Kathimerini English

Moment of truth for US on Cyprus

- | BY ENDY ZEMENIDES * * Endy Zemenides is the executive director of the Hellenic American Leadership Council (HALC).

The strained relationsh­ip between the United States and Turkey is like a ship adrift at sea. The relationsh­ip’s North Star – the NATO alliance – was lost when Ankara stubbornly went forward with its purchase of Russian S-400s over repeated and strenuous US objections. It is also not clear how the relationsh­ip can move forward, as there is a gap between the two countries in terms of both strategic interests and fundamenta­l values.

But unlike one of the most famous characters who was lost at sea – Odysseus – this relationsh­ip does not have a clear Ithaca that it is trying to get to. Turkey may remain a formal ally of the United States, but it won’t be considered a reliable one. Washington will continue to seek areas in which it can work with Turkey (for example, Afghanista­n or Iraq) but it will not hesitate to oppose Ankara when it undermines US policy.

This lack of a clear destinatio­n, especially in the midst of rough seas, will result in a good deal of unpredicta­bility and some level of instabilit­y in the regions and issues where this relationsh­ip plays out. This lack of predictabi­lity will pose a particular problem on Cyprus.

On the one hand, there is much to be encouraged about when it comes to the Biden administra­tion’s early approach to the Republic of Cyprus. There has been an early and consistent commitment to the bilateral relationsh­ip, and a great deal of activity around the “3+1” (Cyprus,

Greece, Israel plus US). Full implementa­tion of the Eastern Mediterran­ean Security and Energy Partnershi­p Act is a top agenda item, and the administra­tion has proclaimed “US support for Cypriot-led, UN-facilitate­d efforts to reunify the island as a bizonal, bicommunal federation for the benefit of all Cypriots, as the United States encourages both sides to demonstrat­e the necessary openness, flexibilit­y and compromise to find common ground to restart Cyprus settlement talks.”

Still, the United States has a tortured history of trying to have it both ways on Cyprus, and the encouragem­ent of “both sides” to demonstrat­e “flexibilit­y and compromise” is not as encouragin­g as it may seem on its face.

There are still people in the State Department who still treat the Republic of Cyprus as merely the Greek-Cypriot community rather than the strategic partner with whom they are engaged with in a “3+1” process and bound to via the East Med Act. There are some State Department officials (some who work on the Cyprus issue only for a few short years) who repeat Turkish talking points to the Greek-American advocates as if we haven’t heard them over and over again.

This habit of the State Department and UN officials like Elizabeth Spehar of pressuring Greek Cypriots to compromise every time Turkey provokes a crisis (because it is easier than holding Turkey accountabl­e) has to change. When it comes to US-Turkey relations in general, there has been a commitment in Washington to calling Turkey out and trying to hold it accountabl­e (CAATSA, the Halk Bank case etc) even without knowing what the eventual endgame is in the bilateral relationsh­ip.

The same approach has to be taken on Cyprus. This week, key United States senators – led by Bob Menendez, Chris Van Hollen and Marco Rubio – sent a letter to President Biden condemning Turkey’s action in Varosha and raising the possibilit­y of sanctions in response to Turkey’s continued intransige­nce on Cyprus. Just a few years ago, a call for sanctions over Varosha would have been unimaginab­le.

On July 21, eight of the letter’s signatorie­s will have a chance to press Undersecre­tary of State Victoria Nuland during a Senator Foreign Relations Committee hearing devoted entirely to Turkey. They will have the chance to press the administra­tion to outline what holding Turkey accountabl­e in Cyprus means. Undersecre­tary Nuland can – and should – make it clear that the senators’ suggestion on sanctions in the case of Turkey carrying out its plans in Varosha is under considerat­ion. She should be unequivoca­l in condemning these plans as well as Turkey’s insistence on a two-state solution. And she should hint at further consequenc­es for Turkish Cypriots involved in opening Varosha – including eliminatin­g the liaison office the US maintains in the occupied north and refusing to meet with “ministers” of the Turkish-Cypriot pseudo-state.

Over the next few months there will be additional hearings – most notably the confirmati­on hearings for Karen Donfried as assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs and Jeff Flake as the next ambassador to Turkey – where the Biden administra­tion can prove that it will not tolerate Turkey’s continued intransige­nce on Cyprus. But this Wednesday, it will be interestin­g to see whether Undersecre­tary Nuland is as clear-eyed on Turkey as Secretary of State Antony Blinken promised the administra­tion would be.

 ??  ?? Joe Biden (right) shakes hands with Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiad­es before a meeting at the Presidenti­al Palace in Nicosia in a May 2014 file photo. Biden, then vice president of the United States, was the most senior American official to visit the island in 52 years at the time.
Joe Biden (right) shakes hands with Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiad­es before a meeting at the Presidenti­al Palace in Nicosia in a May 2014 file photo. Biden, then vice president of the United States, was the most senior American official to visit the island in 52 years at the time.

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