Greece and Turkey claims over the Aegean Sea

Context

  • Greece and Turkey have had long-standing rival claims over the Aegean Sea territory, even finding themselves on the brink of war over the issue in the past.

Key Details

  • Turkey alleges that Greece has been building a military presence in violation of international treaties that guarantee the unarmed status of the Aegean islands.
  • Meanwhile, Greece maintains that Turkey has deliberately misinterpreted the treaties, adding that it has legal grounds to defend itself.
  • Recently, the two NATO allies traded barbs about airspace violations over the Aegean Sea. Greece informed NATO about a series of overflights in the Aegean Sea by Turkish fighter jets. Turkey retaliated by saying that Greece was the one “instigating” tensions by carrying out “provocative flights” near Turkish coasts.

Why is the Aegean Sea at the centre of Greco-Turkish ties?

  • The Aegean Sea, spanning over two lakh square kilometres, is an arm of the Mediterranean Sea.
  • It is located in the East Mediterranian Basin with the Greek peninsula to its west and Anatolia (consisting of the Asian side of Turkey) to its east.
  • There are more than a thousand islands in the Aegean Sea, almost all Greek, and some within two kilometres of mainland Turkey or the Turkish west coast. Greece and Turkey rival claims over the Aegean Sea
  • Greece and Turkey have been regional adversaries on a host of issues concerning the Aegean sea since the 1970s, both asserting rival claims over their borders in the Sea.
  • They came to the brink of war in 1996 over a pair of uninhabited islets in the Aegean Sea, referred to as the Imia islets in Greece and as Kardak in Turkey. A Turkish cargo ship had run aground in Imia in December 1995 and both countries rushed to salvage it.
  • Turkey rejected Greece’s help and its sovereignty over Imia. Shortly after, both countries moved their navies towards Imia, resulting in a standoff that spilled over into January of 1996. The issue attracted international concern as both countries began to mobilise their forces for war, however, global intervention prevented further escalation.
  • Over the decades, attempts at resolving disagreements over the Aegean Sea have seen the involvement of multiple actors like the United Nations, the United States, European countries, the International Court of Justice, and NATO.

What do international treaties say about Aegean islands?

  • The Lausanne Treaty of 1923 was signed at the end of the First World War to settle the conflict between Turkey (the successor of the Ottoman Empire) and the Allied Powers including Greece.
    • The Treaty defined the boundaries of Turkey and Greece, and several islands, islets and other major territories in the Aegean Sea beyond three miles from the Turkish coast were ceded to Greece, with the exception of three groups of islands. Under the terms of the Treaty and the Lausanne Convention of 1923, Greece was obligated to keep the islands demilitarised.
    • The Treaty also opened up civilian shipping passage in the Turkish Straits and mandated Turkey to demilitarise the straits.
    • Turkey also ceded Cyprus to the British.
  • At the end of the Second World War, as part of the Paris Peace Treaties of 1947, the Dodecanese Islands (a group of 12 islands in the Aegean Sea) were given to Greece, again with the obligation of permanent and total demilitarisation. They had been ceded to Italy in 1923.
  • While Turkey recognises both these treaties, Greece accuses it of wrongly interpreting them, and argues that the 1936 Montreux Convention Regarding the Regime of the Straits superseded the Lausanne Treaty on the Straits, as it gave Turkey the power to militarise the Turkish Straits, hence nullifying the obligation upon Greece to demilitarise the Aegean Islands.

What are the issues that have caused friction over the Aegean Sea?

  • Turkey and Greece have long sparred over the extent of their respective territorial waters in the Aegean, the determination of continental shelves, airspace, Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs), militarisation, and sovereignty of certain islets.

Territorial seas

  • In 1995, Greece ratified the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which provides a legal framework to recognise the limits of maritime zones of coastal nations. While over 160 countries are party to the Treaty, Turkey did not sign it as it did not favour its interest in the Aegean Sea.
  • According to the UNCLOS, the sovereignty of a coastal country extends “beyond its land territory and internal waters” to an “adjacent belt of sea, described as the territorial sea”.
    • A country’s territorial sea extends to 12 nautical miles (nm) from the baseline of its coast, and it has sovereign rights over it. (One nautical mile is equal to 1.1508 land-measured miles or 1.852 kms.)
  • Presently, Turkey claims a territorial sea of six nautical miles and has not exercised its claim over the 12 nautical miles from its coast in the Aegean Sea.

Continental shelves and Exclusive Economic Zones

Photo Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (American govt agency), noaa.gov
  • In geological terms, the continental shelf is defined as the seabed and subsoil that is the prolongation of a country’s landmass, extending beyond its territorial sea.
  • The Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) is a zone in which a country has special rights to exploration, use of natural resources, wind and hydro-power generation, and other economic activities like laying of pipelines, fishing and so on.
  • As per the UNCLOS, the continental shelf extends to 200 nautical miles from the country’s coastal baseline but is within its continental margin. A country has sovereign rights over the natural resources in the water and the seabed and soil within its continental shelf. EEZs also extend to 200 nm from the coastline.

Militarisation

  • Right now, Turkey has cited the Lausanne and Paris treaties, arguing that Greece is violating them by increasing its military presence in the Aegean Islands.
  • Presently, for instance, the Greek islands of Rhodes, Kos, and Lesbos in the Aegean Sea near the Turkish coast would meet the description of militarised.

Airspace violations

  • UNCLOS states that a country has sovereign rights over the airspace above its territorial sea. Currently, Greece claims six nm of territorial sea in the Aegean, starting from its coast. Hence, its internationally recognised airspace over the Aegean is also up to six nm.
  • Alleged violation of airspace over the Aegean Sea has also been a bone of contention between the two countries. Both Greece and Turkey have alleged that the other is carrying out flights near or over their coasts. As mentioned earlier, Greece has taken the matter to the NATO, while Turkey has said that Greece is the one instigating tensions by flying near its coastline.

Reference:

https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/explained-why-are-turkey-and-greece-at-odds-over-islands-in-the-aegean-sea/article65518758.ece?homepage=true


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