Sinan Ulgen, Columnist

Turkey Turns Up the Dial in Eastern Mediterranean

The conflict over energy resources and international maritime law has gone beyond cartography and diplomacy.

Turkey demonstrates that it means business.

Photographer: Firat Kozok/Bloomberg
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A long-simmering conflict at Europe’s doorstep is coming to a boil. In the Eastern Mediterranean, Turkey is in a face-off with a coalition led by Greece, including Cyprus, Egypt and Israel, and backed by the European Union. At stake is the right to explore the off-shore hydrocarbon resources of this maritime zone. The growing tensions are threatening to spill over into the battlefields of Libya.

Since the discovery of offshore gas in the Eastern Mediterranean a decade ago, littoral states have sought to leverage these natural resources. But in pursuit of national interests, they have deployed mutually exclusive interpretations of international law.