Foreign Policy Dialogues “Eastern Mediterranean: who (and how) can create favorable conditions for cooperation?”

This Dialogue organized by CIDOB (Barcelona Centre for International Affairs) and the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, European Union and Cooperation will discuss which are the opportunities for de-escalation, the content of the Positive Agenda with Turkey and on the type of alliances that are necessary for this strategy to deliver.

Location:

Online session

Organized by:

CIDOB (Barcelona Centre for International Affairs) with the support of the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, European Union and Cooperation [Activity subsidized by the State Secretariat for Global Spain]

Since 2019, tension levels in the Eastern Mediterranean have increased significantly. 2020 has been a year of acceleration, but without reaching a final breaking point. Could this trend be reversed in 2021? By whom?  This meeting aims at building a shared diagnose, identify opportunities and incubate or discuss concrete proposals for action. 

The first step in this exercise is to understand where we are coming from. In 2020, tensions in the Eastern Mediterranean have intensified and alarms have been triggered. First, with Turkey's threat to repeat a new migration crisis just before the pandemic spread.  And secondly, following the disputes over Exclusive Economic Zones, the unilateral explorations in disputed spaces and the signing of bilateral agreements with other coastal countries in a fait accompli policy. Adding to this, the unresolved Cyprus confict and the lack of prospects for resolution and overlapping it with other scenarios of tension such as Libya. This tension has spilled over into already strained relations between Turkey and the EU - with frozen accession negotiations and the threat of sanctions on the table - and within NATO - with the controversy over the purchase of the S-400 missile system. All of this has been coupled with the greater involvement of extra-regional actors such as France, Russia and the United Arab Emirates, which has increased the complexity of the situation and the associated risks.