In every geopolitical redesign, there is a moment when the architects start saying too much. Don’t argue, explain. Please explain why nothing unusual is happening, why cooperation is purely defensive, why the map doesn’t redraw when the ink dries. The Eastern Mediterranean entered that moment.
In recent months, Greece and Israel have developed a marked aversion to silence. Say more. Military cooperation is announced, clarified, expanded, and announced again. Energy projects are being revived with ritualistic urgency. Egypt also joins the chorus. Eastern Libya, in a feat of sudden intellectual awakening, discovered the law of the sea. The Greek Cypriot government is invoked with ritual regularity as a bridge, an anchor, and a demonstration of virtue.
This is not diplomatic noise. It is a system that announces itself.
Therefore, the trilateral summit meeting on December 22, 2025, when Israel, Greece, and the Greek Cypriot government would gather together, was not the beginning. It was the unveiling rehearsal. The subject of the choreography was not named. There was no need for that.
It was Turkiye, not as an enemy to be confronted, but as a variable to be manipulated. Alongside them stood Turkish Cypriots, quietly excluded from the political equation, whose presence complicates any claims to legitimacy that the regime prefers to keep in order.
bend the rules for one’s own benefit
The alliance describes itself as “Western,” “democratic” and “rules-based.” These words are not an argument. They are atmospheres. They reassure donors, editors, and policy committees. It does not limit your actions. It is architecture that restrains behavior when restraint is needed.
Greece’s deployment of advanced military systems to the Aegean islands is being touted as “defense modernization.” This would be even more persuasive if these islands were not governed by treaties expressly aimed at preventing this very condition. The Treaty of Lausanne and the Paris Peace Treaty did not envisage demilitarization as a “lifestyle choice,” but codified it as a structural safeguard against escalation resulting from proximity.
Modern Western solutions to this inconvenience are sophisticated. In other words, interpretation replaces compliance. International law is sacrosanct in principle, flexibly applied and amenable to the changing security environment, making it the most efficient tool in modern diplomacy.
What changes is not the law, but its destination. The same act can have different legal meanings depending on who performs it. Compliance becomes a discipline for some and an interpretive privilege for others. This asymmetry is no coincidence. It’s functional.
The same method applies to maritime claims. Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, impartial principles prevail over maximalist cartography when geography causes distortions. Small islands are not designed to generate continental-scale ocean areas. Fairness, proportionality and relevant circumstances are not footnotes. Those are the basics.
But in the Eastern Mediterranean, islands are encouraged to imagine themselves as empires. Rocks acquire continental shelves. Maps become moral arguments. President Turkiye’s insistence on impartiality is reframed as invasion, while his removal is praised as stability.
Israel’s role here is decisive. As a defense exporter, Israel does more than just sell hardware. It exports doctrine. Be careful in advance. Perception of a persistent threat becomes realism. The exception becomes normal. What the partner acquires is not only competence, but a worldview that deals with lawfulness rather than adhering to it.
Cyprus becomes a functional module
Most commentators still treat Cyprus as a problem waiting to be resolved. This is analytically outdated.
Cyprus was reclaimed. It currently functions as a modular asset within the broader Eastern Mediterranean security architecture, and is valuable precisely because it is unresolved, legally operational, and politically divisible.
Performs four roles simultaneously. The first is a projection without a clear source. In particular, Britain’s sovereign base areas, which are also used by other Western actors, enable sustained operations across the Middle East. While Europe and the European Union enjoy a posture of restraint, Cyprus is absorbing operational realities. Values remain pure. Aircraft are not.
The second can be called surveillance density. Cyprus is located on an observation ridge that straddles Anatolia, the Levant and North Africa. Intelligence infrastructure transforms islands from “bridges” to sensor hubs. There is no stability here. Indexed, categorized and exported.
This island is also an underwater base. Power interconnections, gas pipelines, and data cables marketed as green transitions have become strategic terrain. Control of the seabed means control of dependence. Maritime law was once intended to prevent conflict, but it is now being used as a tool to intensify conflict.
