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What Is Turkey Thinking In The Eastern Med?

dBSPL

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by Richard Outzen
Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Frictions between Turkey and some of its Mediterranean neighbors have escalated in recent years, producing a stream of Western press alarms about aggressive Turkish policy.1 Expansionism2, neo-Ottomanism and Islamism3, or recklessness4 have been portrayed as drivers of such aggression, frequently with a rejoinder that the West must unite to make Turkey back down. These reductionist explanations come from writers without contacts among Turkey’s security decision-makers - and without inclination to address Turkish analysis on the subject. They ignore the fact that Turkish assertiveness in the eastern Mediterranean is systematic and strategic, rooted in practical interests with a pragmatic solution in mind.


From Ankara’s view - which must be accurately understood if it is to be either countered or accommodated - Turkey’s recent assertiveness is the natural response to earlier passivity that was punished with provocation. Turks now believe that decades of land-focused security policy and lax assertion of Turkish maritime rights left room for Greece, Cyprus, and other actors to pursue unilateral moves that undermined Turkish interests. Tools of policy, military doctrine, and power projection have thus been applied to reverse these provocations and force a compromise solution. Western observers are free to ascribe to alternative narratives, but they should understand the logical underpinnings and operational heft supporting Turkey’s views before formulating an appropriate response.


Precedents and Provocations


Turks, like most of their Mediterranean neighbors, view policy matters with a long historical memory and keen sense of grievance. The ethnic cleansing of Cretan Ottomans after 1897 is often a starting point for Turkish framing of the Mediterranean: Western powers adjudicated a Greco-Turkish conflict by expelling Ottoman forces and empowering the Greeks, who over several decades drove out Turks and Greek Muslims.5 The collapse of a unified government in Cyprus between 1962 and 1974 - which the Turks attribute to escalating violations by radical Greek nationalists that other guarantor powers ignored - also features prominently in the Turkish narrative.6 Finally Europeans may have forgotten, though Turks will not, that the combined forces of Greece, France, Italy militarily occupied parts of Anatolia’s Aegean and Mediterranean coasts less than a century ago.7


Turks are also provoked by Greece’s perceived intransigence on maritime demarcation and territorial claims. Greece asserts a suite of maritime rights based on its archipelago of modestly-sized islands near the Turkish coast, including territorial zones, exclusive economic zones, sovereignty over land and air features quite near the Turkish coast, and militarization rights over islands ceded by Italy after the Second World War.8 If applied without compromise or due concern for their impact on Turkey, these demands could deny Turkey navigation and exploitation of waters visible from its mainland. Turkish arguments for island waters scaled to size and proximity to coastlines are hardly far-fetched.9 In fact, the International Court of Justice’s ruling in similar cases (Tunisia-Italy and Malta-Italy) have strengthened Turkey’s position, especially on the principle of equitable distance compromises.10 Greece has yet to back off its maximalist position, and the matter was exacerbated when the Republic of Cyprus began formally delimiting maritime zones without consultations either with Turks in the northern part of the island or in Turkey proper. Nicosia made such agreements with Egypt in 2003 and Lebanon in 2007, angering Ankara and scuttling the Annan Plan for peace for Cyprus. The European Union accession of Cyprus shortly after it rejected the Annan plan deepened Ankara’s dismay.11


Turkey has submitted its arguments on maritime demarcation to the United Nations, but regional governments ignored complex legal issues while tacitly endorsing Greece’s claims by pursuing joint energy projects, creating a sort of consortium provocation.12 Greece, Cyprus and Israel began work on a gas pipeline avoiding Turkey in 2012.13 Egypt created a regional gas forum in 2019 that included Italy, Cyprus, Greece, Israel, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority, but excluded Turkey.14 Turkey’s eastern Mediterranean naval patrols, energy exploration, and maritime deal with Libya aimed to block the establishment of navigation precedents or energy projects that exclude them; this is economic and strategic hardball, not adventurism.15 Turkey considers energy resources and routes strategic priorities of the first order, and will go to great lengths to protect them.16


Finally, the Turks perceive military provocation in the eastern Mediterranean, especially from France. President Macron has increased naval patrols there, pushed for aircraft and ship sales to Greece, and described Turkey as a revisionist power that Europe must deter.17 Emirati and French planes joined Greek counterparts for air exercises in Crete last year in a demonstration clearly targeting Turkey’s presence in the eastern Mediterranean.18 More recently, the U.S. has increased its military presence in and activities with Greece, both to strengthen its flexibility regarding threats in the Black Sea and Middle East, but implicitly to calm Greek anxieties about military threats from their neighbor to the east.19


