Michael Rubin warns that Greece and Turkey could go to war

By 2 years ago

Michael Rubin, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute specialising in Iran, Turkey and the broader Middle East, believes there is a potential that Greece and Turkey could go to war despite being so-called NATO allies.

He says that the list of countries suffering from Turkish aggression is long. Turkey occupies one-third of Cyprus and has used its F-16s and Special Forces against Armenians.

Iraqi officials say Turkey has now established 68 outposts on its territory, ranging in size from small platoon-level posts to a full-size base. The Turkish Air Force bombs Iraq nightly. Turkey ethnically cleanses entire districts in northern Syria.

Its maritime land grabs would make the creators of China’s Nine-Dash Line blush.

Against this backdrop, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s increasing threats against Greece should raise alarms. Indeed, the tension between the two NATO members is nothing new and predates Turkey’s mercurial ruler for decades. Four factors, however, make the current crisis different.

First, Erdogan is openly revanchist. He seeks to revise—always in Turkey’s favour—the century-old Lausanne Treaty that established Turkey’s borders with Greece and Bulgaria.

He falsely claims Greece violates demilitarisation agreements, and Turkish politicians up to and including Erdogan coalition partner and nationalist party leader Devlet Bahceli and Defence Minister Hulusi Akar further argue that they should possess all islands east of a median line in the Aegean Sea.

Turkey does not limit such provocations to maps. Turkish jets regularly violate the airspace of Greek islands like Kastellorizo. State Department statements infused with both-siderism make matters worse.

Simply put, Turkey is violating Greek airspace and occupying Cypriot territory, not the other way around. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken should make this clear. Moral equivalence and lies are no basis for peace and justice.

READ MORE: The first photos of the Greek Air Force’s F-16 Viper fighter jets – “A beautiful day for flying,” says US Embassy.

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Guest Contributor

This piece was written for Greek City Times by a Guest Contributor