Erdoğan says Greece 'sowing chaos' in Mediterranean
Erdoğan has accused Greece of "sowing chaos" in the eastern Mediterranean Sea and of acting "in a spoiled manner." "Greece has declared its own Navtex unlawfully and in a spoiled manner. With this approach, Greece has sown a chaos that it will not be able to escape from," Erdoğan said on Aug. 24.
Reuters
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said on Aug. 24 Turkish navy will not back down as Greece "sows chaos" in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, where the countries have deployed frigates in an escalating rhetorical confrontation over overlapping resource claims.
"The ones who throw Greece in front of the Turkish navy will not stand behind them," Erdoğan said after a cabinet meeting. He added that Athens did not have the right to broadcast maritime navigational and weather advisories, known as Navtex, in areas claimed by Ankara.
"Greece has declared its own Navtex unlawfully and in a spoiled manner...With this approach, Greece has sown a chaos that it will not be able to escape from," Erdoğan said.
Turkey has extended the exploration mission of its Oruç Reis survey ship in a disputed part of the eastern Mediterranean to Aug. 27, stoking tensions in the region. Athens has called the survey illegal.
Greek government spokesman Stelios Petsas told reporters on Aug. 24 that Greece had issued a Navtex advisory also expiring on Aug. 27.
"Greece is responding calmly and with readiness both on a diplomatic and on an operational level. And with national confidence it does everything needed to defend its sovereign rights," Pestas said.
Turkey and Greece, NATO allies, vehemently disagree over claims to hydrocarbon resources in the area based on conflicting views on the extent of their continental shelves in waters dotted with mostly Greek islands.
Separately, Turkish Defense Ministry said maritime training involving Turkish and allied navy ships would be conducted in the eastern Mediterranean on Aug. 25.