Turkish Response


Ankara has responded strategically and systematically, if not delicately, to perceived provocations. The first strategic element has been sustained bilateral and multilateral diplomacy to reiterate Ankara’s legal case and concerns.20 The second has been the promulgation of a coherent doctrine that articulates and connects Turkey’s maritime claims, capabilities, vision, and program of action (Mavi Vatan, or “Blue Homeland”). The developers of the doctrine, naval officers Cihat Yayci and Cem Gurdeniz, insist that it is defensive in nature and aimed at compromise and equity, rather than dominance.21 They also see it as a way to make Turkey’s case in the context of international law, not to bypass that framework.22


The third strategic element was development of naval power projection tools, to include domestically-produced ships and submarines23, missiles24, and naval drones25. The fourth was extending the reach of the Turkish Navy through training, equipping, and access agreements with foreign navies, including Qatar26, Libya27, and Albania.28 The fifth was acquisition of a fleet of drilling vessels to enable Turkish energy exploration.29 The final element was an increased tempo for naval deployments, with a quantity of vessels and sustained operational capability that no other fleet - or combination of fleets - in the region can match.30


These steps, together with Turkey’s long Mediterranean coastline and robust support infrastructure near the coast, give Turkey an effective check on military or economic activities that Ankara finds objectionable. Turkey cannot be militarily intimidated in these waters, as the French learned after an incident between French and Turkish ships that NATO declined to blame on the Turks.31 Given that the Turks cannot be coerced successfully and will not abjure their rights, compromise seems a more promising path.


Calming Troubled Waters


Despite his frequent rhetorical broadsides over the eastern Mediterranean, President Erdogan clearly has pursued this strategy neither recklessly nor impulsively, but to get to negotiations.32 His stated desire for a compromise solution is echoed by sources in Ankara.33 The outlines of a compromise solution are not complicated: a consultative mechanism, economic cooperation, inclusion of Turkey, NATO as the regional security leader, and negotiated maritime rights with International Court of Justice arbitration if the sides cannot agree.


There is much to be gained by a deal that enables Israel, Greece, Libya, Egypt, Turkey, and Cypriots on both sides of the island to benefit from energy finds and transit in the Mediterranean.34 Unfortunately and ironically, efforts to find that deal are undercut by the increasingly one-sided tack taken by Paris, and to a lesser extent by Washington. Greek intransigence yields upgraded defense ties and assistance from external powers, and puts pressure on Turkey; there is little incentive for Athens to change that, for now. Yet Turkey remains immoveable for the reasons examined above. Creative diplomacy and win/win solutions, not attempts to isolate or deter/coerce Turkey, will be necessary.35


Policymakers in Europe and the United States should turn away from the one-sided reductionist approach to tensions in the eastern Mediterranean. This is not a problem of revisionism versus status quo; it is a very messy intersection of legal, economic, and strategic interests that have been in conflict for decades. Rather than deepen current cleavages within NATO - with only Russian standing to benefit - it is time to take the Turks at their word by mobilizing multilateral support not for coercion, but for an inclusive project for the eastern Mediterranean.

