a communist rebellion
and demands by the Soviet Union for military
bases in the Turkish Straits prompted the United
States to declare the Truman Doctrine in 1947.
The doctrine enunciated American intentions to
guarantee the security of Turkey and Greece and
resulted in large scale U.S. military and
economic aid. After participating with United
Nations forces in the Korean conflict, Turkey in
1952 joined the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO). Turkey is currently a
European Union candidate.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The 1982 Constitution, drafted by the military
in the wake of the 1980 coup, proclaims Turkey’s
system of government as democratic, secular, and
parliamentary. The presidency’s powers are not
precisely defined in practice, and the
president’s influence depends on his personality
and political weight. The president and the
Council of Ministers led by the prime minister
share executive powers. The president, who has
broad powers of appointment and supervision, is
chosen by Parliament for a term of 7 years and
cannot be reelected. The prime minister
administers the government. The prime minister
and the Council of Ministers are responsible to
Parliament.
The 550-member Parliament carries out
legislative functions. Election is by
proportional representation. To participate in
the distribution of seats, a party must obtain
at least 10% of the votes cast at the national
level as well as a percentage of votes in the
contested district according to a complex
formula. The president enacts laws passed by
Parliament within 15 days. With the exception of
budgetary laws, the president may return a law
to the Parliament for reconsideration. If
Parliament reenacts the law, it is binding,
although the president may then apply to the
Constitutional Court for a reversal of the law.
Constitutional amendments pass with a 60% vote,
but require a popular referendum unless passed
with a two-thirds majority; the president may
also submit amendments passed with a two-thirds
majority to a popular referendum.
The judiciary is declared to be independent,
but the need for judicial reform and
confirmation of its independence are subjects of
open debate. Internationally recognized human
rights, including freedom of thought,
expression, assembly, and travel, are officially
enshrined in the Constitution but have at times
been narrowly interpreted, can be limited in
times of emergency and cannot be used to violate
what the Constitution and the courts consider
the integrity of the state or to impose a system
of government based on religion, ethnicity, or
the domination of one social class. The
Constitution prohibits torture or ill treatment;
the current government has focused on ensuring
that practice matches principle. Labor rights,
including the right to strike, are recognized in
the Constitution but can be restricted.
The 1982 Constitution provides for a system
of State Security Courts to deal with offenses
against the integrity of the state. The high
court system includes a Constitutional Court
responsible for judicial review of legislation,
a Court of Cassation (or Supreme Court of
Appeals), a Council of State serving as the high
administrative and appeals court, a Court of
Accounts, and a Military Court of Appeals. The
High Council of Judges and Prosecutors,
appointed by the president, supervises the
judiciary.
In the November 2002 election of Turkey’s
58th government, the Justice and Development
Party (AK) captured 34.3% of the total votes,
making Abdullah Gul Prime Minister, followed by
the Republican People's Party (CHP) with 19.39%
of the vote, led by Deniz Baykal. A special
General Election was held again in the province
of Siirt in March 2003, resulting in the
election of AK’s chairman Recep Tayyip Erdogan
to a seat in parliament, allowing him to become
prime minister. AK and CHP were the only parties
to surpass the 10% threshold required to hold
seats in parliament. The elections resulted in
363 of the 550 seats going to AK, 178 seats to
CHP, and 9 as independent. Due to a reshuffle in
party affiliation, AK holds 367 seats, CHP holds
175 seats, five are independent, and three
joined the True Path Party (DYP). In March 2004
nationwide local elections, AKP won 57 of 81
provincial capital municipalities and, with
41.8% of the votes for provincial council seats,
consolidated its hold on power.
