UAE Targets Turkey and Qatar in the Mediterranean
By
James M. Dorsey
A podcast version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
Europe is progressively being sucked into the Middle East and North
Africa’s myriad conflicts. As if wars on its doorstep in Libya and Syria were
not enough, UAE support for an Eastern Mediterranean pipeline that could hurt
Qatar economically — combined with Greek, Cypriot and French opposition to
Turkish moves — leaves Europe with few, if any, options but to get involved.
Europe’s
headaches just got worse. Its efforts to contain wars on its doorstep in Libya
and Syria have failed at a moment that Europe is struggling to control a
pandemic and reverse its economic fallout.
Proxy
wars that pit the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt against Qatar
and Turkey have spilled out of Libya and Syria into the Eastern Mediterranean
as a whole.
European
nations, including France, Greece, and Cyprus, feel threatened by Turkey’s use
of Libya to extend its grip on gas-rich regional waters in violation of
international law. As a result, Middle Eastern and North African disputes are
becoming European problems.
Libya’s
internationally recognized Islamist Government of National Accord (GNA), backed
by Turkish military might, has forced rebels led by Khalifa Haftar, who is
supported by Russia, Egypt, France and the UAE to retreat in recent weeks from
western Libya and fight to maintain control of key cities in the center of the
country.
A statement last month by the foreign
ministers of France, Greece, Cyprus, the UAE, and Egypt made their concerns
clear.
The
statement condemned Turkey’s "illegal activities" in the Eastern
Mediterranean. It called on Turkey to “fully respect the sovereignty and the
sovereign rights of all states in their maritime zones in the Eastern
Mediterranean.”
Israel
was conspicuously absent among the signatories even though it maintains close
relations with all of them.
The Institute for National Security
Studies (INSS), a prominent Israeli think tank, warned that “given that
Israel’s ties with Turkey have been highly problematic and relations with
Russia remain delicate, Jerusalem needs to prepare for the possibility of a
continuing and even growing regional influence of both, especially in light of
Washington’s continued reluctance to assume a more active diplomatic or
military role.”
So
does Europe, which at the European Union level has so far remained on the
sidelines at its peril.
“Now
that the catastrophic consequences of European inaction are evident and Haftar
no longer has a chance to seize power, a (European) policy shift is both
possible and indispensable,” said Libya scholar Wolfram Lacher.
“Two
key goals should guide European policies: first, safeguard Libya’s unity;
second, counter Russian influence in Libya as a matter of priority. The U.S. shares
both goals. But Europeans will only be able to act in unison if the French
position shifts away from its relative tolerance for Russia and adversarial
stance towards Turkey,” Mr. Lacher suggested.
Mr.
Lacher appears to believe that countering Russia would not only help thwart the
threat posed by Moscow but also prevent Turkey and Russia from carving up Libya
into spheres of influence, if not separate states.
Arguing
that the EU can no longer afford to stand by, Mr. Lacher advised the EU to impose
sanctions on Mr. Haftar in a bid to undermine Russian support for his forces.
“In
parallel, Western states should finally push their interests in a stable Libya
more strongly when engaging with Haftar’s other foreign supporters,
particularly Egypt and the UAE, to dissuade them from further cooperation with
Russia,” Mr. Lacher said.
Underlying
the UAE’s Saudi-backed determination to stymie Turkey is its assertive global
campaign to confront any expression of political Islam. The UAE is aided by
Egypt, whose president, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, came into power in a 2013
Emirati-backed military coup that toppled an elected Muslim Brotherhood
president.
Coupled
with an agreement between Turkey and the Tripoli-based GNA which extends the
two countries maritime boundaries in the Eastern Mediterranean, Turkish
involvement in the wars in Libya and Syria appears to have fueled Emirati efforts
to suck Europe, and ultimately the United States, into its conflict with
Turkey.
Greece
and Italy — which was believed to be supporting the GNA prior to Turkey’s
intervention — this week signed a maritime boundaries agreement to counter
Turkish moves. The accord recognizes Greek territorial waters off its many
islands in accordance with the international Law of the Sea. The Turkish-Libyan
agreement ignores those rights for a number of Greek islands.
The
UAE and its partners in the Eastern Mediterranean were expected to support the
Greek-Italian accord.
The
UAE is banking on the fact that Turkey’s traditional ties to its NATO allies,
Europe and the US, are strained over a host of issues, including Turkey’s
military intervention in Libya, the fate of millions of refugees primarily from
Syria hosted by Turkey, and Turkey’s relationship with Russia and its
acquisition of an S-400 Russian anti-missile defense system.
The
UAE has been putting in place the building blocks for enhanced influence in the
eastern Mediterranean for some time. Increasingly close ties to Israel, whose relations
with Turkey are complex, constitute a cornerstone. So does UAE participation in
Greek-led annual military exercises in which Israel, Cyprus, Italy, and the
United States also take part.
Containing
Turkey in the Eastern Mediterranean has taken on greater significance after the
UAE’s hopes for a planned EastMed pipeline that would have transported natural
gas from Israeli, Cypriot and Lebanese fields via Greece to Italy, were dashed.
The
pipeline threatened to replace up to half of Qatari exports to Europe with gas
from the Eastern Mediterranean.
Among
Qatar’s detractors, the UAE is believed to be the most resistant to finding a
compromise that would end the three-year-old UAE-Saudi-led boycott of the Gulf
state.
The
$7 billion USD, 2,200-kilometre-long pipeline project was effectively put on
hold because of the economic fallout of the pandemic and the collapse of energy
prices.
A
consortium led by France’s Total, which includes Italian oil and gas major ENI
and Novatek, Russia’s second largest gas producer, was expected to halt
drilling after its first well proved to be dry.
ENI
and Total have also suspended plans for six drillings off the coast of Cyprus
while ExxonMobil has delayed exploration of its two wells in the area. US
explorer Noble Energy together with Shell and Herzliya-based Delek Drilling is likely
to follow suit in Israel’s Aphrodite field.
All
of that does not seem to deter Turkey. The country’s Official Gazette announced on May 30 that
state-owned oil company Turkish Petroleum had been granted 24 exploration
licenses that include waters off the coast of Greek islands such as Crete and
Rhodes.
Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias’ warning that his country
would answer what he called, "the Turkish provocation" if Turkey were
to proceed would further draw Europe into the Eastern Mediterranean’s
mushrooming imbroglio.
It
is a development that would boost Emirati efforts to further corner Turkey
internationally even if it would for now likely further dampen prospects for
dealing a blow to Qatar.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at
Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies in Singapore. He is also an adjunct senior research fellow at the National
University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director of the
University of Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture in Germany
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