site.bta Public Figures Warn that Recent Steps in Bulgaria's Foreign Policy Go against the National Interests
Public Figures Warn that Recent Steps in Bulgaria's Foreign Policy Go against the National Interests 
 
 Sofia, August 31 (BTA) - In an open letter to the President, the  Parliament leader and the Prime Minister, 13 public figures including  former government ministers and analysts, warn that steps which Bulgaria  has recently made in its foreign policy and which they see as going  counter the national interests and the model of development based on  Bulgaria's membership of the EU and NATO.
 
 The letter is prompted by "imbalanced initiatives" Bulgaria has  undertaken in its relations with Turkey and Russia amid the migration  crisis and the Ukraine crisis, and new ideas for resuscitating the  projects for a new N-plant in Belene and for the South Stream gas  pipeline.
 
 The letter says that there is a covert campaign in the Bulgarian news  media and in the public space against Bulgaria's commitment to EU and  NATO membership. This campaign is masked as a concern for the Bulgarian  national interests; the actions of the Bulgarian government are  presented as something whose only alternative is a catastrophe for this  country. "Creating panic is a well-known trick during election  campaigns. But in the present crisis, it undermines the confidence in  Bulgaria and creates tangible security threats," the letter says. 
 
 According to the authors, Turkey "is clearly extorting the EU using the  migrant-for-visas issue". "Having the Bulgarian Prime Minister committed  to the cause of the extortionist is a most dangerous step with no  precedent in the latest history of Bulgarian diplomacy," the message  reads.
 
 It goes on to say that Bulgaria needs relations of goodneighbourliness  and partnership with Turkey, especially considering the large number of  Bulgarian people who also have Turkish citizenship and live in Turkey,  but in "the present moment of delicate relations among Turkey, the EU  and NATO, Bulgaria should act straight-backed, with clear and honest  diplomacy, with no imbalanced moves, without bending under pressure,  without interfering in internal Turkish matters and without giving  reasons for hostile attitudes against itself among the present Turkish  opposition". 
 
 The open letter also says that the only protection of the national  interests against the risks coming from the militarization of Crimea and  the conflict in Eastern Ukraine, is active policy within NATO. "It is  an illusion that opportunities exist for mediation and bilateral  arrangements with both Russia and Turkey." 
 
 The letter calls "inadmissible flirtation" the talk of resuscitating the  Belene N-plant and the South Stream projects and describes them as  having "a proven huge adverse impact". "The lack of consistency in its  energy policy puts Bulgaria under a risk of new financial, political and  material losses. It also damages the country's reputation as a reliable  and predictable partner which pursues its national interests within the  framework of the common energy policy of the EU," the letter says. 
 
 Among the 13 signatories of the letter are former government ministers  Vladimir Kissyov, Hristo Ivanov and Traicho Traikov, former Bulgarian  Ambassador in Moscow Ilian Vassilev, economic and political analysts  Krassen Stanchev, Dimiter Bechev, Borislav Mavrov and Alex Alexiev.
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