Principal Government Officials
President of the Republic--Ahmet Necdet Sezer
Prime Minister--Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Abdullah Gul
Ambassador to the United States--Nabi Sensoy
Ambassador to the United Nations--Umit Pamir
Turkey maintains an
embassy in the United States at 2525
Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20008,
tel. (202) 612-6700. Consulates general in
Chicago (360 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 1405,
Chicago, IL 60601, tel: 312-263-0644, ext. 28);
Los Angeles (4801 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 310, Los
Angeles, CA 90010, tel: 323-937-0118); New York
(821 United Nations Plaza, New York, NY 10017,
tel: 212-949-0160); and Houston (1990 Post Oak
Blvd., Suite 1300, Houston, TX 77056, tel:
713-622-5849). The Permanent Representative of
Turkey to the United Nations is located on 821
United Nations Plaza, 10th floor, New York, NY
10017, tel: 212-949-0150.
ECONOMY
Turkey is a large, middle-income country with
relatively few mineral resources. Its economy is
currently in transition from a high degree of
reliance on agriculture and heavy industrial
economy to a more diverse, more modern economy
with an increasingly important and globalized
services sector. Turkey’s economy suffered from
high--sometimes very high--inflation for 30
years, from the early 1970s until the recent
reform period. Coming out of a tradition of a
state-directed economy that was relatively
closed to the outside world, Prime Minister and
then President Turgut Ozal began to open up the
economy in the 1980s. In the 1990s, Turkey’s
economy suffered from a series of coalition
governments with weak economic policies, leading
to a boom-and-bust cycle culminating in a severe
banking and economic crisis in 2001 and a deep
economic downturn (GNP fell 9.5% in 2001) and
increase in unemployment.
Since the crisis, however, Turkey's economy
has recovered strongly thanks to good monetary
and fiscal policies and structural economic
reforms made with the support of the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
The independence of the Central Bank from
political interference has been firmly
established, a floating exchange rate system has
been put in place, and the government's overall
budget deficit has been substantially reduced.
In addition, there have been substantial reforms
in the financial, energy, and telecommunications
sectors that have included the privatization of
several large state-owned institutions.
Thanks to these efforts, Turkey's economy
grew an average of 7.5% per year from 2002
through 2005--one of the highest sustained rates
of growth in the world. Inflation and interest
rates have fallen significantly, the currency
has stabilized, government debt has declined to
more supportable levels, and business and
consumer confidence have returned. At the same
time, the booming economy and large inflows of
portfolio investment have contributed to a
growing current account deficit. Though Turkey’s
vulnerabilities have been greatly reduced, the
economy could still face problems in the event
there is a sudden change in investor sentiment
that leads to a sharp fall in the exchange rate.
Continued implementation of reforms, including
tight fiscal policy, is essential to sustain
growth and stability.
After years of low levels of foreign direct
investment (FDI), in 2005 Turkey succeeded in
attracting $9.6 billion in FDI and is expected
to attract a similar level in 2006. A series of
large privatizations, the stability fostered by
the start of Turkey’s EU accession negotiations,
strong and stable growth, and structural changes
in the banking, retail, and telecommunications
sectors have all contributed to the rise in
foreign investment. Turkey has taken steps to
improve its investment climate through
administrative streamlining, an end to foreign
investment screening, and strengthened
intellectual property legislation. However, a
number of disputes involving foreign investors
in Turkey and certain policies, such as high
taxation of cola products and continuing gaps in
the intellectual property regime, inhibit
investment. Turkey has a number of bilateral
investment and tax treaties, including with the
United States, that guarantee free repatriation
of capital in convertible currencies and
eliminate double taxation.
Inflation, Debt and Fiscal Policy.
Though Turkey has made great progress reducing
inflation, it has not yet converged with the low
levels prevalent in most other industrialized
countries. Annual consumer price inflation,
which averaged around 80% in the 1990s and
nearly 50% in 2000 through 2003, fell to 9.3% in
2004 and 7.7% in 2005. In 2006, the target is to
bring inflation down to 5%. Turkey’s other
persistent economic weaknesses--its large,
short-term domestic public debt and runaway
state spending--have also been brought under
control. Net public debt to GDP has fallen from
92% in 2001 to under 60% at the end of 2005. The
composition of the debt, with much of it
short-term debt needing to be rolled over in the
domestic financial market, remains a risk, but
the Turkish Treasury has gradually reduced this
by increasing maturities and reducing the share
of foreign exchange-denominated debt. Turkey’s
five straight years of tight fiscal policy have
brought public sector balances under control,
with the overall public sector deficit now less
than the 3% of GDP requirement in the EU’s
Maastricht criteria.