1 See for example Svante Cornell and Michael Makovsky, “Addressing Turkish Aggression in the Eastern Mediterranean,” The Defense Post, August 14, 2020, https://www.thedefensepost.com/2020/08/14/turkish-aggression-mediterranean/.
2 Tziarras, Zenonas and Jalel Harchaoui “What Erdogan Really Wants in the Eastern Mediterranean,” Foreign Policy, January 19, 2021 https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/01/1...astern-mediterranean-sovereignty-natural-gas/.
3 Maziad, Marwa and Jake Sotiriadis “Turkey’s Dangerous New Exports: Pan-Islamist, Neo-Ottoman Visions and Regional Instability,” Policy Analysis, Middle East Institute, April 21, 2020, https://www.mei.edu/publications/tu...pan-islamist-neo-ottoman-visions-and-regional.
4 Gokce, Yasir and Mehmeet Bozkaya “From Prudence to Recklessness: Erdogan’s Risky Plays with International Law,” Kennedy School Review, February 28, 2020 https://ksr.hkspublications.org/202...-erdogans-risky-plays-with-international-law/.
5 Ainsworth, Rachel “The Cretan Rebellion of 1897 and the Emigration of the Cretan Muslims,” Refugee History, July 20, 2017 http://refugeehistory.org/blog/2017...1897-and-the-emigration-of-the-cretan-muslims.
6 Dee, Liz “The 1974 Turkish Intervention in Cyprus,” A Moment in U.S. Diplomatic History, Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training, July 3, 2014, https://adst.org/2014/07/the-1974-turkish-intervention-in-cyprus/.
7 Zurcher, Erik Turkey: A Modern History, I.B. Tauris, London, 2014 (3rd Volume), pp. 140-160.
8 Gavouneli, Maria “Whose Sea? A Greek International Law Perspective on the Greek-Turkish Disputes,” Europe/World Blog, Institut Montaigne, October 16, 2020 https://www.institutmontaigne.org/e...tional-law-perspective-greek-turkish-disputes.
9 Kouparanis, Panagiotis “Turkey’s Maritime Claims in the Mediterranean Sea Raise Thorny Legal Questions,” Deutsche Welle, July 21, 2020, https://www.dw.com/en/turkeys-marit...n-sea-raise-thorny-legal-questions/a-54256300.
10 Altunisik, Meliha Benli “Turkey’s Eastern Mediterranean Quagmire,” Policy Analysis, Middle East Institute, February 18, 2020 https://www.mei.edu/publications/turkeys-eastern-mediterranean-quagmire.
11 Altunisik, Meliha Benli “Turkey’s Eastern Mediterranean Quagmire,” Policy Analysis, Middle East Institute, February 18, 2020 https://www.mei.edu/publications/turkeys-eastern-mediterranean-quagmire.
12 United Nations, “Turkey,” Law of the Sea: Legislation and Treaties, https://www.un.org/Depts/los/LEGISLATIONANDTREATIES/STATEFILES/TUR.htm.
13 Tsafos, Nikos “Can the East Med Pipeline Work?” CSIS Commentary, Center for Strategic and International Studies, January 22, 2019 https://www.csis.org/analysis/can-east-med-pipeline-work.
14 Eastern Mediterranean Gas Forum homepage https://emgf.org, accessed November 20. 2021.
15 Ashaboglu, Rona “Turkey and the Future of the EastMed Pipeline Project,” Wharton Energy Group Newsletter, November 22, 2020, http://whartonenergygroup.com/newsl...nd-the-future-of-the-eastmed-pipeline-project.
16 Gagliano, Giuseppe “The Projection of Turkish Power in the Eastern Mediterranean,” Modern Diplomacy, January 18, 2021 https://moderndiplomacy.eu/2021/01/18/the-projection-of-turkish-power-in-the-eastern-mediterranean/.
17 Wintour, Patrick “How a Rush for Mediterranean Gas Threatens to Push Greece and Turkey Into War,” The Guardian, September 11, 2020 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/11/mediterranean-gas-greece-turkey-dispute-nato.
18 Iddon, Paul “UAE Dispatches Fighter Jets to Support its Allies Against Turkey,” Forbes.com, August 26, 2020 https://www.forbes.com/sites/paulid...upport-allies-against-turkey/?sh=160534d027e1.
19 Kokkinidis, Tasos “U.S. Forces Prepare for Largest-Ever Military Landing in Greece,” Greek Reporter, October 19, 2021 https://greekreporter.com/2021/10/19/us-forces-military-landing-greece/.
20 Kartal, Firdevs Bulut “Turkey Will Defend Its Rights in East Med, Aegean, Black Sea,” Anadolu Agency, August 26, 2020, https://www.aa.com.tr/en/politics/turkey-will-defend-its-rights-in-east-med-aegean-black-sea/1953784.
21 Vita, Lorenzo “What Turkey Wants,” Inside Over, September 8, 2020, https://www.insideover.com/politics/mediterranean-gurdeniz-turkey.html.
22 Yayci, Cihat and Zeynep Ceyhan “Israel Is Turkey’s Neighbor Across the Sea: Delimitation of the Maritime Jurisdiction Areas Between Turkey and Israel,” Turkeyscope, Moshe Dayan Center, December 7, 2020 https://dayan.org/content/israel-tu...on-maritime-jurisdiction-areas-between-turkey.
23 Gokalp, Burak Tunahan “Turkish Defense Industry: Naval Forces,” The FEAS Journal, May 25, 2020 https://thefeasjournal.com/2020/05/05/turkish-defense-industry-naval-forces/.
24 Archus, Dorian “ATMACA: Turkey’s First Indigenous Anti-Ship Missile,” Naval Post, September 5, 2020 https://navalpost.com/atmaca-turkeys-first-indigenous-anti-ship-missile/.
25 Ozberk, Tayfun “Turkey’s ULAQ USCV Hits the Target During Denizkurdu 2021 Exercise,” Naval News, May 28, 2021 https://www.navalnews.com/naval-new...s-the-target-during-denizkurdu-2021-exercise/.
26 Middle East Monitor (no byline), “Qatar Signs Turkey Naval Military Base Agreement,” March 14, 2018 https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20180314-qatar-signs-turkey-naval-military-base-agreement/.
27 Basaran, Elifnur “Turkish Naval Forces Set Up a Naval Base in Misrata,” Defenceturk.net, August 30, 2020 https://en.defenceturk.net/turkish-naval-forces-set-up-a-naval-base/.
28 Yaylali, Cem Devrim “TCG Preveze Arrives in Durres,” Bosphorous Naval News, March 22, 2018 https://turkishnavy.net/tag/albania/.
29 Associated Press (no byline) “Amid Tensions, Turkey Expands its Offshore Drilling Fleet,” abcnews.com, November 17, 2021 https://abcnews.go.com/Internationa...rkey-expands-offshore-drilling-fleet-81224089.
30 TRT World (no byline) “Turkish Naval Strength in Eastern Mediterranean Shifts Balance of Power,” trtworld.com, June 30, 2020 https://www.trtworld.com/turkey/tur...n-mediterranean-shifts-balance-of-power-37730.
31 Falk, Thomas “France and Turkey Remain on a Collision Course,” Inside Over, July 5, 2020, https://www.insideover.com/politics/france-and-turkey-remain-on-a-collision-course.html.
32 https://www.reuters.com/world/turke...ast-med-wants-negotiation-erdogan-2020-12-10/.
33 Author’s direct discussions with diplomatic officials and non-partisan strategic analysts during interviews and roundtable discussion in Ankara, 15-18 November 2021.
34 Dalay, Galip Turkey, Europe, and the Eastern Mediterranean: Charting a Way Out of the Current Deadlock (Policy Briefing), Brookings Doha Center, January 2021, pp. 8-10 https://www.brookings.edu/research/...n-charting-a-way-out-of-the-current-deadlock/.
35 International Crisis Group Turkey-Greece: From Maritime Brinksmanship to Dialogue (Europe Report No. 263), May 31, 2001, pp. i-ii https://www.crisisgroup.org/europe-...-turkey-greece-maritime-brinkmanship-dialogue.


