Turkish defense minister warns Athens not to test Ankara’s patience
ANKARA: Greece should refrain from testing Turkey’s patience
with provocations, including with a threat to extend its territorial waters in
the Aegean, Turkey’s defense minister warned on Saturday.
Speaking to a group of journalists in Ankara, Hulusi Akar
also said Turkey wanted to resolve disputes with neighbor and fellow NATO
member Greece through dialogue and turn the Aegean into a “sea of friendship”
but accused Athens of pressing ahead with what he said were provocative
actions, including militarizing islands close to mainland Turkey, in breach of
international agreements.
“They (Greece) should not miscalculate and think it’s the
right time (to extend the territorial waters to) 12 miles,” Akar said. “They
should not test us in any way, and should not embark on such an adventure. I
hope they don’t make such a mistake.”
He added: “Let the two sides benefit from the riches, let
both the Turkish people and the Greek people live happily and prosperously.”
Greece and Turkey have long been at odds over a series of
disputes, including territorial rights in the Aegean Sea and energy exploration
rights in the eastern Mediterranean. Tensions flared in the summer of 2020 over
exploratory drilling rights in areas in the Mediterranean where Greece and
Cyprus claim their own exclusive economic zone.
Greece says it maintains its right to extend its territorial
waters from the current six to 12 nautical miles around its Aegean islands.
Turkey has long said it would consider the move — which would block its own
access to the Aegean — as a cause for war. Last year, the Greek parliament
voted to extend its waters along its western coastline, on the other side of
the country, to 12 miles.
Athens has recently called on Turkey to revoke the decision
to consider an extension of the territorial waters as a cause for war if it
wants to normalize ties. It has also urged Ankara to end what it also terms as
provocations in the Aegean and the eastern Mediterranean.
Commenting on the NATO alliance, meanwhile, Akar lamented
what he said was an “open or covert” arms embargo by some NATO allies on
Turkey. He said those countries were “weakening” the alliance by not selling
defense components to Turkey.
The US slapped sanctions on some Turkish defense officials
and expelled Turkey from the US-led F-35 fighter jet program after Turkey
purchased Russia’s advanced S-400 long-range missile defense system, over
concerns that the Russian technology would put the safety of the fighter jets
at risk.
Canada canceled export licenses for drone technology to
Turkey in April last year after finding the equipment had been used by Turkey’s
ally Azerbaijan in the conflict with Armenian forces in Nagorno-Karabakh five
months earlier. Arms control advocates had claimed the UAVs were using imaging
and targeting systems produced by a Canadian company.
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