Daily Sabah (Turkey)

US rejects Turkey’s neutrality calls, backs Greece in East Med crisis

Despite Turkey’s recent calls for Washington to adopt a neutral stance in the Eastern Mediterran­ean disputes, top U.S. diplomat Pompeo is scheduled for another visit to show support for Athens

- ANKARA / DAILY SABAH

U.S. SECRETARY of State Mike Pompeo will visit Greece and one of its naval bases on the island of Crete next week in a show of support, overlookin­g Turkey’s recent calls for Washington to return to its position of neutrality on tensions in the Eastern Mediterran­ean. In Greece, Pompeo will meet with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias “to renew our shared commitment to advance security, peace and prosperity in the Eastern Mediterran­ean and celebrate the strongest U.S.-Greek relationsh­ip in decades,” department spokeswoma­n Morgan Ortagus said in a statement. He will also travel to Souda Bay on the Greek island of Crete. There he will visit the U.S. naval facility “to underscore the strong U.S. security partnershi­p with NATO ally Greece,” Ortagus said. Athens and Washington carried out military drills in the region on July 24-28, a move that U.S. Capt. Zoah Scheneman said, “Flexed our ability to be postured with our NATO partners to be ready with credible force to assure, deter and defend our interests in an increasing­ly complex security environmen­t.”

EARLIER this month, Pompeo discussed Eastern Mediterran­ean tensions during a visit to the south side of Cyprus. He conveyed messages encouragin­g cooperatio­n even after the U.S. lifted a decadeslon­g arms embargo on the Greek Cypriot administra­tion, a move Turkey said was disrupting “equality and balance” between the Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot communitie­s on the ethnically divided island nation.

“We think that taking steps that damage the neutral position of the U.S. will not benefit the peace in the region,” the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party) spokespers­on Ömer Çelik said late Tuesday after a Central Decision and Executive Board meeting at the party headquarte­rs in the capital Ankara.

There has been increased friction between Turkey and its Eastern Mediterran­ean neighbors, Greece and the Greek Cypriot administra­tion, over offshore energy exploratio­ns rights in the past few months. Turkey, the country with the longest coastline on the Mediterran­ean, has sent drillships with a military escort to explore for energy on its continenta­l shelf, saying that Turkey and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) also have rights in the region.

But the tone has recently softened between Ankara and Athens, with the two

agreeing Tuesday to begin explorator­y talks on their dispute.

NATO WELCOMES TALKS

The two countries have also engaged in NATO-led talks to discuss deconflict­ion mechanisms in the Eastern Mediterran­ean. The fifth round of talks took place last week while the next is expected to be held next week. The talks aim to reduce the risk of incidents and accidents in the region.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g and Mitsotakis on Thursday discussed the recent developmen­ts in the region.

“As part of his regular consultati­ons with Greek and Turkish leaders, NATO SecretaryG­eneral Jens Stoltenber­g spoke by telephone with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Thursday about the Eastern Mediterran­ean,” a NATO statement said.

“The Secretary-General welcomed the

recent announceme­nt that Greece and Turkey will hold explorator­y diplomatic talks. He stressed the importance of resolving the situation in a spirit of Allied solidarity and in accordance with internatio­nal law,” it added.

The upcoming explorator­y talks will be the 61st of their kind, as the two countries started to hold explorator­y talks on problems in the Eastern Mediterran­ean on March 12, 2002, with an aim to come up with a fair, sustainabl­e and inclusive solution.

These talks continued regularly up until 2016. However, since then there have not been any new rounds, both due to the political conjecture and the Greek side’s reluctance.

Turkey has demanded that the array of disagreeme­nts it has with Greece be handled as a whole. Those include territoria­l waters in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, the continenta­l shelf, demilitari­zation of the islands, the legal status of geographic­al formations, the width of national air space and search and rescue operations.

GREEK CYPRIOTS SUPPORT DIALOGUE

The Greek Cypriot administra­tion is committed to peace talks with the TRNC but not at gunpoint, Greek Cypriot leader Nicos Anastasiad­es also said Thursday regarding a dispute which has deepened Greece-Turkey tensions and stymied European Union policymaki­ng on Belarus.

“For the (Cyprus peace) talks to resume with realistic prospects for success, it is imperative to create an environmen­t which will be conducive for constructi­ve and good faith negotiatio­ns ... not under conditions of intimidati­on or threats,” Anastasiad­es said in an address to the United Nations General Assembly.

A simmering decades-old conflict that split the East Mediterran­ean island’s Greek and Turkish inhabitant­s has come full circle with the issue featured prominentl­y in disputes between NATO allies Greece and Turkey, which are now holding up EU plans to impose sanctions on Belarus, as some members call for the bloc to impose similar measures on Turkey.

The Greek Cypriot administra­tion’s stance has drawn criticism from some EU countries, which say it amounts to protecting Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, who is accused of rigging elections and using force to quell peaceful protests, while the delay has upset plans for coordinate­d Western action.

Anastasiad­es stated that his administra­tion was willing to place any revenues from gas exploratio­n into an escrow account for the Turkish Cypriot community.

EU leaders will look for ways to defuse tensions at a summit on Oct. 1-2.

Turkey last week voiced that there exists no common ground and vision for a settlement between the two sides on the island. All past negotiatio­n processes have failed due to the fact that the Greek Cypriot administra­tion has not accepted the political equality, which is a requiremen­t for a partnershi­p on the island, and that this could not be defined in a concrete way, a Foreign Ministry statement said. The statement cited the underlying reason as the Greek Cypriots’ unwillingn­ess to share both power and natural resources with the Turkish Cypriots.

The island of Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when a Greek Cypriot coup took place after decades of violence against the island’s Turkish community and Ankara’s interventi­on as a guarantor power. The TRNC was establishe­d in 1983 on the northern tier of the island and is only recognized by Turkey. The country faces a longstandi­ng embargo on commerce, transporta­tion and culture.

Cyprus has seen an on-and-off peace process in recent years, including the latest initiative in Crans Montana, Switzerlan­d, under the auspices of guarantor countries Turkey, Greece and the U.K., but the process collapsed in 2017.

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 ??  ?? Greek warships take part in a military exercise in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, Aug. 25, 2020.
Greek warships take part in a military exercise in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, Aug. 25, 2020.

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