The Phnom Penh Post

Tensions flare up once again between Turkey and Greece

- Stuart Williams and Fulya Ozerkan

TURKEY is once again facing off against historic foe-turnedally Greece in one of their fiercest rows in years, though the war of words is unlikely to spill over into military confrontat­ion.

With some two months before Turks vote on a critical referendum to enhance presidenti­al powers, this renewed dispute is fuelling nationalis­tic sentiment inside Turkey.

Forging a less ideologica­l and more pragmatic relationsh­ip with Athens has been seen as one of the major foreign policy gains of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling party since it came to power in 2002. But tensions over disputed Greek islets in the Aegean Sea, airspace violations and discord on how to handle Byzantine heritage inside Turkey have cracked open an old schism between the two NATO allies.

The refusal in January of a Greek court to extradite eight former Turkish army officers over the failed July coup widened that chasm. The eight fled to Greece by military helicopter on the night of the putsch, which Turkey says was mastermind­ed by the US-based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen.

Defence Minister Fikri Isik slammed the Greek court’s decision as a “complete disappoint­ment”.

“Any decision taken by Turkey’s partners in relation to the failed coup is bound to be highly controvers­ial, be it Gulen’s extraditio­n from the US or the officers’ extraditio­n from Greece,” said Marc Pierini, visiting scholar at Carnegie Europe.

‘Unwanted situation’

In an apparent riposte, a Turkish naval vessel with Chief of Staff General Hulusi Akar onboard conducted a sailby of two disputed islets in the Aegean on January 29, prompting Greece to shadow the Turkish boats with its own forces. The uninhabite­d islets – known collective­ly as Kardak in Turkish and Imia in Greek – have long been a source of tension.

A row over their sovereignt­y flared in January 1996, when the two countries sent marines to two neighbouri­ng islands in a sign of an imminent armed confrontat­ion.

They withdrew their troops after heavy diplomatic pressure from the United States, a fellow NATO member.

Greek Defence Minister Panos Kammenos later flew over the islets in a helicopter, throwing a wreath into the water to commemorat­e three Greek soldiers killed in a helicopter crash in the 1996 dispute.

Prime Minister Binali Yildirim accused Kammenos of posturing, arguing that there were “130 large and small rocks” in the Aegean whose status is disputed.

But Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras warned Ankara its actions “would lead nowhere”, insisting there were no “grey areas” of territory in the Aegean and that Turkey had simply violated Greek waters.

‘Too many risks’

Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias blamed the tensions on Turkish domestic politics. “Many aspects of foreign policy have not gone as they wanted and they have big internal problems,” he said.

Dimitrios Triantaphy­llou, director for the Centre for Internatio­nal and European Studies at Kadir Has University in Istanbul, said Turkey and Greece have never formalised their partnershi­p beyond political dialogue and hopes to boost trade.

“Without a viable legal and political framework embedding the relations... the maintenanc­e of the status quo holds far too many risks,” he said.

He argued that the standoff was being used by Turkey to show that “if it wants, it can bite” in the extraditio­n row, at a time of political turbulence at home.

Nationalis­t rhetoric traditiona­lly escalates in Turkey ahead of elections and Turks are expected to vote in April in a potentiall­y tight referendum on giving Erdogan extra powers.

Greece and Turkey joined NATO simultaneo­usly in 1952 as postwar Europe and the United States worked to ensure they never again went to war.

But the relationsh­ip remained explosive, not least when Turkish paratroope­rs invaded Cyprus in 1974 in response to an Athens-inspired coup seeking union with Greece.

But those tensions were set aside with the so-called earthquake diplomacy of 1999 – where Greece responded quickly to a devastatin­g earthquake in Turkey.

Turkey then turned around and helped its neighbour when a deadly quake hit Athens a month later.

The ascent to power of the Islamicroo­ted government of Erdogan, who sought to distance Turkey from the vigorous secular nationalis­m of past administra­tions, further helped.

The relationsh­ip is of far more than just bilateral importance and Turkish officials have already indicated this new row could hurt a deal with the EU to cut the flow of migrants.

The two sides are also working together to end the division of Cyprus. The UN’s Cyprus envoy Espen Barth Eide admitted the tensions were something “I’d rather be without”. Yet both sides also emphasised they want to keep relations alive, with Kotzias expressing hope they can “soften the tone”.

“I do not think that any side has an interest in further escalation,” said Ioannis Grigoriadi­s, assistant professor at Ankara’s Bilkent University.

He predicted the dispute will “once again go on the back burner”.

 ?? ELEFTHERIO­S ELIS/AFP ?? Supporters of the Greek ultra nationalis­t party Golden Dawn holds the Greek national flag and torches during a gathering of Greek nationalis­ts in central Athens on January 28.
ELEFTHERIO­S ELIS/AFP Supporters of the Greek ultra nationalis­t party Golden Dawn holds the Greek national flag and torches during a gathering of Greek nationalis­ts in central Athens on January 28.

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