Richard Outzen is a geopolitical analyst consulting for private-sector clients. A former US Army foreign area officer and senior advisor at the State Department, he is currently a PhD candidate at George Mason University’s Schar School and a senior fellow at the Jamestown Foundation. He served in Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel, Turkey, and Germany and speaks Turkish, Hebrew, Arabic, and German.
 
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The ethnic cleansing of Cretan Ottomans after 1897
What ethnic cleansing? Cretan Turks left for the mainland. Ever since that term was coined,everybody uses the phrase just like that.

I'm not blaming you @dBSPL of course,I'm talking about the original author. There was immigration,not "ethnic cleansing".

The problem of this thread is that buffoons like MMM-E will come and start their flaming again. And in the end we'll talk about the same things over and over again,that we've mentioned in so many other threads.

I think that Greece and Turkey could work out a deal for the area around Kastellorizo,maybe give Turkey a bit more of an expansion. But But Turkey has absolutely no right to claim the Greek Cypriot EEZ or demand profits from it for the Turkish Cypriots.

The important thing is that we can't have the Turkish EEZ cut off the area between Greece and Cyprus. There could be some deal about expanding the EEZ area next to Kastellorizo like I said above,but the Mavi Vatan claims are ridiculous.

The problem with the Turkish foreign policy is that Turkey often threatens with war and rarely TRULY goes to negotiations. Erdogan and Akar keep saying "we are a peaceful people" and "we are open to dialogue",but often either refuse to sit on the negotiating table and work out a deal or demand too much. It's almost like a delaying tactic or show for the international community.
 
