Required?
Yes, massa.
To begin with, I've been almost fanatically devoted to Ataturk ever since I read about him first. He is the only man in Asia who had his thinking straight, and every single step he took for post-khilafat Turkey shows that.
Strangely, for a country that has seen such hard times for neglecting his record and doing very strange things, the founding spirit of Pakistan, Jinnah, was also a firm admirer of Ataturk. It would break Jinnah's heart if he were alive today, and saw what one set of Pakistanis has done to the country that he helped them to form.
Even today, with the increase in religiosity and with a swing to the right, and the compromises on some of Ataturk's ideals, Turkey remains, and the Turks remain, people to be emulated. They have done almost everything right, and it is embarrassing that their scientific and technical advances, and their continued liberal outlook on life, allowing foreigners and strangers to behave much as they do in their own homes and countries (within reason) without imposing rules on them makes them rank among the civilised first world countries. Those who have settled in other European countries have made themselves good citizens who fit in comfortably with their adopted country, with none of the drama and the aggravations that some other nationalities and ethnicities have shown.
Their defence technology is breathtakingly advanced. It is amazing that such a relatively small country - India is enormous compared to them - should be pushing the envelope in every desirable field, but most strikingly in the areas of naval architecture, of UAV design and deployment, and of armoured vehicle development. Those are three chosen at random. That technology supports a military noted for its fearsome courage and fighting spirit for, now, centuries; in recent times, their track record in the Korean War was breathtaking, and their admirers among allied soldiers who fought in Korea still keep the admiration strong.
Individually, Turks are principled and say what they think, and do what they say. It is a world-wide disgrace that no one has stood up for and come to the aid of the Uyghur; only Turkey, and Turks, had the gumption to call a spade a spade, and expose Chinese genocide for what it is. In stark, plain terms. Now that the good and reliable friend of India, Russia, has decided to lash out against the west, for taking up the vacuum that was formed between the easternmost NATO countries and Russia herself, and has decided to make an example of Ukraine, India has found it hard to decide what to do, and what to say to the world about this extremely dangerous situation. I am not an admirer of Erdogan, but am forced to admit that he is, above all, not a hypocrite. He has clearly and bluntly come to the side of the Ukrainians, in spite of his own very mixed feelings about NATO, and about the European Union, that had made it clear to him and to every other Turk that possessing European feelings and behaving according to the highest standards of European behaviour was not enough, he has acted in a straightforward and manly way. If only our own demagogue had any principles, or the courage to uphold these principles! He does not, so we continue to wallow in a welter of words, looking like backboneless, spineless creatures in front of the world.
You raised the question of Pakistan.
The straightforward way to deal with this should be what the Turks themselves might have done. We should approach the Turkish government and tell them clearly that it is for them to be friends with whomsoever they want, but that we Indians want their friendship and that we do not look for equations with others, that friendship with a country that is sometimes very hostile towards us does not mean that they have to be our enemies, and that we are willing to enter into cordial trade, industrial and defence related cooperation with their country without pre-conditions or questioning their existing relations. We should do as they are doing, to normalise relations with every other country, and not put up artificial barriers. Their friendship with Pakistan is nothing to do with our reasons to seek their friendship.
Let me know if you have more questions.