The Telegram (St. John's)

Turkey dampened NATO’S outrage with Belarus: diplomats

- HUMEYRA PAMUK AND ROBIN EMMOTT

WASHINGTON/BRUSSELS — Turkey pushed NATO allies into watering down an official reaction to the forced landing by Belarus of a passenger plane and the detention of a dissident journalist on Sunday, two diplomats familiar with the matter told Reuters.

NATO’S 30 allies released a two-paragraph statement on Wednesday condemning the forcing down of a Ryanair flight to arrest journalist Roman Protasevic­h, but did not include any punitive steps that Baltic allies and Poland had pressed for.

The statement was also less strident than NATO Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g’s public remarks. He called the incident a “state hijacking” and “outrageous.”

Ankara insisted that any mention of support for more Western sanctions on Belarus, and calls for the release of political prisoners there, would be left out of the text, the two diplomats said. Language threatenin­g a suspension of NATO’S cooperatio­n with Belarus was also removed, they added.

Turkey’s motives were not immediatel­y clear.

Diplomats said Ankara might be trying to preserve ties with Moscow, Belarus’ closest ally, and maintain economic relations with Belarus via Turkish Airlines, which has daily flights to Minsk. Another possibilit­y could be Turkey’s keenness to welcome Russian tourists this summer after the COVID-19 pandemic.

A spike in coronaviru­s infections last month and a flurry of foreign travel warnings have wiped out many early bookings and raised prospects of another lost tourist season for Turkey, which relies on the cash inflow to fund its heavy foreign debt.

The Turkish foreign ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

A NATO official said: “The statement by the North Atlantic Council on Belarus was agreed by all 30 Allies by consensus. We do not go into the details of discussion­s in the North Atlantic Council, which are confidenti­al.”

One of the diplomats said Stoltenber­g had won the agreement of all allies, including Turkey, for the final text, published on NATO’S website, to avoid further public divisions.

Turkey’s insistence on a watered-down text upset a number of allies, particular­ly Poland, Lithuania and Latvia, which had pushed for tougher wording, the diplomats said.

A third diplomat said Ankara’s pushback was mainly aimed at using a different wording to that of the European Union, which detailed proposals for sanctions. These included a ban on the overflight of EU airspace by Belarusian airlines, preventing Belarusian airlines from using EU airports and calling on EU airlines to avoid Belarus.

Turkey is not an EU member, though it has been a candidate for many years.

“Many allies were very frustrated with Turkey. It was important for NATO to respond and it is not clear why Ankara should want to defend (Belarusian President Alexander) Lukashenko,” said a European diplomat present at the discussion.

Turkey has become a more difficult partner in recent years for some NATO allies, clashing with France over Turkish policy in Libya, with the United States on Syria and with Greece over energy rights in the Mediterran­ean.

Turkey has also bought air defence missiles from Russia, which NATO says is an adversary trying to destabiliz­e the West.

The United States and European Union have criticized what they see as a slide towards more authoritar­ian rule under President Tayyip Erdogan, especially since a failed 2016 coup.

But Turkey, which has the second largest military in NATO and is in a strategic location between Europe and the Middle East and with coasts on the Black and Mediterran­ean Seas, is too big and important for the EU or the United States to ignore.

 ?? REUTERS ?? NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g welcomes Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the NATO leaders summit in Watford, Britain, on Dec. 4, 2019.
REUTERS NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g welcomes Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the NATO leaders summit in Watford, Britain, on Dec. 4, 2019.

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