Turkey breaks off high-level talks with Greece amid rising tension
Turkey will no longer hold high-level talks with neighboring Greece, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday amid rising tensions between the traditional rivals.
Ankara resumed negotiations with Athens last year following a five-year break to address differences over a range of issues such as mineral exploration in the eastern Mediterranean and rival claims in the Aegean Sea.
“We broke off our high-level strategy council meetings with Greece,” Erdogan told a meeting of his party’s lawmakers in Ankara, adding: “Don’t you learn any lessons from history? Don’t try to dance with Turkey.” The talks had made little headway, but were a means for the two countries to air out their grievances without resorting to a potential armed standoff as had occurred as recently as two years ago.
Erdogan’s pivot on the talks appeared to have been triggered last week when he signalled his displeasure at comments made by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis during a trip to the US.
Erdogan said Mitsotakis “no longer exists” for him after accusing the Greek leader of trying to block Turkey’s acquisition of F-16 fighter planes.
Erdogan also commented on Turkey’s objection to Sweden and Finland joining Nato. Ankara has complained the Nordic states harbor terror suspects and arm a group in Syria it accuses of being an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK that has waged a 38-year insurgency inside Turkey. “Nato is a security organisation, not a support organisation for terrorist organisations,” he said.
The US and EU have categorised the PKK as a terror group. However, it’s Syrian wing, the People’s Protection Units, or YPG, has played a leading role in the Us-led fight against the Daesh group. Erdogan said those who tried to legitimise the PKK with “letter tricks” were “deceiving themselves, not us.” The president added that Turkey would not change its stance on the Swedish and Finnish Nato application without seeing “binding documents” demonstrating a hardened approach to those Ankara considers terrorists.— reuters