Greece, U.S. foreign ministers to meet over Eastern Mediterranean tensions

The foreign ministers of Greece and the United
States will meet in Vienna on Friday to discuss tensions in the Eastern
Mediterranean, the Greek foreign ministry said, amid a dispute between Athens
and Ankara over hydrocarbon resources.
The meeting between Greek Foreign Minister Nikos
Dendias and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo comes days after Turkey
dispatched the seismic survey vessel Oruc Reis to an area of sea claimed by
both nations, saying it will operate there until Aug. 23.
Turkey has said it plans to issue gas exploration
and drilling licences in the region, somewhere between the Greek island of
Crete and Cyprus, this month.
NATO allies Greece and Turkey vehemently disagree
about their overlapping claims on hydrocarbon resources in the eastern
Meditteranean, based on conflicting views of how far their continental shelves
extend in waters dotted with islands.
Turkey’s latest moves, days after Greece signed a
maritime deal with Egypt which angered Ankara, have further raised tensions
with its neighbour, ending a brief period of calm brokered by Germany.
Dendias urged Turkey on Tuesday to “immediately
leave the Greek continental shelf” saying the country was determined to defend
its sovereign rights. Athens has also called for an emergency EU meeting to
address the issue.
An extraordinary EU foreign ministers’ meeting has
been set for Friday and will be held via teleconferene.
The United States has appealed for a resumption of
direct talks between Turkey and Greece, which Turkish presidential spokesman
Ibrahim Kalin said had been under way for two months until they were broken off
last week.
Turkey said the deal with Egypt - which Greek
diplomats said effectively nullified an accord between Turkey and the
internationally recognised government of Libya - showed it could not trust
Athens, and vowed to continue surveying waters that are also claimed by Greece
and Cyprus.