MED-7 SUMMIT IN CORSICA: WORKING TO AVOID FURTHER CRISIS BETWEEN GREECE AND TURKEY
Med7 Summit: Leaders working to avert crisis between Turkey and Greece
The recent history of Greece and Turkey
might be described as difficult. The two neighbours have disagreed over issues
including migration, religion and the future of Cyprus. Now the prospect of
natural gas exploration in the Eastern Mediterranean has the NATO neighbours in a
tense standoff.
It's an issue that seven southern European
nations, including Greece, are discussing today in a summit convened by the
French President, Emmanuel Macron.
The crisis is set to dominate today's MED7
summit.
The navies of Turkey and Greece are both at
sea and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Greek Prime Minister
Kyriakos Mitsotakis are blaming each other for the worsening relations.
On August 10, Ankara sent a research Vessel
to the Eastern Mediterranean to explore an area, part of which belongs to
Greece, according to Athens. Turkey disagrees claiming oil exploitation rights
within that part of the continental shelf.
"We’ve seen this crisis for more than
10 years and now we are seeing that both countries have been defending their claims,"
explains political analyst Hamdi Firay Buyuk. "The Turkish agreement with
Libya for sharing the East Mediterranean raised tensions, later Greece's
agreement with Egypt, so we’re seeing both countries pushing to get the
maximum".
Carrot and stick
The European Union's Foreign Affairs Council
has been discussing what should be the appropriate European response. And sanctions
are on the table.
"Possible EU sanctions against Turkey
will undoubtedly send a strong message to the Turkish side," says Panagiotis
Tsakonas, a professor of international relations at the University of Athens.
"However, I believe that they are only part of a more comprehensive
strategy that the EU must develop towards Turkey. This strategy should be a
kind of carrot and stick policy, a combination of the German approach of
engagement or commitment to Turkey with the French approach of curbing Turkish
aggression".
But Greek and Turkish warships on patrol are
not the cause of tensions.
Migration, the Libyan crisis and relations
with countries on the Mediterranean's southern shore are also on the menu.
Discussions at the summit are expected to be robust.
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