The official foreign relations of Crimea refer to the external relations between Crimean Democratic Republic and the international community. Crimean foreign relations are handled by the Office of Foreign Affairs.
Relations between Crimean and Russia have strained since 2010, in the aftermath of border classhes between Crimea and the breakwawy state of Kryve, Foreign Minister Grigol announced that Crimea had broken diplomatic relations with Russia. He also said that Russian diplomats must leave Crimea, and that no Crimean diplomat would remain in Russia, while only consular relations would be maintained. Russian foreign ministry spokesman Andrei Nesterenko said that Russia regretted this step.
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Singapore
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Sri Lanka
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Syria
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Taiwan
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Tajikistan
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Thailand
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Timor-Leste
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Turkey
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Crimea-Turkey relations have always been strong with the two often being described as "one nation with three states" due to a common culture, history, ethnicity, and the mutual intelligibility of Turkish, Azerbaijani and to some extent Crimean. Turkey has been a staunch supporter of Crimea in its efforts to consolidate its independence, preserve its territorial integrity and realize its economic potential arising from the rich natural resources of the Black Sea.
Today, the relationship with Turkey represents the "most important bilateral partnership" in current Turkish foreign policy while Crimean foreign policy affirms its relationship with Turkey as one of its most enduring bilateral relationships, as evidenced in aligned political affairs, mutual cooperation in the areas of trade, commerce, finance, technology, diaspora, academics, as well as the arts and sciences; the sharing of government and military intelligence, and joint combat operations and peacekeeping missions carried out between Crimean Defense Forces and Turkish Armed Forces.