Turkey not 'blackmailing' NATO over Baltics defense plan: Source

Turkey is not blackmailing NATO with its rejection of a defense plan for the Baltics and Poland, and has full veto rights within the alliance, a Turkish security source said. "NATO is an institution where Turkey has full veto rights, politically and militarily, and there are procedures here," the source said. "There is no such thing as Turkey blackmailing - a statement like that is unacceptable."

Reuters

Turkey is not blackmailing NATO with its rejection of a defense plan for the Baltics and Poland, and has full veto rights within the alliance, a Turkish security source said on Dec. 2 ahead of a NATO alliance summit in London.

Reuters reported last week that Turkey was refusing to back a NATO defense plan for the Baltics and Poland until it received more support for its battle with the Peoples' Protection Units (YPG) militants, which it views as a terrorist organization due to the group's links with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

Ankara has said the impasse was caused by the United States withdrawing support from a separate defense plan for Turkey, covering any possible attack from the south where it borders Syria, and that it wanted the issue resolved.

"NATO is an institution where Turkey has full veto rights, politically and militarily, and there are procedures here," the source said. "There is no such thing as Turkey blackmailing - a statement like that is unacceptable."

A diplomatic source told Reuters last week that Turkey was "taking eastern Europeans hostage" by blocking approval of the military planning, and a second source call Ankara's behavior "disruptive."

NATO envoys need formal approval by all 29 members for the plan to improve the defense of Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia against any threat from neighboring Russia.

A Turkish diplomatic source later said Turkey was "open to offers," and that NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg was trying to find common ground between the allies.

However, relations between Turkey and its NATO allies have been strained over a host of issues ranging from Ankara's decision to procure Russian air defense systems to Syria policy. Several NATO members condemned Turkey's decision last month to launch an offensive into northeastern Syria against the YPG.

Turkey, which has NATO's second largest military, wants the alliance to formally classify the YPG, the main component of the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), as terrorists. It has been infuriated over the support NATO allies have given the YPG, a Western partner in fighting ISIS.

Last week, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu accused French President Emmanuel Macron of sponsoring terrorism in his support for the YPG, after Macron said Turkey should not expect solidarity from NATO after its Syria incursion.

Macron has also criticized NATO ahead of the summit, saying the alliance was experiencing a "brain death." Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan lambasted his remarks on Dec 29, telling the French leader to "check whether you are brain dead."