Cyprus top diplomat Turkey is creating new Ottoman empire
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UNITED NATIONS (AP) â" The foreign minister of the divided island of Cyprus is accusing Turkeyâs president of attempting to promote a new Ottoman empire in the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East â" and says such an approach to geopolitics could adversely impact regional security.
Nikos Christodoulides, whose Mediterranean island nation is divided into a breakaway Turkish Cypriot north and internationally recognized Greek Cypriot south that is a member of the European Union, pointed to what he called aggressive Turkish behavior not only in Cyprus but in Syria, Iraq, Libya and other Arab countries in the region.
âWe see the militarization of the Turkish foreign policy,â Christodoulides said in an interview with The Associated Press, âand this is of great concern for all the countries in the region.â
Christodoulides invoked the Ottoman empire, which controlled much of southeastern Europe, western Asia and northern Africa between the 14th and early 20th centuries from Constantinople, which is now Turkeyâs largest city, Istanbul. The empire entered World War I on the side of Germany and the central powers that were defeated, leading to its breakup and the rise of the modern Turkish republic.
Christodoulides cited former Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutogluâs policy of âzero problems with neighboring countries,â which was a flagship concept of the ruling Justice and Development Party led by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
âFrom zero problems with the neighbors we end up today with Turkey having problems with all neighbors,â he said. âThere is not a single country that doesnât have problems with Turkey.â
âWhat we are witnessing from Turkey is an attempt to promote a new Ottoman policy in the region,â the Cypriot minister said. âTurkey wants to become the regional hegemony.â
Christodoulides was interviewed Monday, the final day of the U.N. General Assemblyâs annual high-level gathering of world leaders, after U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres hosted Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades and Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar in hopes of jump-starting a return to negotiations to reunite the Mediterranean island nation.
Numerous rounds of U.N.-mediated talks have ended in failure, with the last push for a peace deal in July 2017 ending in acrimony. That meeting also led to a shift by Turkey and the Turkish Cypriots toward seeking a two-state deal rather than pursuing their stated aim of reunifying the country as a federation made up of Greek and Turkish speaking zones as called for by the U.N. Security Council.
Turkeyâs Foreign Ministry didnât immediately respond to a request seeking comment.
Turkeyâs government, which takes pride in the countryâs Ottoman past, denies it has expansionist ambitions in the region and insists that its actions in the Mediterranean are geared toward safeguarding its interests and those of Turkish Cypriots on the divided island against what it regards as Cyprus and Greeceâs disproportionate maritime boundary and energy exploratory claims.
Turkey maintains troops in northern Iraq and frequently conducts cross-border operations there to battle Kurdish militants. It has also sent troops to Syria with the stated aim to clear militia forces linked to the Kurdish insurgency from its borders. In Libya, Turkey provided military support to the countryâs U.N.-backed government, helping to tip the balance in the conflict against the Benghazi-based forces that controlled the east. Turkey also signed an agreement with the Tripoli-based government delineating the maritime boundaries which triggered protests from Greece and Cyprus.
Christodoulides said Erdoganâs recent announcement of a drone base in breakaway northern Cyprus is an example of Turkeyâs Ottoman policy.
âThe main reason for establishing this drone base is to control the Middle East, is to control Israel, itâs to control Egypt,â he said. âItâs not for Cyprus, actually, because you donât need a drone base in Cyprus in order to see the situation in the island.â
Christodoulides said the Cypriot government vehemently opposes a two-state solution because it will give Turkey full control of âa so-called Turkish Cypriot sovereign state,â which isnât the case today because only Turkey recognizes the Turkish Cypriot north, not the international community.
âSo, they run with this to control the region, to promote its plan for the eastern Mediterranean,â he said.
The top Cypriot diplomat said that to understand Erdoganâs policy in Cyprus it must be seen in the context of what Turkish forces are doing in northern Syria and Iraq, in Libya and in some African countries.
Christodoulides said Cyprus is working to bolster its security with its neighbors, especially Israel and Egypt, but also the United States, recalling that Cyprus signed a statement of intent for security cooperation with the U.S. in 2018 that is âvery important.â Also important, he said: that the EU is considering developing âa security wing.â
The Cypriot minister renewed an invitation to Turkey â" made last year by the leaders of Cyprus, Egypt and Greece â" to become a partner in reaping the potential benefits of offshore gas deposits, while urging Ankara to end its âaggressiveâ actions in the eastern Mediterranean.
âWe donât exclude anybody,â he said. âWe want all the neighboring countries to work in order to take advantage of the energy possibilities of our region.â
Christodoulides said all countries in the region have delineated their maritime borders except Turkey, adding that it has refused to enter bilateral relations to determine its border with Cyprus or go to the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands.
âWe want and weâre ready to work with Turkey,â he said. âWhat weâre asking from Turkey â" just to respect international law, the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea.â
He said all other countries in the region understand the benefits of cooperation, âbut also the fact that united we will be able to tackle the challenges of the region, to work together.â He pointed as an example to this summerâs wildfires in Cyprus, Greece and Israel which saw many countries in the region offer help.
Cyprusâ long-term vision, Christodoulides said, is to establish a regional organization for security and cooperation.
âItâs the only region in the world that no such organization exists,â he said. âAnd we believe that all the countries of the region, they can see benefits out of this regional cooperation.â
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Edith M. Lederer, chief U.N. correspondent for The Associated Press, has been reporting internationally for nearly 50 years. Follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/EdithLedererAP
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