At the end of my conversation, I basically tried to summarize the issues and why Turkey would be part of the Western-aligned structure because of its commitment to the European Union, because in a recent summit both the European Union and Turkey reiterated their commitment to continue their negotiations, continue to accession negotiations, and electoral democracy in which the people—the vibrant middle class, the youth, the women—are getting much more powerful. They are getting much more empowered.
I'm hoping that the electoral democracy, the society, and the commitments to European institutions will put Turkey in a better situation, especially after the alleviation of these threats. We are talking about a country that has a 600-kilometre border with Syria, with Iraq, that is hosting 3.5 million refugees, that has been following an open-door policy and faced the security repercussions of this open-door policy with trying to deal with YPG and trying to deal with ISIS at the same time.
It is a little bit complicated when you ask what it would look like. It will also depend on the co-operation of the international community against these threats on its southern border.