Greece, Turkey resume talks on maritime disputes after years of strife

Turkey and Greece resumed talks aimed at addressing long-standing maritime disputes on Monday, ending a five-year hiatus after months of tensions in the eastern Mediterranean.

Greek navy ships taking part in a military exercise in the eastern Mediterranean last Ausgust.
Greek navy ships taking part in a military exercise in the eastern Mediterranean last Ausgust. © Greek Defence Ministry handout, AFP
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The neighbouring NATO members are at odds over claims to Mediterranean waters and energy rights, air space and the status of some islands in the Aegean Sea. They made little progress in 60 rounds of talks from 2002 to 2016.

Plans for resuming talks foundered last year over Turkey's deployment of a seismic survey vessel in contested waters and disagreements over which topics they would cover. The vessel was withdrawn to Turkish shores last year.

>> Troubled waters: Greek-Turkish escalations in the Mediterranean

Ankara and Athens agreed this month to resume the talks in Istanbul, in a test of Turkey's hopes of improving its relations with the European Union, which has supported EU-member Greece and threatened sanctions on Turkey.

"Under the strong leadership of our president, the solution to all problems, including the Aegean, is possible and our will for this is strong," said Turkish presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin, who was part of Monday's talks.

As the talks resumed, Greece finalised a 2.5 billion euros ($3.04 billion) deal to purchase 18 French-made Rafale fighter jets. France said it would also present proposals to Greece for the renewal of its fleet of frigates.

>> Greece to buy French fighter jets in message to Turkey

The exploratory talks are aimed at reaching common ground on disputed issues to allow for formal negotiations. But, despite agreeing to resume talks, Ankara and Athens still appeared to disagree over the topics to be covered in the run-up to Monday's meeting.

'Zero naivety'

Athens has said it would discuss only the demarcation of exclusive economic zones and continental shelf in the Aegean Sea and eastern Mediterranean, and not issues of "national sovereignty", while Ankara has said it wants all issues, including air space and the Aegean islands, on the table.

Greek government spokesman Christos Tarantilis said on Monday Greece was "attending the talks in good faith and expects Turkey to act similarly", reiterating the Greek position that the talks are unofficial and focused on maritime zones only.

The agenda for Monday's talks, which lasted more than three hours, was not disclosed. Another round of talks is expected to be held in Athens, a Greek diplomatic source said, without providing any further details.

Despite the technical disagreements, both sides voiced guarded optimism, though they were still trading barbs in the days leading up to Monday's meetings.

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said last week Greece would approach the talks with optimism but "zero naivety", while Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said he hoped the resumption of talks would herald a new era.

Analysts have said an immediate breakthrough is unlikely given decades-old policy differences, but that resuming dialogue is an important first step after EU pressure on Ankara.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu held talks in Brussels last week to discuss possible future steps to maintain what he called the "positive atmosphere" between Ankara and the EU. In December, the bloc postponed the question of sanctions on Turkey until March.

(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS)

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