NATO Chief Stoltenberg described in Greece as “Erdoğan’s Ambassador” for justifying "authoritarian regime"

By 2 years ago

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg was accused by Nikos Androulakis on Tuesday for acting like “Erdoğan’s Ambassador” to the Alliance, and "not the first time" either.

The leader of the opposition PASOK-Movement for Change political party criticised the NATO chief for his statements on Turkey’s provocations against Greece and the objections he expresses regarding the accession of Sweden and Finland to the bloc.

“Unfortunately, this is not the first time that Mr. Stoltenberg has chosen to justify the authoritarian Erdoğan regime, even Turkey’s extortionate attitude towards Sweden and Finland,” Androulakis said.

“It should be absolutely understood by everyone that it will be the last. He can not be both Erdoğan’s ambassador and NATO Secretary General,” he added.

Stoltenberg adopts Turkey’s reservations on NATO Nordic enlargement

On Sunday Stoltenberg said that the concerns expressed by Turkey on the accession of Finland and Sweden to the alliance are legitimate.

Speaking alongside Finnish President Niinistö, the Secretary General said that Ankara has “legitimate concerns. This is about terrorism, it’s about weapons exports.”

“We have to remember and understand that no NATO ally has suffered more terrorist attacks than Turkey,” said Stoltenberg.

NATO’s chief repeated the same argument during an interview with AMNA, where he added: “We have to address the security concerns of all Allies, including Turkey’s serious concerns about the terrorist group PKK, and find a united way forward."

He went onto say that "Turkey has suffered grievously" at the hands of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and "has suffered more from terrorism than any other Ally has."

"So Turkey has legitimate concerns, which all Allies should take seriously," Stoltenberg added.

NATO’s chief speaks of Greece-Turkey “disagreements”

In the same interview with AMNA, Stoltenberg refused to condemn Turkey for its provocations against Greece.

Ankara has been raising the tension in the region by repeated menacing statements against Greek sovereignty over Greek islands in the Aegean, by numerous provocative overflights of armed aircraft not only deep into Greek national airspace, but literally over inhabited Greek islands and by an increased flow of illegal migrant movements towards Greece’s borders once again.

“We should not be surprised that there are sometimes strong disagreements among our countries. But diverse views and debate are an essential part of our democracies,” Stoltenberg said.

“We urge Greece and Turkey to solve their differences in the Aegean in a spirit of trust and Allied solidarity. That means restraint and moderation, and refraining from any actions or rhetoric that could escalate the situation.”

Stoltenberg’s statements on Greece and Turkey were condemned by the leader of the PASOK party.

“The provocations in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean, the threat of war against Greece, the questioning of our national sovereignty in the Eastern Aegean islands and the revisionist doctrine of the Turkish leadership are not just disagreements or ‘accidents’,” as he said in the interview.

The leader of PASOK pointed out that the NATO Secretary General, in fact, described Turkey, a country that functions as a destabilizing factor from the Caucasus to the Eastern Mediterranean and the Aegean, violating human rights and the rule of law, as a “committed ally”.

“[Turkey] is the only NATO member-state which has not imposed any sanctions against Russia since the start of the war,” he pointed out.

READ MORE: Turkish fake news: “Greek forces killed an Afghan immigrant in Evros.”

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