France to bolster Mediterranean military presence over Turkish prospecting

Following a call with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotaki, French President Emanuel Macron announced he would deploy additional ships to the eastern Mediterranean and called on Turkey to halt oil and gas exploration in disputed waters.

Reuters

France will increase its military presence in the eastern Mediterranean, President Emmanuel Macron said on on Aug. 12, calling on Turkey to halt oil and gas exploration in disputed waters that has heightened tensions with Greece.

Turkey seeks to resolve energy exploration dispute with Greece through dialogue

The French leader voiced concern over "unilateral" exploration by Turkey in a call with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, Macron's office said in a statement. It added that prospecting should "cease in order to allow a peaceful dialogue" between the neighboring NATO members.

The standoff deepened this week with the arrival of Turkish seismic research vessel Oruç Reis in a disputed area of the Mediterranean, accompanied by warships.

France will "temporarily reinforce" its military presence, Macron's statement said, to "monitor the situation in the region and mark its determination to uphold international law."

Turkey and Greece are at loggerheads over competing claims to natural gas reserves, brought into sharp focus by the attempts of Greek Cyprus to explore for gas in the eastern Mediterranean over Turkey's strong objections.

Macron called last month for EU sanctions against Turkey for what he described as "violations" of Greek and Cypriot sovereignty over their territorial waters. Relations between Paris and Ankara have also frayed over the conflict in Libya.

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