Turkeyโs economy minister sought to calm rising tensions with Germany on Friday as Berlin said it was reviewing all applications for arms projects from Ankara.
Tensions between the NATO allies have escalated since Turkey arrested six human rights activists including German national Peter Steudtner on accusations of terrorism; but relations have been strained over a series of often bitter disputes this year.
Turkeyโs economy minister told Reuters he believed the Turkey-Germany crisis was temporary.
โOne must refrain from words that would cause lasting harmโฆto the economies,โ Nihat Zeybekci said in an interview. โGermany must reassess comments that are inappropriate.โ
But Germany said almost immediately afterwards it would review Turkish applications for arms projects.
โWeโre checking all applications,โ an Economy Ministry spokeswoman said.
That means the Federal Office of Economics and Export Control (Bafa) probably cannot issue new export approvals; but projects already agreed will not be affected initially as no international sanctions have been imposed on Turkey.
In 2016 the German government exported armaments worth โฌ83.9m to Turkey. In the first four months of 2017, business worth 22 million euros was approved โ for deliveries for the navy and for joint projects with other NATO partners.
Germany has warned Germans travelling to Turkey that they do so at their own peril. Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble was quoted as comparing Turkey with the former communist East German state โ the German Democratic Republic (GDR).
โTurkey now makes arbitrary arrests and no longer sticks to minimum consular standards. That reminds me of how it was in the GDR,โ he told the mass-circulation Bild newspaper.
Schaeuble said those who travelled to the former Communist East before it collapsed in 1990 were aware that โif something happens to you, no one can help youโ.
TURKISH SECRET SERVICES
German officials have complained they have not had full consular access to Steudtner, who was arrested with five others and accused of โterrorismโ โ an allegation Berlin has dismissed as absurd. Another German citizen was arrested on charges of links to terrorism earlier this year.
The arrests were part of a broader crackdown across Turkish society since a failed coup last July.
Germanyโs domestic security chief expressed concern about increased activities of Turkeyโs secret service and the growth of militant groups among the three million people with Turkish roots living on German soil.
โWe know about the Turkish governmentโs influence on the Turkish community here in Germany,โ BfV president Hans-Georg Maassen told local newspaper Neue Osnabruecker Zeitung.
Maassen named as an example charges being made against supporters of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara accuses of orchestrating Turkeyโs failed coup last July. He also said there were attempts to โintimidate those with Turkish roots if they are against President (Tayyip) Erdoganโ.
German authorities barred Turkish ministers in March from speaking at mass rallies of expatriates supporting Erdoganโs campaign for broader presidential powers. Erdogan responded by accusing Berlin of โfascist actionsโ.
More than 150,000 people have been sacked or suspended from jobs in Turkeyโs civil service, military and private sector in the purges that followed the attempted putsch in 2016. More than 50,000 people have been jailed.
Rights groups and some Western governments say Erdogan is using the crackdown as a pretext to quash dissent. The Turkish government says the measures are necessary given the gravity of the security threat it faces.
Die Zeit newspaper reported this week that Turkish authorities had several weeks ago handed Berlin a list of 68 German companies, including Daimler and BASF that they accused of having links to US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, blamed by Ankara for orchestrating the coup.
Zeybekci said Germanyโs behaviour in cautioning its citizens over travel to Turkey was โunfortunateโ, but he did not see harm accruing to tourism.
So far this year, bookings from Germany have accounted for some 10 per cent of Turkeyโs tourists.
Last year, the number of foreign visitors to Turkey fell 30 per cent amid a spate of bombings by Kurdish and Islamist militants, the lowest in nine years. The travel sector contributes about $30bn to the economy in a normal year.
Commercial links are close.
Germany was also Turkeyโs top export destination in 2016, buying $14bn worth of Turkish goods. It was also the second biggest source of Turkish imports, at $21.5bn. Only China, at $25.4bn, exported more to Turkey.
German news broadcaster n-tv said it would no longer run adverts that aimed to attract investment in Turkey.