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The problem of this thread is that buffoons like MMM-E will come and start their flaming again

haddini bil lan soytarı

who are you to talk about the original author ? you stupid buffoon

the original author is a geopolitical analyst who in Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel, Turkey, and Germany and speaks Turkish, Hebrew, Arabic, and German


I think that Greece and Turkey could work out a deal for the area around Kastellorizo,maybe give Turkey a bit more of an expansion. But But Turkey has absolutely no right to claim the Greek Cypriot EEZ or demand profits from it for the Turkish Cypriots

Greece-France has no rights and power to dictate anything to Turkiye
and Turkiye has right by agreements to protect the Turkish Cypriots ( Turkiye is guarantor state in Cyprus)

Greece is not Archipelagic State
and 10km2 tiny Kastellorizo can not generate EEZ of 200nm which is 582km away from Greek mainland and just 2km away from Turkish mainland

I very well knows about that Turkiye never will give up from its rights in the Eastern Mediterranean
 
Last edited:
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by Richard Outzen
Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Frictions between Turkey and some of its Mediterranean neighbors have escalated in recent years, producing a stream of Western press alarms about aggressive Turkish policy.1 Expansionism2, neo-Ottomanism and Islamism3, or recklessness4 have been portrayed as drivers of such aggression, frequently with a rejoinder that the West must unite to make Turkey back down. These reductionist explanations come from writers without contacts among Turkey’s security decision-makers - and without inclination to address Turkish analysis on the subject. They ignore the fact that Turkish assertiveness in the eastern Mediterranean is systematic and strategic, rooted in practical interests with a pragmatic solution in mind.


From Ankara’s view - which must be accurately understood if it is to be either countered or accommodated - Turkey’s recent assertiveness is the natural response to earlier passivity that was punished with provocation. Turks now believe that decades of land-focused security policy and lax assertion of Turkish maritime rights left room for Greece, Cyprus, and other actors to pursue unilateral moves that undermined Turkish interests. Tools of policy, military doctrine, and power projection have thus been applied to reverse these provocations and force a compromise solution. Western observers are free to ascribe to alternative narratives, but they should understand the logical underpinnings and operational heft supporting Turkey’s views before formulating an appropriate response.


Precedents and Provocations


Turks, like most of their Mediterranean neighbors, view policy matters with a long historical memory and keen sense of grievance. The ethnic cleansing of Cretan Ottomans after 1897 is often a starting point for Turkish framing of the Mediterranean: Western powers adjudicated a Greco-Turkish conflict by expelling Ottoman forces and empowering the Greeks, who over several decades drove out Turks and Greek Muslims.5 The collapse of a unified government in Cyprus between 1962 and 1974 - which the Turks attribute to escalating violations by radical Greek nationalists that other guarantor powers ignored - also features prominently in the Turkish narrative.6 Finally Europeans may have forgotten, though Turks will not, that the combined forces of Greece, France, Italy militarily occupied parts of Anatolia’s Aegean and Mediterranean coasts less than a century ago.7


Turks are also provoked by Greece’s perceived intransigence on maritime demarcation and territorial claims. Greece asserts a suite of maritime rights based on its archipelago of modestly-sized islands near the Turkish coast, including territorial zones, exclusive economic zones, sovereignty over land and air features quite near the Turkish coast, and militarization rights over islands ceded by Italy after the Second World War.8 If applied without compromise or due concern for their impact on Turkey, these demands could deny Turkey navigation and exploitation of waters visible from its mainland. Turkish arguments for island waters scaled to size and proximity to coastlines are hardly far-fetched.9 In fact, the International Court of Justice’s ruling in similar cases (Tunisia-Italy and Malta-Italy) have strengthened Turkey’s position, especially on the principle of equitable distance compromises.10 Greece has yet to back off its maximalist position, and the matter was exacerbated when the Republic of Cyprus began formally delimiting maritime zones without consultations either with Turks in the northern part of the island or in Turkey proper. Nicosia made such agreements with Egypt in 2003 and Lebanon in 2007, angering Ankara and scuttling the Annan Plan for peace for Cyprus. The European Union accession of Cyprus shortly after it rejected the Annan plan deepened Ankara’s dismay.11


