CLOSE
Loading...
12° Nicosia,
11 June, 2026
 
Home  /  Comment  /  Opinion

From Bismarck to Merkel

Greece’s case against Turkey not as monolithic as German logic and politics would dictate

Alexis Papachelas

Alexis Papachelas

“Turks and Germans loved each other for a long time,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said during a visit to Berlin in 2018. He was citing the historic words of Germany’s first chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, which still seem to determine Berlin’s policy on Ankara. We should recognize this reality as we enter a new geopolitical era, without succumbing to sentimentalism and spasmodic reactions.

Germany sees Turkey as belonging to its traditional sphere of influence. It deems that the two countries share a large number of key interests. The way in which the mass influx of refugees/migrants destabilized Germany has left a mark on Chancellor Angela Merkel and her aides.

She believes that Greece may have succeeded in neutralizing Turkey’s efforts to weaponize refugees along the Evros border, but she also believes that it will not be able to do so again, especially in the Aegean Sea.

Furthermore, she deems that Nicosia took drastic action with regard to energy exploration and that it did so without the proper consideration of the implications and the reaction from Erdogan.

Greece is not, and it should not be, looking to build alliances with Turkey’s enemies. What it is looking for is partners who are aware of the danger of Ankara’s revisionism

This is the prism through which Berlin sees Greek-Turkish affairs. Germany gets frustrated with the French when they push things with Ankara.

It does not understand why Greece has to spend so much on defense, particularly on non-German systems, as it considers Greece a small, bankrupt country.

It would like Athens to accept a comprehensive compromise settlement in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean without going into much detail about which side is right. It is a square, inflexible logic.

And it will not change until the end of Merkel’s tenure, and certainly not in view of elections where the Turkish minority has a role to play in the final outcome.

Greece is not, and it should not be, looking to build alliances with Turkey’s enemies. What it is looking for is partners who are aware of the danger of Ankara’s revisionism, as it is challenging the sovereign rights of an EU country while seeking to assert its full hegemony in the Eastern Mediterranean.

The Germans were ahead of themselves once in former Yugoslavia because they did not possess the geopolitical maturity to be patient and examine the consequences of their actions.

As far as Greek-Turkish relations are concerned, it has to be said that Merkel played a positive role because she was the only Western leader who could, and wanted, to pick up the phone and speak with Erdogan. At some crucial moments perhaps she even stopped him from pulling the trigger.

That said, Berlin and Paris are on completely different pages. And this probably applies to the officials of the Biden administration who are realizing that the Erdogan of 2021 is not the Erdogan they knew back in 2016.

A key problem remains that the existing EU leadership is largely guided by German interests – with whatever implications this has for Greek foreign policy.

Comment published Sunday 7 February 2021 by Kathimerini Greece, where Alexis Papachelas serves as executive editor

TAGS
Cyprus  |  Greece  |  Germany  |  Turkey  |  politics  |  Papachelas  |  regional politics  |  Bismarck  |  Merkel  |  Erdogan

Opinion: Latest Articles

The question is not whether change is coming, but how Cyprus responds. Photo credit: www.consilium.europa.eu

Veto or not?

Cyprus risks losing influence if it remains attached to an outdated view of the veto.
Opinion
 |  OPINION
Social Media photo courtesy Visit Cyprus

Coffee shop conversations

How a village café becomes the heartbeat of community life, memory, and everyday connection in rural Cyprus.
Michalis Michaelides
 |  OPINION
Composure

Composure

Voters back familiar parties and send a warning to louder, anti-establishment voices that politics still runs on trust, ...
Opinion
 |  OPINION
Turkey did not hide its intentions. The maps, coordinates, and warnings were there from the beginning, while Cyprus chose delay over confrontation. Photo credit: kibrispostasi.com

15 Years

For 15 years, Cyprus watched Turkey formalize its claims in silence. Now, after Ankara prepares to cement them into law, ...
Pavlos Xanthoulis
 |  OPINION
Platforms continue promising a better user experience while demanding more sharing and more noise from people already stretched to their limit. Image is AI

No more noise

Information overload is no longer a side effect of digital life but one of its defining conditions, leaving less room for ...
Paris Demetriades
 |  OPINION
The real issue is not how investors see us, but how willingly we trade heritage, identity, and community for quick money. Photo credit: @trozena.cy Facebook

Talking past the real issue

We had more outrage for a foreign investor pointing out that Cypriots speak English than for the unchecked development that ...
Paris Demetriades
 |  OPINION
Israel at Eurovision

Israel at Eurovision

Why are Russian bans in sports and culture not matched with similar restrictions on Israel?
Opinion
 |  OPINION
File photo of Constantinos the Great Beach Hotel in Protaras, Cyprus

Prudently & sparingly

As tourism takes a hit from regional tensions, questions grow over whether profitable hotels should receive state aid while ...
Dorita Yiannakou
 |  OPINION
In Trozena, investors see opportunity while the state once again looks unprepared and absent. Photo credit: trozena.cy

On Trozena’s pitch-black ridge

A forgotten Cypriot village becomes the latest battleground between unchecked development and the loss of local identity. ...
Apostolos Kouroupakis
 |  OPINION
From Suez to Iran, history offers a reminder that even the best-laid military plans can quickly unravel. Photo credit: @whitehouse Instagram

Give peace a chance

Trump’s unpredictable war strategy has left allies uneasy and searching for clarity.
Costas Iordanidis
 |  OPINION
Behind the push for investment, a quiet power struggle between Cyprus’s top business bodies is becoming impossible to ignore. Photo credit: Unsplash

In the trenches

A long-simmering rivalry spills into the open as business groups clash over influence and exclusion.
Dorita Yiannakou
 |  OPINION
Growth for a few, hardship for many, and the quiet collapse behind the success story. Photo credit: Unsplash

The wreckage of a narrative

A decade after the crisis, the story of economic recovery looks far less convincing for most Cypriots.
Paris Demetriades
 |  OPINION
X