United States hope to advance relationship with Greece among European unrest

·

After the U.S. execution of Iranian terror mastermind Qassem Soleimani, the combustible regional dynamic across the eastern Mediterranean Sea, where southern Europe, the Middle East, Eurasia and northern Africa intersect, is more dangerous than any time since the 1973 Yom Kippur War.

It’s especially timely that President Trump value a kaleidoscopic geopolitical conversation when he meets Jan. 7 with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis regarding China, Russia, Iran, the European Union, Turkey, Libya, Ukraine, Israel, Egypt, energy, cyber security and more. 

The U.S.-Greece relationship is the strongest in decades, engaged in a strategic dialogue since 2018. Greece is long among NATO members spending above 2 percent of GDP on defence, with a renewed commitment to allocating 20 percent on major equipment. 

The Trump administration signed an open-ended military agreement to expand the deep-water naval base used by the Sixth Fleet in Souda Bay, Crete. Washington will build out three additional bases, including a naval air base near the Dardanelles Straits, to more effectively supply NATO allies Bulgaria and Romania and through which the Russian navy must navigate.

Mr. Mitsotakis recently welcomed China’s General Secretary Xi Jinping to Athens. They signed 16 government and business agreements across a diverse array of industrial, energy, banking, education, legal and agricultural sectors. 

Mr. Trump will ask Mr. Mitsotakis to strongly consider 5G alternatives to Huawei, the Chinese telecommunications giant. One of Europe’s least digitised countries, Greece will hold a 5G spectrum auction this year. From Washington’s perspective, a Huawei 5G network means granting the Chinese Communist Party access to personal, commercial, industrial and defence-related data, facilitating potential Chinese espionage and cyber-attacks against U.S. and Western interests. 

Sourced by: Washington Post

Monument to migration - Mother's Day

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
Angelo Tsarouchas Skits and Wits tour

Advertisement

Latest News

Winners shine at award ceremony for the 1st Greek Youth Creative Arts Competition

The Greek Festival of Sydney held the ‘1st Greek Youth Creative Arts Competition’ this year and recently announced the winners. Read more now

Melbourne’s Vanilla Lounge preserves nearly 50-year-old family tsoureki recipe

Located at Eaton Mall in the heart of Oakleigh, Melbourne, Vanilla Lounge is where you will find some of your Greek favourites. Read more now

Greek Orthodox Community of NSW students get creative with Easter lambathes and koulourakia

The Greek Orthodox Community of NSW (GOCNSW) Easter school holiday program was a huge hit with students last week.

Program released for visit of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew to Australia

A program of events has been released for the historic visit of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew to Australia in October this year.

Message at 2024 NSW teachers conference: AI is threatening to destroy languages

Hundreds of teachers of community languages in New South Wales have attended and annual conference at Sydney University. Read more here.

You May Also Like

NSW police officer, James Delinicolis, granted bail after being charged with sexual assault of teenage girl

James Delinicolis received bail in Central Local Court on Tuesday after being charged with sexual assault of a teenage girl in a hotel room.

‘Australians deserve a better future’: Q&A with Labor Leader Anthony Albanese

As the election race enters its final half, Opposition Leader, Anthony Albanese, sat down with The Greek Herald and answered our questions.

‘Lost Homeland’: Greek Australian Cultural League calls for artists for new exhibition

The GACL is organising a group art exhibition on the theme of “Lost Homelands”, to align with this year’s commemoration of the 100 years from the Asia Minor Catastrophe.