Turkey has submitted its arguments on maritime demarcation to the United Nations, but regional governments ignored complex legal issues while tacitly endorsing Greece’s claims by pursuing joint energy projects, creating a sort of consortium provocation.12 Greece, Cyprus and Israel began work on a gas pipeline avoiding Turkey in 2012.13 Egypt created a regional gas forum in 2019 that included Italy, Cyprus, Greece, Israel, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority, but excluded Turkey.14 Turkey’s eastern Mediterranean naval patrols, energy exploration, and maritime deal with Libya aimed to block the establishment of navigation precedents or energy projects that exclude them; this is economic and strategic hardball, not adventurism.15 Turkey considers energy resources and routes strategic priorities of the first order, and will go to great lengths to protect them.16


Finally, the Turks perceive military provocation in the eastern Mediterranean, especially from France. President Macron has increased naval patrols there, pushed for aircraft and ship sales to Greece, and described Turkey as a revisionist power that Europe must deter.17 Emirati and French planes joined Greek counterparts for air exercises in Crete last year in a demonstration clearly targeting Turkey’s presence in the eastern Mediterranean.18 More recently, the U.S. has increased its military presence in and activities with Greece, both to strengthen its flexibility regarding threats in the Black Sea and Middle East, but implicitly to calm Greek anxieties about military threats from their neighbor to the east.19


Turkish Response


Ankara has responded strategically and systematically, if not delicately, to perceived provocations. The first strategic element has been sustained bilateral and multilateral diplomacy to reiterate Ankara’s legal case and concerns.20 The second has been the promulgation of a coherent doctrine that articulates and connects Turkey’s maritime claims, capabilities, vision, and program of action (Mavi Vatan, or “Blue Homeland”). The developers of the doctrine, naval officers Cihat Yayci and Cem Gurdeniz, insist that it is defensive in nature and aimed at compromise and equity, rather than dominance.21 They also see it as a way to make Turkey’s case in the context of international law, not to bypass that framework.22


The third strategic element was development of naval power projection tools, to include domestically-produced ships and submarines23, missiles24, and naval drones25. The fourth was extending the reach of the Turkish Navy through training, equipping, and access agreements with foreign navies, including Qatar26, Libya27, and Albania.28 The fifth was acquisition of a fleet of drilling vessels to enable Turkish energy exploration.29 The final element was an increased tempo for naval deployments, with a quantity of vessels and sustained operational capability that no other fleet - or combination of fleets - in the region can match.30


These steps, together with Turkey’s long Mediterranean coastline and robust support infrastructure near the coast, give Turkey an effective check on military or economic activities that Ankara finds objectionable. Turkey cannot be militarily intimidated in these waters, as the French learned after an incident between French and Turkish ships that NATO declined to blame on the Turks.31 Given that the Turks cannot be coerced successfully and will not abjure their rights, compromise seems a more promising path.


Calming Troubled Waters


Despite his frequent rhetorical broadsides over the eastern Mediterranean, President Erdogan clearly has pursued this strategy neither recklessly nor impulsively, but to get to negotiations.32 His stated desire for a compromise solution is echoed by sources in Ankara.33 The outlines of a compromise solution are not complicated: a consultative mechanism, economic cooperation, inclusion of Turkey, NATO as the regional security leader, and negotiated maritime rights with International Court of Justice arbitration if the sides cannot agree.


There is much to be gained by a deal that enables Israel, Greece, Libya, Egypt, Turkey, and Cypriots on both sides of the island to benefit from energy finds and transit in the Mediterranean.34 Unfortunately and ironically, efforts to find that deal are undercut by the increasingly one-sided tack taken by Paris, and to a lesser extent by Washington. Greek intransigence yields upgraded defense ties and assistance from external powers, and puts pressure on Turkey; there is little incentive for Athens to change that, for now. Yet Turkey remains immoveable for the reasons examined above. Creative diplomacy and win/win solutions, not attempts to isolate or deter/coerce Turkey, will be necessary.35


Policymakers in Europe and the United States should turn away from the one-sided reductionist approach to tensions in the eastern Mediterranean. This is not a problem of revisionism versus status quo; it is a very messy intersection of legal, economic, and strategic interests that have been in conflict for decades. Rather than deepen current cleavages within NATO - with only Russian standing to benefit - it is time to take the Turks at their word by mobilizing multilateral support not for coercion, but for an inclusive project for the eastern Mediterranean.

