Greece
and Turkey say they are ready for talks to settle rival claims
to an energy-rich section of the Mediterranean, but the hostility
was clear when the foreign ministers of both countries
called for dialogue Tuesday.
After talks in Ankara with German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Greece must drop what he called its "maximalist demands."
"We
are open to talks without pre-conditions. But, when one side starts
imposing pre-conditions, then there are many things we will put forth
too," he said.
Maas
also met in Athens with Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias, who also
said Greece wants talks with Turkey but will not go if it is "under
threats." He said Greece is ready to defend its rights and said the
dispute with Turkey is a matter for the security of the entire European
Union.
Maas said a military conflict between Greece and Turkey would be "absolute insanity.”
"The
situation is very risky, because in the end, whoever moves closer and
closer to the abyss, can at some point fall down. That's a development
which we want to avoid," he said in Ankara.
Both Greece and Turkey say they will hold military exercises in the eastern Mediterranean.
Germany
is the current EU president and has been trying to
mediate talks between Greece, which belongs to the EU, and Turkey, which
does not but would like to join.
Greece
and Turkey are locked in a dispute over boundaries in the
Mediterranean and the rights to drill for offshore gas and
oil deposits.
Greece claims a Turkish research ship is in its waters, in which it has exclusive rights to whatever is under the sea floor.
Turkey insists the Exclusive Economic Zones of Greek islands in the Agean near the Turkish coast should be greatly reduced.
VOA