Principal Growth Sectors - Energy.
Installed electricity generation capacity in
Turkey reached 32,000 megawatts (MW) as of 2004.
Fossil fuels account for 71% of the total
installed capacity and hydro, geothermal, and
wind account for the remaining 28%. The growth
in electricity generation has remained below
electricity demand until recently, which has
made Turkey a net importer of electricity since
1997. The growth of energy demand slowed
somewhat as a result of the 2001 economic
crisis, but has picked up again. Turkish
authorities expect a significant electricity
shortfall by 2008 unless new facilities become
operational. The Government of Turkey took some
important steps in 2001 to liberalize its energy
sector, including passage of the Electricity
Market Law and establishment of the Energy
Market Regulatory Authority (EMRA). However, the
government has moved slowly to follow through on
plans to liberalize and privatize the
electricity and natural gas sectors. In 2004,
the High Planning Council approved the
Electricity Sector Reform Strategy to renew the
reform process.
Oil provides about 43% of Turkey’s total
energy requirements; around 90% is imported.
Domestic production is mostly from small fields
in the southeast. New exploration is taking
place in the eastern Black Sea. In 2004, the
Parliament approved a petroleum market reform
bill that liberalized consumer prices and would
lead to the privatization of the state refining
company TUPRAS. TUPRAS was privatized in 2005,
but this has been held up by court cases still
in process. Turkey has a refining capacity of
802,275 barrels per day (b/d).
Turkey acts as an important link in the
East-West Energy Corridor bringing the Caspian
energy to Europe and world markets. The
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, which will begin
operation in 2006, will deliver 1 million b/d of
petroleum, and in late 2006, the South Caucasus
Pipeline (from Shah Deniz) will bring natural
gas from Azerbaijan to Turkey. Turkey is
building an interconnector pipeline to Greece,
an important step in bringing Caspian natural
gas to Europe via Turkey.
Telecommunications.
Parliament enacted legislation separating
telecommunications policy and regulatory
functions in January 2000, by establishing an
independent regulatory body, the
Telecommunication Authority. The Authority is
responsible for issuing licenses, supervising
operators, and taking necessary technical
measures against violations of the rules. Most
regulatory functions of the Transport Ministry
were transferred to the Authority, and the
regulator is slowly gaining competence and
independence. The long-expected privatization of
the state-owned telecommunications company was
accomplished by the sale of 55% of Turk Telekom
to the Saudi-owned Oger Group in November 2005.
With liberalization and growth in the economy,
there is growing competition for Internet
provision, but Turk Telekom remains the sole
provider of ADSL wide band Internet.
Environment. With the
establishment of the Environment Ministry in
1991, Turkey began to make significant progress
addressing its most pressing environmental
problems. The most dramatic improvements were
significant reductions of air pollution in
Istanbul and Ankara. However, progress has been
slow on the remaining--and
serious--environmental challenges facing Turkey.
In 2003, the Ministry of Environment was
merged with the Forestry Ministry. With its goal
to join the EU, Turkey has made commendable
progress in updating and modernizing its
environmental legislation. However,
environmental concerns are not fully integrated
into public decision-making and enforcement can
be weak. Turkey faces a backlog of environmental
problems, requiring enormous outlays for
infrastructure. The most pressing needs are for
water treatment plants, wastewater treatment
facilities, solid waste management, and
conservation of biodiversity. The discovery of a
number of chemical waste sites in 2006 has
highlighted weakness in environmental law and
oversight.
Transport. The Turkish
Government gives a special priority to major
infrastructure projects, especially in the
transport sector. The government is in the
process of building new airports and highways,
thanks to an increased public investment budget.
