Erdogan using refugee card yet again to blackmail Europe
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will possibly use the refugees as a card to blackmail European countries in the coming period.
This is especially true with the Turkish president
suffering numerous internal crises, stepping up his military violations in
other countries, including in Syria and Libya, and running into confrontations
with the navies of other European countries, such as France.
Erdogan uses the refugees to extort financial and political
gains from Europe. He uses the same card in putting the lid on European anger
at the provocative policies of his country, ones that harm the interests of
European states in the most part.
Erdogan is running into troubles with Greece and France. Turkey
is also running into a potential confrontation with Italy because it prevents
the Italian state-owned company, Eni, from exploring gas off the coast of
Cyprus.
Renewed threat
Ankara threatened on June 30 to use the refugees as a
pressure card against the Europeans once more.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu
accused European states of failing to honor their commitments to his country as
far as the refugees file is concerned.
Cavusoglu's remarks coincided
with the 4th Brussels meeting on Syria and the Middle East.
Turkey also accused Greece of denying the refugees entry
and sending them back to the sea.
Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias countered by accusing
Ankara of exacerbating the refugee crisis by using the refugees politically.
This exposes the refugees to hardships, Dendias said,
noting that his country abides by all international efforts for settling the
Syrian crisis.
Timing
On July 3, Radio Monte Carlo gave an insight into the
reasons why Turkey is using the refugee card now.
The radio said Ankara is afraid that European states would
put pressure on it because of its violations in Libya, during a conference on
the Libyan crisis on July 9.
It added that the Turkish blackmail casts its shadows on
the decisions the meeting will take, including France's pursuit to get those
meeting to condemn Turkish interference in Libya.




