Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. backs Greece-Turkey talks

Pompeo visits region as tensions ease between NATO allies

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Elena Becatoros, Derek Gatopoulos and Suzan Fraser of The Associated Press; and by Lara Jakes of The New York Times.

ATHENS, Greece — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo expressed support Tuesday for talks between Greece and Turkey, NATO allies whose relations deteriorat­ed to the point where both had warships facing off in the Mediterran­ean Sea.

Speaking from the Souda Bay military base on the Greek island of Crete on the second day of a five-day regional tour, Pompeo said relations between the United States and Greece are “at an all-time high and getting stronger.”

Greece has been looking to the U.S. and the European Union for support in its dispute with neighborin­g Turkey, which it accuses of encroachin­g on its sovereign rights in the eastern Mediterran­ean. EU leaders are set to discuss this week potential sanctions against Turkey, which is not a bloc member.

Turkey last month sent a research vessel, accompanie­d by warships, to prospect for energy resources in an area where Greece claims exclusive rights. Athens also sent warships to the area and put its armed forces on alert. The dispute led to fears of open conflict.

The tensions at sea eased recently, with Athens and Ankara announcing that they would hold explorator­y talks on restarting stalled negotiatio­ns. Technical discussion­s on a military level also took place at NATO to prevent a military accident.

In Turkey, a senior ruling party official said Pompeo

had “lost his impartiali­ty” in the dispute by visiting Greece two times in a month and ignoring Turkish Cypriots during a visit to Cyprus.

“You cannot serve peace in the region by visiting only the Greek side on the island [of Cyprus], by paying two visits to Greece, and by making one-sided statements of support,” Omer Celik, the spokesman for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling party, told reporters. “We believe that there is a need for a return to a balanced policy.”

During the tensions with Turkey, Greece has announced major arms purchases, including fighter jets from France, as well as warships, helicopter­s and weapons systems.

“I was pleased to see that Mr. Pompeo shares our positions, understand­ing that tension between two members of NATO ultimately is not

in anyone’s interest,” Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said after talks with Pompeo.

After taking a step back in regional issues, the U.S. began to become more involved in the Mediterran­ean in 2018, said Michael Tanchum at the Austrian Institute for European and Security Policy.

“The U.S. was proceeding cautiously, balancing interests in various areas of the region ranging from Syria, Cyprus to Libya,” Tanchum said. “[But] events in the eastern Mediterran­ean are forcing Washington to accelerate the pace at which it deepens its involvemen­t.”

Pompeo visited Athens last October and signed an agreement with Greece that provided for increasing joint U.S.-Greece and NATO activity at three locations in Greece, as well as infrastruc­ture and other improvemen­ts at Souda Bay.

Pompeo and Mitsotakis announced Tuesday that the U.S. will base a Navy ship at a military base it shares with Greece, just 600 miles from the Turkish coast.

The USS Hershel “Woody” Williams, an Expedition­ary Sea Base ship, is assigned to the U.S. Africa Command and is not the kind of vessel that might intervene in a high-intensity conflict, should rising strains between Turkey and Greece — two NATO allies — boil over.

But its deployment at Souda Bay could serve as a symbolic warning of America’s growing irritation with Ankara.

“It’s literally the perfect choice in light of the facility’s strategic location. And it’s symbolic of a defense partnershi­p that will continue to expand and to grow,” Pompeo said.

Pompeo said security cooperatio­n with Greece “is especially important as Russia continues to destabiliz­e the region, especially in Libya.”

He said he and Mitsotakis “also agreed to explore closer cooperatio­n to overcome challenges that Russia poses.” He referred to “malign influence” such as spreading disinforma­tion on the coronaviru­s pandemic and trying to involve the Orthodox Church.

Pompeo’s tour also will include visits to Italy, the Vatican and Croatia.

 ?? (AP/Aris Messinis) ?? Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis (left) and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visit the archeologi­cal site of Aptera on the Greek island of Crete on Tuesday.
(AP/Aris Messinis) Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis (left) and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visit the archeologi­cal site of Aptera on the Greek island of Crete on Tuesday.

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