Greece will no longer accept NATO's 'hands-off approach' to Turkey, PM says
 
Greece expects NATO to play its role with regard to
Turkish activities in the eastern Mediterranean and the Aegean, Greek Prime
Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has indicated, saying that the alliance’s
“hands-off approach” is no longer acceptable to him.
“I think within NATO it is very clear that this
hands-off approach - that ‘oh we have two NATO partners so we’re not going to
go into the details’ - is no longer going to be accepted by me. I raised this
with Secretary-General [Jens] Stoltenberg that we’re a NATO contributor and an
ally and…when we feel that a NATO ally is behaving in a way that endangers our
interests, we cannot expect from NATO a similar approach of ‘we don’t want to
interfere in your internal differences.’ This is profoundly unfair for Greece,”
Mitsotakis said during a conversation with former U.S. ambassador to Greece and
executive director of the Aspen Security Group, Nicholas Burns, at the online
Aspen Security Forum on Wednesday.
“I think the alliance will find itself faced with
the reality that an important member…behaves in a way that undermines the
alliance and the interests of other members of the alliance. It’s an issue we
can no longer afford to put under the rug,” he said, adding that Turkey’s
“unreliable behaviour” within the alliance, also raises security concerns.
“Purchasing the S-400 system is an issue of concern
to all of us, including the U.S. because it compromises the F-35 [fighter jet],
which is an integral part of NATO,” he said referring to the missile defence
system Turkey has acquired from Russia.
The United States should be alarmed by Ankara’s
activities in the eastern Mediterranean but also its involvement in Libya,
Mitsotakis said, adding that a visit to Washington last December gave him a
sense that “there is a bipartisan understanding that the relationship with
Turkey is not the same that is was three, four years ago. It’s not as
predictable.”
“Pieces of legislation sponsored by Senator [Robert]
Menendez clearly are an indication that there is a much better understanding in
Washington of what is really happening in the eastern Mediterranean,” the Greek
premier said in reference to the Eastern Mediterranean Security and Energy
Partnership Act of 2019. 
Statements from the U.S. State Department have also
been “overall quite supportive of Greece’s positions” with a “few exceptions,”
Mitsotakis said.
“When there is encouragement for both parties to
refrain this is a fundamentally unjust statement as far as Greece is concerned
because we are not engaging in any provocative activity,” he said.
Mitsotakis added that there also appears to be a
“much better understanding from within the European Union that Turkey’s role in
our part of the world is really not very constructive”.
“I’ve made it very clear to our European partners
that should Turkey pursue this activity, there need to be consequences, there
need to be sanctions,” he said.
“Either the relationship is going to improve or if
Turkey continues to violate the sovereign rights of Greece and Cyprus, the
European Union has to react,” the Greek prime minister said, stressing that
Greece is not seeking to isolate Turkey but to encourage a more “productive
relationship”.
          
     
                               
 
 


