Kathimerini English

Tangible rewards for alliance-building

- BY ALEXIS PAPACHELAS

Greece’s military spending has shrunk dramatical­ly as a result of the crisis, widening the defense gap with Turkey. Successive Greek government­s have spent billions on armaments over the past few decades, yet there is very little to show for it in terms of a defense industry. After getting off to an ambitious start, state-owned firms such as the Hellenic Aerospace Industry (EAV) and others were gradually choked by mismanagem­ent from political parties and unionism. Ankara, however, learned its lesson after the three-year US arms embargo in the 1970s, which prompted it to develop a long-term plan and a strong defense industry, and today Turkey is regarded as a pioneer in cuttingedg­e technology. No one can say how it will be affected if the United States goes ahead with sanctions over the country’’s purchase of the Russian S-400 missile defense system. Right now, it is not even certain that US President Donald Trump will allow any sanctions at all. The irony, of course, is that Turkey has gone from gaining so much from cooperatio­n with Israel in the area of defense, to the Israeli lobby now pushing the United States to cut Turkey off from the F-35 fighter jet program. For its part, Greece has been playing its diplomatic cards right. The need for closer ties with the US and Israel became apparent with the onset of the crisis, and, in a rare show of political maturity, the government­s of George Papandreou, Antonis Samaras and Alexis Tsipras pursued this line. Now it seems that both the United States and Israel are looking forward to a further deepening of this relationsh­ip under the administra­tion of Kyriakos Mitsotakis. But since in diplomacy, as in so many other things, it takes two to tango, Greece needs to start reaching for tangible and quantifiab­le rewards that will help it narrow the gap with Turkey within the next decade. Restarting its defense industry could be among the initiative­s it could push for. The country has plenty of talent in the area of technology and several major procuremen­t programs are due to begin shortly, which could act as a push to get such an initiative off the ground. If the shenanigan­s of the past (such as the fiasco with the Elefsina shipyards) are truly behind us, Greece is in a position to accomplish a lot. But we need to get serious and start acting, if only a little bit, like a small country that is capable of achieving a lot thanks to its ability to form and stick to a plan, a domestic brain trust and American support.

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