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Philip Gordon: The Security Domain: A European Perspective
ABSTRACT
US and European views of Greece-Turkey differ, and have further diverged
since the end of the Cold War. Increasingly, the US sees south Balkan
issues through the prism of Middle Eastern geopolitics whereas Europe views
the region through the prism of the EU. As a result of these differing
perceptions, European and US policies tend to diverge as well. Since the
overwhelming US strategic interest in the region is a stable, pro-Western
Turkey, Americans place high priority on integrating Turkey into the
Western Community. Since Europeans see Turkey primarily through the prism
of the EU, their policies are more attentive to Greek interests, and tend
to exclude Turkey. There are legitimate reasons for EU policies toward
Turkey, but their result is that EU relations with Turkey are poor. In the
Aegean dispute, most Europeans tend to support the Greek position for all
the above reasons, but EU support for Greece in this area should not be
exaggerated. For all the talk of an EU Common Foreign and Security Policy,
if Greece and Turkey were to go to war over territory, EU military support
for Greece would be unlikely. The most salient Greece-Turkey issue where
Europe is concerned is Cyprus, and in particular the EU agreement to begin
accession negotiations with the island. This agreement was designed to
entice the parties on Cyprus to come to a prior agreement, but it is in
fact having the opposite effect, and Turkish Cypriots are unlikely to make
concessions even for the "carrot" of EU membership. (And Ankara is
unlikely to pressure them to do so.) As a result, the EU will eventually
either have to abandon its plan to incorporate Cyprus, or proceed with
negotiations with the Greek Cypriots only, neither of which approaches is
without high risk.
Philip Gordon: Biographical Note
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