Turkey is no longer a partner in the region, Macron says
French President Emmanuel Macron said during the meeting
with leaders from six Mediterranean EU countries on Thursday for talks focused
on growing tensions between Turkey, Greece and Cyprus that Turkey was behaving
like a NATO ally in the region.
Macron called Turkey's behaviour in the region
"unacceptable" and he said he told Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan in private talks what he says publicly.
"Turkey signed a [maritime] deal with Libya while
ignored Greece's legitimate rights. Turkey's activities off the coast of Cyprus
are also unacceptable. These provocations at the same time not fitting for a
big state. The Turkish people are grand. However, we need to be more
straightforward with the Erdoğan government," said Macron in the press
briefing before the summit.
Macron, in the same briefing, said that Turkey is not
behaving like an ally even though Ankara is a NATO member.
Turkey was quick to respond to Macron’s remarks, Turkish
Foreign Ministry said the French President made an "arrogant statement
reflecting his old colonialist reflexes targeting the country and President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan."
“In fact, Macron's statements are a manifestation of his
own incompetence and despair. The world has left behind the days when they
freely acted. Macron, whose sneaky foreign policy plans were spoiled by us,
every day attacks Turkey and our president with his feeling of grudge,” the
ministry said in a statement.
The summit on the French island of Corsica is bringing
together the leaders of France, Italy, Malta, Portugal, Spain, Greece and
Cyprus. It was set to begin at around 3 p.m. central European time, according
to Agence France Presse.
The aim of the talks is to "make progress in the
consensus on the relationship of the (European Union) with Turkey above all
ahead of the 24-25 September EU summit", AFP cited a French presidential
official as saying.
The EU’s foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell said on Aug.
28 that the bloc was preparing sanctions against Turkey that could be discussed
at EU summit.
Macron will hold talks with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos
Mitsotakis before Thursday’s meeting, AFP said.
France has strongly backed Greece and Cyprus in a growing
standoff with Turkey over territorial claims and a military buildup in the
eastern Mediterranean that has sparked fears of conflict.
The Greek media has said Greece may purchase Rafale
fighter jets and at least one frigate from France, in a sign of an increasingly
strong alliance between Paris and Athens.
Turkey still has time to avoid sanctions and “take a step
back” from its activities in the sub-region, Mitsotakis said in an op-ed
published in The Times on Wednesday.
“We do need dialogue, but not when held at gunpoint. What
threatens my country’s security and stability threatens the well-being and
safety of all EU member states,” he said. “If Europe wants to exercise true
geopolitical power, it simply cannot afford to appease a belligerent Turkey.”
However, Greece’s Deputy Foreign Minister Miltiadis
Varvitsiotis said on Thursday that if Turkey does not remove military and
research vessels from Cypriot waters, the EU must issue “severe sanctions,"
Reuters reported.
“The sanctions should put this pressure, to be severe,
for a limited time, but severe, in order to send the message that Europe is
here to negotiate but is also here to defend its values,” Miltiadis
Varvitsiotis told the European Parliament’s foreign affairs committee.
On Wednesday, Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar told
his German counterpart Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer that other countries involved
in the eastern Mediterranean dispute should approach the issue with
"common sense and spirit of the alliance", state-run Anadolu news
agency reported, citing an official statement.
Turkey says it is ready for talks with Greece and accuses
Athens of failing to come to the negotiating table.
Political and military tensions between Turkey and Greece
have intensified after Ankara sent the Oruç Reis research vessel escorted by
Turkish warships to a disputed area between Cyprus and the Greek island of
Crete on Aug. 10. Athens responded to the move by sending naval and air units
to shadow the vessel and conducted military exercises with Cyprus and France in
the area, creating a standoff at risk of escalating into a direct
confrontation.
Turkey is righteous and resolute, will never allow any
fait accompli, and will continue to defend its rights based international law,
Akar said.
During a visit to Ankara this week, NATO Military
Committee Chairman Stuart Peach said Turkey was a valuable ally for the
military alliance, of which Greece is also a member.
“Turkey makes essential contributions to NATO operations
and activities. NATO is working to strengthen further our collective deterrence
and defence, and to project stability beyond our borders, and Turkey is playing
a key role in both,” Peach said, according to NATO’s official website.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Sept. 3
that Turkey and Greece had agreed to begin technical talks at NATO to resolve
tensions in the region, a statement Athens later denied.
Stoltenberg gave the countries a deadline, which expires
on Thursday, to respond to his proposals for talks on de-escalating tensions,
Greek newspaper Kathimerini reported on Wednesday.
Turkish and Greek officials at NATO headquarters held
talks on how to avoid military escalation in the eastern Mediterranean on
Thursday.
"The following meeting is planned to be held in the
coming days," Turkish Defence Ministry said on Twitter, without providing
further details on the meeting.