Finally, this is suitable for legal disinfection. Routing projects solely through the Greek Cypriot government not only simplifies administrative procedures; It establishes a hierarchy of legitimacy. Despite the collapse of the two-community constitutional order in 1960, one side’s maximalist sovereignty claims are treated as settled law, while political equality for Turkish Cypriots remains administratively invisible.
This is not a bias. It’s system efficiency. It’s not against the law. It is selectively enforced. And this is not neglect. It’s system design.
Exporting exceptions
The imperative to promote democracy while erasing entire populations from energy governance, ocean demarcation, and revenue sharing is not contradictory. It’s efficient. Turkish Cypriots will not be rejected on the basis that their claims have no legal basis. These are excluded because their inclusion would require negotiation. And negotiations will reintroduce uncertainty into a system that prioritizes spreadsheets over settlements. Their removal is presented as a matter of procedural neutrality. In fact, it’s political engineering. Democracy here is not participatory. It’s selective.
Israel’s contribution to this architecture deserves far more scrutiny than it has received.
Israel operates under a permanent state of exception, presenting itself as a stabilized democracy. Its leadership, led by a prime minister wanted by the International Criminal Court, is treated as a technical partner rather than a liability. Gaza provides the context. Civilian deaths are complicated. Accountability becomes optional.
This is not hypocrisy. It is a hierarchical morality. And hierarchical morality is not a contradiction in the system. It’s that stabilizer.
Israel’s annexation of East Jerusalem, its expansion of settlements in the West Bank, and its repeated cross-border military operations will not be halted by accidental legal decisions, but in effect. What is prohibited depends on the situation. Treaty obligations are elastic. What would otherwise be a violation is here reframed as necessary.
This elasticity is not local. It is exported. Partners acquire not only weapons but also permission structures and an understanding that legality is something to be controlled, not something to be followed.
The projections do their best work when warnings are issued about the “imperial illusions” directed at Turkiye. Homegrown territorial revisionism can be rebranded as a security necessity. Expansion is recorded as a defense. Accusations are broken by inspection, but inspection is not encouraged.
geometry of omission
What ultimately holds this architecture together is differentiated judgment rather than shared norms.
The same actions, militarization, territorial modification, legal maximalism, are condemned or normalized not by their content but by the actors who carry them out. Some countries are governed by international law. others interpret it. A select few will operate on it as long as it remains strategically useful.
International law does not disappear here. It’s layered.
The rhetorical alignment of eastern Libya makes the architecture complete in itself. From the Aegean Sea through Cyprus and Israel to North Africa, a continuous belt has emerged, harmonizing maritime claims, energy corridors, and security narratives.
It is never said that it is anti-Turkish. It doesn’t have to be that way. Enough geometry.
From Ankara’s perspective, this is not a competition. These are strategic compression, containment without confrontation, and exclusion without declaration. It is easier for a nation to tolerate its enemies than to tolerate its irrelevance.
Against this background, the accusations of “Ottoman ambitions” leveled at Turkiye are not convincing. they perform. Last century, Israel, not Turkiye, expanded its borders through annexation. That claim to fairness is pathological because it disrupts a system built on selective legitimacy.
This system is based on the fragile premise that complex architectures can substitute for political solutions indefinitely. You can’t do that. A system that eliminates ambiguity eliminates flexibility. An architecture that eliminates generates a counterarchitecture. Orders based on exceptions are confusing. Mr. Turkiye did not react emotionally. It’s a structural response.
What is labeled as assertiveness is actually resistance to erasure. Prime Minister Turkiye’s response will have repercussions across the region, starting with the Aegean and Cyprus. In both cases, international law supports the country’s position.
the last satire
The Eastern Mediterranean is not militarized. This is becoming streamlined and easier to read with dashboards, interoperability frameworks, and risk management models. Cyprus is not a victim. That’s how it works. Israel is not a stable country. It’s an exception multiplier. Western values will not be betrayed. They become proceduralized until they no longer interfere.
Once upon a time, the Empire marched. This will be installed automatically, politely, legally, and with a great press conference. Maps already understand that. The communiqué will be uploaded later.


