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In The Media
Carnegie Europe

The EU Must Persuade Turkey That Permanent Disruption Comes With Disastrous Consequences

In confronting Turkey’s leadership over its disruptive behavior—most lately in the Eastern Mediterranean—the European Council will have to tread carefully between principles, possible actions, and unsound options.

Link Copied
By Marc Pierini
Published on Sep 22, 2020

Source: Le Monde

On September 24–25 in Brussels, the European Council will discuss the tensions at the edges of Europe: repression in Belarus, the Navalny case and its repercussions on relations with Russia, turmoil in the Eastern Mediterranean—with NATO’s missile defense, Libya, Syria, China, and the November 3 U.S. election as the backdrop to this worrying agenda.

After years of patient dismantlement of its rule-of-law architecture, Turkey is now governed by autocracy: free media have been eliminated, civil society suppressed, the judiciary politicized, and adherents of the Gülen movement (the AKP’s political ally between 2002 and 2013) purged. Yet, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan does not approach the 2023 Republic centennial with a successful record. The economy is on the brink of an abyss, and opinion polls illustrate serious difficulties for the alliance between the Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the Nationalist Action Party (MHP). For Ankara, hiding these failures is therefore crucial.

Maritime Boundaries

In this bleak picture, the theme of maritime borders appeared as the ideal tool to summon up national ardor: the litigation with Cyprus and Greece is old and multifaceted; recent gas discoveries off the coasts of Egypt, Israel, and Cyprus illustrate the injustice done to Turkey; and the EastMed Gas Forum was just created between Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Israel, Italy, Jordan, and Palestine to consider—without Turkey—a concerted exploitation of the resources and the construction of an underwater pipeline to Southern Europe.

Seen by Ankara as a replay of Mustafa Kemal’s redrawing of the national territory between 1920 (Treaty of Sèvres) and 1923 (Treaty of Lausanne), the conquest of this new maritime and gas frontier in the Eastern Mediterranean was hence organized around an agreement with Libya on a common maritime area (November 2019), a vast research and drilling campaign—accompanied by considerable military means—in Greek and Cypriot waters, and a formidable media campaign through social networks and outraged foreign ministry statements. Topped up with a generous dose of political hubris, Ankara’s tactical move has managed to mobilize the country’s energies, at least at first sight.

Yet, this wave of nationalist fervor has ended up hiding a simple reality: today’s Turkey is diplomatically isolated, not just from the EU but also from the United States, the Arab League, and Israel. Moreover, Ankara has underestimated the power of EU principles: internal solidarity, good neighborly relations, peaceful resolution of disputes.

The political fallout from willfully disruptive policies have been felt throughout 2019 and 2020: Turkey was excluded from the U.S. F-35 stealth aircraft program for having deployed Russian S-400 missiles; Volkswagen froze a major investment due to military operations in northeastern Syria; Moody’s lowered Turkey’s rating to a historical low; and the EU reacted to the Turkish paramilitary assault (disguised as a refugee exodus) launched on Greece’s land border in February 2020.

Such reactions show the extent of Turkey’s self-inflicted sanctions, more damaging than any eventual official sanction from the European Union. In this warlike atmosphere, who is now going to provide Turkey with the much-needed short-term funds, direct investment, and technology?

In confronting a Turkish leadership confident in its ability to divide the EU, the European Council summit faces a heavy task. How to choose between principles, possible actions, and unsound options?

Recalling its own principles will inevitably be at the center of the European Union’s position: a military or verbal aggression between allies is unacceptable, and military intrusion calls for unwavering solidarity between Europeans. This has been said already and will be restated forcefully. Similarly, the European Council will again state its willingness to dialogue, but under no circumstance if there are threats, whether physical or verbal.

Graduated Response

Concerning possible actions, the European Council will consider a first list of options, a menu leading to a graduated response in case of new aggressions. Sanctions can be directed at persons and entities involved in gas research and drilling, something which has been done before. Sanctions can also be enlarged to other domains such as unilateral trade concessions or—in an extreme case—to exports of European engineering and equipment destined to Turkey’s military industry (present or future). Some summit participants will naturally also invoke the cancellation of Turkey’s EU candidate status (still on the books).

Unsound options also abound, many of them being traps. An international conference on the Mediterranean would not lead to a genuine dialogue but only offer a podium for new high-flying statements by Turkey’s foreign minister. Similarly, high-level visits would only help Ankara show that, as in 2015–2016, tough foreign policy brings the Europeans to their knees. As for a European or German mediation, it is mostly illusory since Turkish diplomats have already requested a major condition (“impartiality”) that is tantamount to neutralizing mediators in advance.

Restating EU principles, military “deconfliction” under the aegis of NATO, preparation of sanctions, willingness to facilitate a bilateral Greek-Turkish dialogue, and diplomatic distancing are therefore the best ways to calm down the situation in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Gauging Ankara’s Appetite for Compromise

Should Greek and Turkish delegations manage to sit down at the same table, the next question will be Ankara’s appetite for compromise. In other words, is the Turkish leadership able to accept a less than optimal compromise on Mediterranean waters with foreign powers at a time when the economic and political risks on the domestic scene are so high? Or, conversely, will endless overreach be seen as necessary—in the run-up to the next elections (if they take place)—to portray the leadership as the savior of a nation under attack from all sides?

The European Union’s DNA will lead it to privilege a classic diplomatic track. Turkey must be persuaded that permanent disruption comes with catastrophic consequences.

This is the author’s own translation of an op-ed originally published in French in Le Monde.

About the Author

Marc Pierini

Senior Fellow, Carnegie Europe

Pierini is a senior fellow at Carnegie Europe, where his research focuses on developments in the Middle East and Turkey from a European perspective.

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Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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