
Turkey has been intensifying its promotion of a “two-state” solution in Cyprus, turning it into the centrepiece of its diplomatic narrative – or so it appears.
Most recently, during a meeting in Ankara with the Cypriot Turkish leader Tufan Erhurman, President Erdogan called the two-state model “the most realistic” option.
Ankara presents the forced division of Cyprus not as the political and legal aberration that resulted from its 1974 invasion