The government will realize many of these
projects by utilizing the build-operate-transfer
(BOT) model.
Textiles. The textile sector
is Turkey's largest manufacturing industry and
its largest export sector. The global phase-out
of textile quotas in 2005 has hurt the Turkish
textile sector, with foreign competition eating
into Turkish textile companies’ market share
both domestically and abroad.
Principal growth sectors are tourism
infrastructure, building products, automobiles
and automotive parts, and electronics.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Turkey's primary political, economic, and
security ties are with the West, although some
voices call for a more "Eurasian" orientation.
Turkey entered NATO in 1952 and serves as the
organization's vital eastern anchor, controlling
the straits leading from the Black Sea to the
Mediterranean and sharing a border with Syria,
Iraq, and Iran. A NATO headquarters is located
in Izmir. Besides its relationships with NATO
and the EU, Turkey is a member of the OECD, the
Council of Europe, and OSCE. Turkey also is a
member of the UN and the Islamic Conference
Organization (OIC). In December 1999, Turkey
became a candidate for EU membership. On
December 17, 2004, the EU decided to begin
formal accession negotiations with Turkey in
October 2005.
Turkey and the EU formed a customs union
beginning January 1, 1996. The agreement covers
industrial and processed agricultural goods.
Turkey is harmonizing its laws and regulations
with EU standards. Turkey adopted the EU's
Common External Tariff regime, effectively
lowering Turkey's tariffs for third countries,
including the United States.
On October 3, 2005, Turkey and the EU reached
agreement for Turkey to begin negotiations on
accession to the European Union. Turkey and EU
officials have begun the process of screening
Turkey’s laws and policies in order to begin
negotiating the individual chapters required for
ultimate EU accession.
Turkey is a member of the World Trade
Organization (WTO). It has signed free trade
agreements with the European Free Trade
Association (EFTA), Israel, and many other
countries. In 1992 Turkey and 10 other regional
nations formed the Black Sea Economic
Cooperation Council to expand regional trade and
economic cooperation.
U.S.-TURKEY RELATIONS
U.S.-Turkish friendship dates to the late 18th
century and was officially sealed by a treaty in
1830. The present close relationship began with
the agreement of July 12, 1947, which
implemented the Truman Doctrine. As part of the
cooperative effort to further Turkish economic
and military self-reliance, the United States
has loaned and granted Turkey more than $12.5
billion in economic aid and more than $14
billion in military assistance.
U.S.-Turkish relations focus on areas such as
strategic energy cooperation, trade and
investment, security ties, regional stability,
the global war on terrorism, and human rights
progress. Relations were strained when Turkey
refused to allow U.S. troops to deploy through
its territory to Iraq in Operation Iraqi
Freedom, but regained momentum steadily
thereafter and mutual interests remain strong
across a wide spectrum of issues.
The U.S. and Turkey have had a Joint Economic
Commission and a Trade and Investment Framework
Agreement for several years. In 2002, the two
countries indicated their joint intent to
upgrade bilateral economic relations by
launching an Economic Partnership Commission. In
2005, Turkish exports to the U.S. totaled $4.9
billion, and U.S. exports to Turkey totaled $5.3
billion.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Ross
Wilson
Deputy Chief of Mission--Nancy McEldowney
Counselors
Political Affairs--Janice G. Weiner
Political-Military Affairs--Timothy Betts
Economic Affairs--Thomas H. Goldberger
Regional Affairs--Thaddeus W. Troy
Consular Affairs--Laura Dogu
Management Affairs--Gerri H. O’Brien
Public Affairs--James R. Moore
Agricultural Affairs--James Higgiston
Commercial Affairs--John T. Lancia
Defense/Air Attache--Col. Roman Hrycaj
Navy Attache--CDR David Renberg
Army Attache--LTC David Bartlett
The
U.S. Embassy is located at 110 Ataturk
Boulevard, Kavaklidere, Ankara 06100, tel: (90)
(312) 455-5555.