BRUSSELS: Turkey’s foreign minister on Friday warned the EU against using sanctions as Brussels demanded “tangible outcomes” from a push to mend ties battered by tensions in the eastern Mediterranean.
Ankara’s top diplomat Mevlut Cavusoglu wrapped up two days of talks with EU chiefs aimed at soothing relations after conciliatory moves from President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Tensions between Brussels and Ankara reached new levels last year after Turkey repeatedly sent a ship to search for gas in disputed waters, infuriating the bloc and member states Greece and Cyprus.
EU leaders in December agreed to add more names to a sanctions blacklist over Turkish drilling in Cypriot waters and draw up options for tougher punishments if Ankara did not change course.
But since then the rhetoric on all sides has mellowed dramatically as Erdogan insisted he wanted to “turn a new page” with Brussels.
FASTFACT
Tensions between Brussels and Ankara reached new levels last year after Turkey repeatedly sent a ship to search for gas in disputed waters, infuriating the bloc and member states Greece and Cyprus.
In an important move, Greece and Turkey agreed to restart long-stalled exploratory talks on their maritime dispute next week. Cavusoglu repeated an invitation for EU leaders to visit Ankara in a meeting with European Council president Charles Michel and said he was working on a roadmap for a “positive agenda in our relations.”
But he also insisted that the EU should hold off trying to punish Turkey. “No results can be achieved (with the) language of sanctions,” he wrote on Twitter.
European diplomats insisted on Friday that work is still going on to finalize the sanctions ordered by the member states in December.
The EU remains wary of Erdogan’s overtures and insists Ankara must turn its warmer words into actions.
“Dialogue needs to produce tangible outcomes in the interest of both EU and Turkey,” Michel wrote on Twitter after the meeting.
An EU official said Michel told Cavusoglu that Ankara needed to continue to refrain “from activities that might fuel tensions.”
Brussels is hoping to see progress in the talks with Turkey and has dangled the carrot of talks on updating a customs union and visa-free travel to help convince Erdogan, the official said.