1 See for example Svante Cornell and Michael Makovsky, “Addressing Turkish Aggression in the Eastern Mediterranean,” The Defense Post, August 14, 2020, https://www.thedefensepost.com/2020/08/14/turkish-aggression-mediterranean/.
2 Tziarras, Zenonas and Jalel Harchaoui “What Erdogan Really Wants in the Eastern Mediterranean,” Foreign Policy, January 19, 2021 https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/01/1...astern-mediterranean-sovereignty-natural-gas/.
3 Maziad, Marwa and Jake Sotiriadis “Turkey’s Dangerous New Exports: Pan-Islamist, Neo-Ottoman Visions and Regional Instability,” Policy Analysis, Middle East Institute, April 21, 2020, https://www.mei.edu/publications/tu...pan-islamist-neo-ottoman-visions-and-regional.
4 Gokce, Yasir and Mehmeet Bozkaya “From Prudence to Recklessness: Erdogan’s Risky Plays with International Law,” Kennedy School Review, February 28, 2020 https://ksr.hkspublications.org/202...-erdogans-risky-plays-with-international-law/.
5 Ainsworth, Rachel “The Cretan Rebellion of 1897 and the Emigration of the Cretan Muslims,” Refugee History, July 20, 2017 http://refugeehistory.org/blog/2017...1897-and-the-emigration-of-the-cretan-muslims.
6 Dee, Liz “The 1974 Turkish Intervention in Cyprus,” A Moment in U.S. Diplomatic History, Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training, July 3, 2014, https://adst.org/2014/07/the-1974-turkish-intervention-in-cyprus/.
7 Zurcher, Erik Turkey: A Modern History, I.B. Tauris, London, 2014 (3rd Volume), pp. 140-160.
8 Gavouneli, Maria “Whose Sea? A Greek International Law Perspective on the Greek-Turkish Disputes,” Europe/World Blog, Institut Montaigne, October 16, 2020 https://www.institutmontaigne.org/e...tional-law-perspective-greek-turkish-disputes.
9 Kouparanis, Panagiotis “Turkey’s Maritime Claims in the Mediterranean Sea Raise Thorny Legal Questions,” Deutsche Welle, July 21, 2020, https://www.dw.com/en/turkeys-marit...n-sea-raise-thorny-legal-questions/a-54256300.
10 Altunisik, Meliha Benli “Turkey’s Eastern Mediterranean Quagmire,” Policy Analysis, Middle East Institute, February 18, 2020 https://www.mei.edu/publications/turkeys-eastern-mediterranean-quagmire.
11 Altunisik, Meliha Benli “Turkey’s Eastern Mediterranean Quagmire,” Policy Analysis, Middle East Institute, February 18, 2020 https://www.mei.edu/publications/turkeys-eastern-mediterranean-quagmire.
12 United Nations, “Turkey,” Law of the Sea: Legislation and Treaties, https://www.un.org/Depts/los/LEGISLATIONANDTREATIES/STATEFILES/TUR.htm.
13 Tsafos, Nikos “Can the East Med Pipeline Work?” CSIS Commentary, Center for Strategic and International Studies, January 22, 2019 https://www.csis.org/analysis/can-east-med-pipeline-work.
14 Eastern Mediterranean Gas Forum homepage https://emgf.org, accessed November 20. 2021.
15 Ashaboglu, Rona “Turkey and the Future of the EastMed Pipeline Project,” Wharton Energy Group Newsletter, November 22, 2020, http://whartonenergygroup.com/newsl...nd-the-future-of-the-eastmed-pipeline-project.
16 Gagliano, Giuseppe “The Projection of Turkish Power in the Eastern Mediterranean,” Modern Diplomacy, January 18, 2021 https://moderndiplomacy.eu/2021/01/18/the-projection-of-turkish-power-in-the-eastern-mediterranean/.
17 Wintour, Patrick “How a Rush for Mediterranean Gas Threatens to Push Greece and Turkey Into War,” The Guardian, September 11, 2020 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/11/mediterranean-gas-greece-turkey-dispute-nato.
18 Iddon, Paul “UAE Dispatches Fighter Jets to Support its Allies Against Turkey,” Forbes.com, August 26, 2020 https://www.forbes.com/sites/paulid...upport-allies-against-turkey/?sh=160534d027e1.
19 Kokkinidis, Tasos “U.S. Forces Prepare for Largest-Ever Military Landing in Greece,” Greek Reporter, October 19, 2021 https://greekreporter.com/2021/10/19/us-forces-military-landing-greece/.
20 Kartal, Firdevs Bulut “Turkey Will Defend Its Rights in East Med, Aegean, Black Sea,” Anadolu Agency, August 26, 2020, https://www.aa.com.tr/en/politics/turkey-will-defend-its-rights-in-east-med-aegean-black-sea/1953784.
