Erdogan insists on violating Greece’s maritime domain after Black Sea gas lie
 
The Turkish opposition has exposed President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
lies about gas discoveries, which the Turkish president resorts to with the
approach of any elections in his country, whether presidential or legislative,
which has been repeated five times within 10 years. Now, a new lie has
appeared, this time regarding the discovery of a gas field in the Black Sea
sufficient to cover Turkey’s needs for a period of no less than 10 years.
However, this has been denied by Turkish economic and energy experts.
After the opposition exposed Erdogan’s lies, he tried to win
electoral votes and restore his popularity by continuing to threaten Greece
against the backdrop of his insistence on gas exploration in the eastern
Mediterranean despite international criticism.
On Monday, August 24, Erdogan said that the Turkish navy
would not retreat from its positions in the eastern Mediterranean while
"(Greece) spread chaos" there.
The two countries have sent frigates amid an escalating war
of words due to competing demands for entitlement to energy resources.
Following a cabinet meeting, Erdogan said, “Those who cast
Greece in front of the Turkish Navy will not stand behind them.”
“Athens has no right to broadcast navigation advisories
known as Navtex in the areas claimed by Ankara,” he added.
“Greece has announced its navigation advisories illegally
and in a crude manner,” he said, adding that “Greece is spreading chaos that it
will not be able to escape from.”
Erdogan’s threats against Greece are angering the European
Union, amid calls for an end to Ankara’s actions that strike against all
international decisions rejecting the illegal exploration operations.
Turkey has extended the exploration mission carried out by
the ship Oruç Reis in a disputed area in the eastern Mediterranean until August
27, thus fueling tension in the region, as Athens describes the exploration as
illegal.
Greek government spokesman Stelios Petsas told reporters on
Monday that Greece has issued navigation advisories that will also expire on
August 27.
"Greece is responding calmly with readiness on the
diplomatic and practical levels. It will do whatever is necessary to defend its
sovereign rights,” he added.
There are severe differences between Turkey and Greece, both
NATO members, over the sovereignty of oil and gas resources in the region,
based on conflicting views about the extension of the continental shelf of each
of the two countries in the waters that are dominated by islands, most of them
Greek.
On the other hand, the Turkish Ministry of Defense said that
a naval exercise involving ships from the Turkish Navy and the navies of allied
countries began in the eastern Mediterranean on August 25.
In the face of Turkey’s violations, Egypt this month signed
an agreement with Greece to demarcate the maritime borders to take advantage of
the wealth existing in the exclusive economic zone between the two countries.
On Tuesday, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas traveled to
Athens and then to Ankara, with the aim of calming the situation between Greece
and Turkey.
“It is imperative that Germany remain in dialogue with the
two parties, [because] the goal is for Greece and Turkey to solve their
differences directly,” German government spokesman Steffen Seibert told
reporters.
“These [mediation] efforts are necessary” to calm down and “find
a solution to tensions,” said German Foreign Ministry spokesman Christopher
Burger.
Maas met his Greek counterpart Nikos Dendias, as well as
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, before meeting his Turkish counterpart
Mevlut Cavusoglu in Ankara.
“We fear that tensions will continue to affect relations
between Turkey and the European Union, and that further escalation will have
dire consequences,” Burger said.
In response to a question about the German minister's visit
to Athens during a press conference Monday, Greek government spokesman Stelios
Petsas said that any initiative taken by Germany, as a great power in Europe,
“will be of special importance,” but added that “Turkey must prove its
credibility.”
In the context of his discussion of foreign files, Erdogan
criticized the statements of the Democratic candidate for the US presidency,
Joe Biden, about Turkey, noting that American politics is “a prisoner of a sick
mentality that prefers dealing with terrorist organizations rather than the
rule of law and democracy.”
Speaking about terrorist organizations, Erdogan meant the
relationship between Washington and Kurdish groups in Syria. However, it is
Ankara that has distinguished relations with jihadist groups, as it has sent
many of mercenaries to fight in Libya alongside the Government of National
Accord (GNA) militias.
The Turkish president added that the mentality that ignored
terrorist attacks on Turkey, waited impatiently for the result of the coup
attempt, and embraced all the revolutionaries after their defeat is “a disgrace
to democracy.”
Erdogan pointed out that the Turkish opposition focused on
the reason for his months-long delay in highlighting Biden's statements instead
of displaying a strong reaction against them at the time.
Ten days ago, media circulated statements made by Biden last
December, in which he called for cooperation with the Turkish opposition to “bring
down” Erdogan.
Erdogan wants to make his regime appear as a victim and that
his rule is targeted by Biden, in an attempt to win domestic sympathy that is
difficult to attain.
          
     
                               
 
 


