Erdoğan envisions new era in relations with Greece
In anticipation of his trip to Greece on December 7th, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan voiced optimism for a renewed relationship between the two nations. Erdoğan underlined, "I am hopeful that this visit will mark the start of a new chapter in our bilateral relations. Our goal is to establish more friendships and fewer hostilities."
- Diplomacy
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 12:03 | 04 December 2023
- Modified Date: 12:03 | 04 December 2023
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Saturday expressed hope for a fresh beginning in bilateral relations with Greece.
On his upcoming visit to Greece scheduled for Dec. 7, he said: "I hope a new era begins (between the two countries). We are trying to make more friends and less enemies."
"We will go to Athens with a win-win approach. There, we will discuss both our bilateral relations and Türkiye-EU relations in order to make decisions worthy of the spirit of the new era," Erdoğan said while speaking to journalists on board the presidential plane returning from Dubai, where he attended the COP28 climate summit.
Noting the proximity and intertwined history of the two nations, he said that nurturing animosities is not constructive.
He expressed a willingness to start a new era, uphold promises, and develop relations free from external influences.
Speaking about external influences, he said that the US supplies military equipment to Greece while withholding similar support for Türkiye.
"Although we paid for them, F-16s are not given to us, while they continue to send F-16s and munitions to Greece. It does not mean we have to back down just because the United States is doing this. We will visit our neighboring country, sit down, and talk," he said.
Separately, Türkiye made a request to Washington in 2021 for 40 F-16 jets and modernization kits. The State Department informally notified Congress of the potential sale.
Erdoğan advocated for a diplomatic approach, emphasizing that as neighbors, Türkiye and Greece can engage in dialogue without compromising each other's interests.
He acknowledged existing differences between the two countries but highlighted the potential for collaboration on mutually beneficial subjects.
The Greek-Turkish High-Level Cooperation Council will be held in Athens on Dec. 7.
- Netherlands urges accelerated ‘efforts on all pillars of the Paris Agreement'
- Erdoğan tells UN chief Israel must be held accountable for war crimes committed in Gaza Strip
- Turkish FM Fidan holds high-level meetings with Blinken and Stoltenberg
- Kremlin: No plan for Putin contact with Saudi crown prince before OPEC+ meet