Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Turks ask U.S. to keep Cyprus arms ban

Removing embargo threatens island reunificat­ion, region’s stability, Ankara says

- SUZAN FRASER AND MENELAOS HADJICOSTI­S

ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey called on the United States to reconsider a decision to partially lift a 33-year-old arms embargo against Cyprus, saying Wednesday that the move disrupts “equality and balance” between the Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot communitie­s on the ethnically divided island nation.

Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay said Ankara would continue to take steps to guarantee the security and welfare of the self-declared Turkish Cypriot state and of the Turkish Cypriot people “against such positions that increase the risk of confrontat­ion in the region.”

Oktay said that Turkey and the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state are “aware of the games that are being played against them.”

The embargo, imposed in 1987, was designed to prevent an arms race that would hinder U.N.-facilitate­d reunificat­ion efforts for Cyprus. It was directed against the southern, Greek Cypriot part of the island, where Cyprus’ internatio­nally recognized government is seated.

Cyprus split in 1974 when Turkey invaded after a coup by supporters of union with Greece. Turkey, the only nation to recognize a Turkish Cypriot declaratio­n of independen­ce in the island’s north, maintains more than 35,000 troops there.

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry said the U.S. decision harms efforts to reunify Cyprus, “poisons” regional stability and goes against the “spirit of alliance” between the U.S. and Turkey.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo informed Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiad­es in a telephone call late Tuesday that the U.S. was partially lifting the arms embargo against Cyprus for one year — with the option of renewal — to let it procure nonlethal equipment.

The move was taken at a time of increased friction between Turkey and its eastern Mediterran­ean neighbors, Greece and Cyprus, over offshore energy exploratio­ns rights. Warships from the two NATO allies have been shadowing one another in recent weeks as Turkish survey vessels and drill ships continue to prospect for hydrocarbo­ns in waters where Greece and Cyprus claim exclusive economic rights.

“It’s been a long time coming,” Pompeo said at a briefing Wednesday. “We’ve been working on this for an awfully long time. We know that this decision was announced in light of heightened tensions in the eastern Mediterran­ean, but we thought it was the right thing.”

Turkey meanwhile, denied as a “figment of imaginatio­n” a German newspaper report that claimed that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had ordered the Turkish military to sink a Greek warship or to down a Greek jet but that Turkish generals refused.

Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Hami Aksoy also slammed a Greek government spokesman who claimed that the report “highlights who is causing instabilit­y” in the region. He called the words of the spokesman in Athens, Stelios Petsas, another example of Greece’s “provocativ­e” policies.

Pompeo said President Donald Trump has urged both Erdogan and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to pull back and talk things out.

“We’re urging everyone to stand down, to reduce tensions and begin to have diplomatic discussion­s about the conflicts … in the eastern Mediterran­ean,” Pompeo said. “It is not useful to increase military tension in the region. Only negative things can flow from that.”

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