Turkey must drop ‘threats’ for talks to begin: Greek PM
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Friday
told Turkey to stop making “threats” against his country if talks on reducing
tension in the eastern Mediterranean over maritime borders and gas exploration
are to begin.
“Let threats go away so that the contacts can
begin,” Mitsotakis said as he met a visiting senior member of the Chinese
Communist party.
Tensions are running high over Turkey’s drilling
activities in the eastern Mediterranean which Greece and Cyprus say violate
their sovereignty.
Turkey on August 10 deployed the Oruc Reis research
vessel and an escorting flotilla of warships to the disputed waters between
Cyprus and the Greek islands of Kastellorizo and Crete, and has since prolonged
the mission three times.
Greece responded by staging naval exercises with
several EU allies and the United Arab Emirates, not far from smaller ones
Turkey conducted between Cyprus and Crete last week.
Mitsotakis on Friday said that Greek Foreign
Minister Nikos Dendias would later on Friday brief UN Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres in New York on Turkey’s “lawless activity.”
Greece denied late Thursday that it had agreed to
hold NATO-brokered talks with Turkey to de-escalate tensions over maritime
borders and gas exploration rights.
“Published information claiming Greece and Turkey
have agreed to hold so-called ‘technical talks’ on de-escalating tensions in
the eastern Mediterranean do not correspond to reality,” Greece’s foreign
ministry said.
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg had earlier said the two
NATO allies had “agreed to enter into technical talks at NATO to establish
mechanisms for military de-confliction to reduce the risk of incidents and
accidents in the Eastern Mediterranean.”
Greek government spokesman Stelios Petsas on Friday
said Stoltenberg’s initiative “is very far from being termed an agreement to
restart dialogue.”
The Greek foreign ministry stressed that
“de-escalation will only take place with the immediate withdrawal of all
Turkish vessels from the Greek continental shelf.”
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
repeatedly lashed out at Greece, and also France, recently calling their
respective leaders “greedy and incompetent” for challenging Turkish energy
exploration in the eastern Mediterranean.
“When the time comes to fight, we will not hesitate
to make sacrifices,” Erdogan told newly-commissioned officers in Ankara on
Sunday.
“The question is: when they stand against us in the
Mediterranean, are they ready to make the same sacrifices?
“To our enemies, we say: Bring it on!”
France’s support for Greece is brewing a serious
crisis for the NATO military alliance.
The European Union has been watching the escalating
row with growing concern, repeatedly urging Turkey to stop the exploration activities
and threatening to slap sanctions on Ankara if it refused to solve the dispute
through dialogue.
EU diplomatic chief Josep Borrell has said that
unless Turkey can be engaged in talks, the bloc could develop a list of
sanctions at a European Council on September 24 and 25.
Mitsotakis said Turkey was “undermining”
international law and “endangering” regional security by seeking to “alter”
geography.



