Pompeo heads for Cyprus as Turkey tensions rage
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will travel to Cyprus
on Saturday in a bid to broker a peaceful solution to tensions with Turkey in
the eastern Mediterranean, Agence France Presse reported on Friday.
Pompeo will also call on Turkey to withdraw warships from
disputed waters, a condition Greece has set to allow talks to take place.
The aim of the Saturday visit was to understand “the
risks that are associated from the people of Cyprus' perspective", Pompeo
said. He was speaking to reporters on his plane on Thursday ahead of meetings
in Doha, according to AFP.
Political and
military tensions between Greece, Turkey and Cyprus have intensified this year
over disputed territories in the Mediterranean and Aegean. Relations worsened
after Turkey sent the Oruç Reis research vessel, escorted by warships, to
explore for hydrocarbons in an area between Cyprus and the Greek island of
Crete on Aug. 10.
Athens has responded to the Turkish move by sending naval
and air units to shadow the Oruç Reis and conducting military exercises with
Cyprus and France, solidifying a standoff at risk of escalating into a direct
confrontation.
The dispute "has to be resolved in a way that's
diplomatic and peaceful", Pompeo said. "We hope there will be real
conversations and we hope the military assets that are there will be withdrawn
so that these conversations can take place."
Pompeo's trip comes after the United States said it
lifted a decades-old arms embargo on Cyprus for the purchase of non-lethal
defence equipment, outraging Turkey. Following the U.S. announcement on Sept 1,
the Turkish Foreign Ministry said the step did not comply with the “the spirit
of the alliance” between Ankara and Washington.
The United States, Germany and NATO have sought to
de-escalate the tensions between Turkey and Greece.
Pompeo is visiting Cyprus after Greece and Turkey
provided conflicting accounts of the nature and success of NATO-sponsored
technical meetings this week designed to end the military standoff.
“Views were exchanged at the meeting, where measures to
prevent possible interventions between military elements were discussed,” the
Turkish Defence Ministry said in a statement on Thursday.
No dialogue was established between Greek and Turkish
NATO representatives, the Athens News Agency reported citing diplomatic
sources.
The Greek representative went to the office of the
Chairman of the NATO Military Committee to present the country’s assessment of
the NATO Secretary-General's proposals for a possible de-escalation mechanism,
the news agency said.
“There was no exchange of views,” the sources said.
Ankara's statement was “part of Turkey's effort to present an unrealistic
picture to avoid possible sanctions”, they said.
The European Union’s political leaders will meet at the
end of September to discuss possible sanctions against Turkey. On Thursday,
French President Emmanuel Macron hosted the heads of state of six EU
Mediterranean countries, who released a joint statement expressing solidarity
with Greece and Cyprus.



