Back in the autumn of 2014, the deal between Russia and Turkey on the Turkish Stream pipeline was expected to start
a period of close energy cooperation between the two countries, potentially able to change the energy game in the
region and consolidate political relations in a long-term perspective.
One year later, after announcing the project’s size would be reduced by half, Moscow suspended the negotiations in
retaliation to the downing of a Russian fighter jet by the Turkish Air Force at the border between Turkey and Syria. This
seems to complement growing doubts about Turkish Stream, which already started as a result of Russia’s military
involvement in Syria. From an EU perspective, recent developments raise doubts about Turkey’s role in the Union’s
energy strategy