GREECE AND CYPRUS PRESS EU FOR SANCTIONS ON TURKEY
Bloomberg - September 10, 2020:
Greece Presses EU to Draw Up ‘Severe’
Sanctions on Turkey
By
and
September 10, 2020, 4:00 AM GMT+2 Updated on September 10,
2020, 6:44 PM GMT+2
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Penalties on Turkey could unlock EU push to target
Belarus
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27-nation bloc
seeks to show unity on two geopolitical fronts
Greece pressed
its European Union partners to draw up “severe” sanctions against Turkey over
its energy exploration in the eastern Mediterranean, a move that could unlock
separate EU efforts to penalize Belarus.
Greek Alternate Foreign
Minister Miltiades Varvitsiotis said Turkey’s hunt for natural gas in waters
claimed by Greece and Cyprus is part of aggressive geopolitical posturing by
the Turkish government.
“Turkey is a major
destabilizing factor in the wider area,” Varvitsiotis told a European Parliament
committee in Brussels on Thursday. “This should be an issue of concern for the
EU and the international community.”
Cyprus has warned peers it won’t sign on to an EU
proposal to sanction dozens of officials in Belarus over that country’s
contested presidential election, unless member states agree to clamp down
on Turkey over its
drilling activities, people familiar with the matter said. Foreign policy
decisions in the EU require unanimity among the bloc’s 27 national governments.
The Conflicts That Keep Turkey and Greece at Odds: QuickTake
Strains between
Turkey and Greece over contested territorial waters have worsened in recent
weeks following heightened Turkish tensions with Cyprus. The Turkish-Greek
dispute has sparked concerns about a military confrontation between two North
Atlantic Treaty Organization members and prompted a German-led diplomatic push
for a resolution.
Turkish Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu on Thursday accused Greece and Cyprus of pursuing a
“maximalist position” on maritime rights and warned the EU against giving
“blind support” to both countries. He said the Turkish government backs
Germany’s mediation efforts and is ready to negotiate a settlement.
“We are ready for dialog
without any preconditions,” Cavusoglu said from Senegal via a video-conference
link to the same EU Parliament committee that Varvitsiotis addressed in person
hours earlier. “We continue to support Germany’s facilitation efforts while
Greece keeps dragging its feet.”
Greece maintains that
islands must be taken into account in delineating a country’s continental
shelf, in line with the United Nations Law of the Sea, which Turkey has not
signed. Ankara argues that a country’s continental shelf should be measured
from its mainland and that the area south of the Greek island of Kastellorizo
-- a few kilometers off Turkey’s southern coast -- falls within its exclusive
economic zone.
EU Prepares Turkey Sanctions in Case Diplomatic Moves Fail
The EU is engaged
in a balancing act over Turkey, seeking to defend the sovereignty of member
countries Greece and Cyprus while holding out hope that diplomacy
can ease tensions with a strategically important partner. Turkey plays a key
role in limiting the risk of a new influx of refugees into the EU.
In a largely symbolic act
in February, the bloc imposed asset freezes and travel bans on two employees of
Turkish Petroleum Corp. in response to Turkey’s energy exploration off Cyprus.
EU leaders are due to focus on relations with Turkey at a Sept. 24-25 meeting
in Brussels.
A Cypriot proposal from
June to add seven Turkish entities to the EU’s sanctions list has been moving
at a snail’s pace, as some member states fret over further antagonizing Ankara.
A plan to
target officials from Belarus over last month’s contested election result and
the subsequent violent suppression of protests has gained broader support, but
only after foreign ministers promised to accelerate parallel work on sanctions
against Turkey. With technical talks on the Turkish measures still held up,
both initiatives may be delayed.
Diplomats involved in the process
are seeking a breakthrough before a meeting of EU foreign ministers later in
September, the people familiar said. While officials agreed last month that
sanctions against officials from both Belarus and Turkey will be adopted, no
action has followed, according to a senior diplomat involved in the
deliberations.
The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, declined
to comment on the talks.
Failure to act amid mass protests
in Belarus and the escalating standoff between Turkey on the one hand and
Greece and Cyprus on the other could further expose EU foreign policy
weaknesses.
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