Turkey has suspended talks with Syria and  may impose sanctions on Damascus, Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said,  the clearest sign yet that Ankara has parted ways with President Bashar  Assad over his bloody crackdown on anti-government protesters.
After long maintaining close relations with  neighbor Syria, Turkey has spoken out increasingly against Assad, urging  him to end a military crackdown on a popular uprising and to launch  democratic reforms.
During  a tour of Arab countries last week, Erdogan said that Turkey's approach  to Syria had changed and that Ankara would soon announce its "final"  decision on Syria by the time the UN General Assembly meeting in New  York.
"I halted talks with the Syrian government. I  did not want to come to this point. But the Syrian government forced us  to make such a decision," Erdogan told Turkish journalists in New York  on Wednesday after meeting U.S. President Barack Obama on the sidelines  of the UN General Assembly.
"The United States has sanctions regarding  Syria. Our foreign ministers will be working together to decide what our  sanctions may be," Erdogan said.
"As a result of this cooperation, the  sanctions may not resemble those on Libya. Every sanction differs  according to country, people and demographic structure. Thus, sanctions  on Syria will be different. We have preliminary studies on the issue,"  he said, according to the state agency Anatolian.
Assad's attempt to stamp out dissent by  having troops and tanks assault restive areas has prompted the United  States and European Union to gradually escalate economic sanctions  against the authoritarian Damascus leadership.
Turkey, which has been Syria's main trading  partner, had  resisted sanctions up to now after suffering the  consequences of past generations of sanctions imposed on next-door Iraq  during  Saddam Hussein's rule and now on Iran, another neighbor.
Bilateral trade between Turkey and Syria was  $2.5 billion in 2010, up from $500 million in 2004. Investments of  Turkish firms in Syria reached $260 million, Turkish official data show.
Turkey, a Muslim member of NATO that has  applied to join the European Union, is one of the few countries in the  world that has had open communication lines with Damascus.
Under Turkey's policy of "zero problems"  with its neighbors, Ankara built up political and commercial relations  with Syria after the two almost went to war in the 1990s over Kurdish  guerrillas harbored by Damascus.
But with Syrian refugees fleeing to Turkish  camps across the border and Assad defying repeated international calls  to return his forces to barracks and open up to reform, Turkey has found  itself in the awkward position of trying to champion democracy in the  region while maintaining ties, especially for trade purposes, with the  Middle East's autocratic leaders.
The United States and EU, along with the governments of Britain, France and Germany, have called for Assad to quit.
Erdogan, who once vacationed together with  Assad and his family on the Turkish Mediterranean coast, has stopped  short of calling for his departure.
But he told journalists in New York, "We do  not have any confidence in the current government," and accused Damascus  of launching "dark propaganda against Turkey".
The Syrian crisis has pushed Ankara and  Washington into closer cooperation, despite U.S. concerns over a fraying  of relations between its allies Turkey and Israel.
Syria sits at the heart of numerous  conflicts in the Middle East, and Turkey and Iran have competed for  influence there. An unstable Syria would have repercussions for Turkey,  which also borders Iran and Iraq.
Source >  Haaretz