21 Vita, Lorenzo “What Turkey Wants,” Inside Over, September 8, 2020, https://www.insideover.com/politics/mediterranean-gurdeniz-turkey.html.
22 Yayci, Cihat and Zeynep Ceyhan “Israel Is Turkey’s Neighbor Across the Sea: Delimitation of the Maritime Jurisdiction Areas Between Turkey and Israel,” Turkeyscope, Moshe Dayan Center, December 7, 2020 https://dayan.org/content/israel-tu...on-maritime-jurisdiction-areas-between-turkey.
23 Gokalp, Burak Tunahan “Turkish Defense Industry: Naval Forces,” The FEAS Journal, May 25, 2020 https://thefeasjournal.com/2020/05/05/turkish-defense-industry-naval-forces/.
24 Archus, Dorian “ATMACA: Turkey’s First Indigenous Anti-Ship Missile,” Naval Post, September 5, 2020 https://navalpost.com/atmaca-turkeys-first-indigenous-anti-ship-missile/.
25 Ozberk, Tayfun “Turkey’s ULAQ USCV Hits the Target During Denizkurdu 2021 Exercise,” Naval News, May 28, 2021 https://www.navalnews.com/naval-new...s-the-target-during-denizkurdu-2021-exercise/.
26 Middle East Monitor (no byline), “Qatar Signs Turkey Naval Military Base Agreement,” March 14, 2018 https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20180314-qatar-signs-turkey-naval-military-base-agreement/.
27 Basaran, Elifnur “Turkish Naval Forces Set Up a Naval Base in Misrata,” Defenceturk.net, August 30, 2020 https://en.defenceturk.net/turkish-naval-forces-set-up-a-naval-base/.
28 Yaylali, Cem Devrim “TCG Preveze Arrives in Durres,” Bosphorous Naval News, March 22, 2018 https://turkishnavy.net/tag/albania/.
29 Associated Press (no byline) “Amid Tensions, Turkey Expands its Offshore Drilling Fleet,” abcnews.com, November 17, 2021 https://abcnews.go.com/Internationa...rkey-expands-offshore-drilling-fleet-81224089.
30 TRT World (no byline) “Turkish Naval Strength in Eastern Mediterranean Shifts Balance of Power,” trtworld.com, June 30, 2020 https://www.trtworld.com/turkey/tur...n-mediterranean-shifts-balance-of-power-37730.
31 Falk, Thomas “France and Turkey Remain on a Collision Course,” Inside Over, July 5, 2020, https://www.insideover.com/politics/france-and-turkey-remain-on-a-collision-course.html.
32 https://www.reuters.com/world/turke...ast-med-wants-negotiation-erdogan-2020-12-10/.
33 Author’s direct discussions with diplomatic officials and non-partisan strategic analysts during interviews and roundtable discussion in Ankara, 15-18 November 2021.
34 Dalay, Galip Turkey, Europe, and the Eastern Mediterranean: Charting a Way Out of the Current Deadlock (Policy Briefing), Brookings Doha Center, January 2021, pp. 8-10 https://www.brookings.edu/research/...n-charting-a-way-out-of-the-current-deadlock/.
35 International Crisis Group Turkey-Greece: From Maritime Brinksmanship to Dialogue (Europe Report No. 263), May 31, 2001, pp. i-ii https://www.crisisgroup.org/europe-...-turkey-greece-maritime-brinkmanship-dialogue.


Richard Outzen is a geopolitical analyst consulting for private-sector clients. A former US Army foreign area officer and senior advisor at the State Department, he is currently a PhD candidate at George Mason University’s Schar School and a senior fellow at the Jamestown Foundation. He served in Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel, Turkey, and Germany and speaks Turkish, Hebrew, Arabic, and German.


We too have a long history memory and grievances. There is no room for compromise. What should this compromise look like? Turksh war ships right infront Crete? Have you looked at the laughable maps turkey prints?
 
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We too have a long history memory and grievances. There is no room for compromise. What should this compromise look like? Turksh war ships right infront Crete? Have you looked at the laughable maps turkey prints?
Turks tell us they "will not give up their rights" in the Mediterranean,if this map is the rights they are talking about

Mavi_Vatan.jpg


Then we won't give up our rights either.
 
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