Turkey is undermining unity of NATO alliance, U.S. says
 
Phil Reeker, the top U.S. State Department official for
Europe, has criticised Turkey’s policy in the Aegean and the eastern
Mediterranean, while voicing concerns that Ankara’s activities are undermining
the unity of the NATO alliance.
“We have conveyed to Turkey repeatedly that its
overflights of Greek territory, its drilling activities in the waters off
Cyprus, its signing of a maritime delimitation MOU with Libya, and its stated
intent to explore for hydrocarbons on the basis of that MOU are provocative,
unhelpful, and raise tensions in the region,” Reeker said in a letter to the
American Hellenic Institute (AHI) on behalf of U.S. Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo.
AHI President Nick Larigakis had written to Pompeo on
June 25 to convey the institute’s grave concern about Turkey’s threat to
stability in the eastern Mediterranean.
In the letter, Reeker said that Washington “continues to
object strenuously” to Turkey’s purchase of Russian S-400 missile systems.
“Our suspension and pending removal of Turkey from the
F-35 programme in response to the S-400 acquisition signals the seriousness of
the administration’s approach to this issue and our willingness to impose
consequences. We are deeply concerned with reports that Turkey is continuing
its efforts to bring the S-400 into operation, and we have stressed that the
S-400 issue remains a major obstacle in the bilateral relationship and at
NATO,” he said.
Reeker said that U.S. sanctions on Turkish individuals
and entities following Turkey’s October 2019 incursion into northeast Syria
laid the groundwork for a negotiated ceasefire that remains in place.
“Secretary Pompeo takes his responsibilities under the
Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) seriously and
fully intends to comply with the law. The Department cannot pre-judge sanctions
decisions or preview a timeline for a determination specific to this
transaction,” he said.
          
     
                               
 
 


