Kathimerini English

The West’s eastern frontier: From Thermopyla­e and Salamis to the Aegean Sea OMMENTARY

- BY ALEXANDROS P. MALLIAS * * Alexandros P. Mallias is a former ambassador of the Hellenic Republic to the United States (2005-09).

It is not necessary to reiterate that Thermopyla­e and Salamis saved Greece and the Western civilizati­on. They countered despotism, thus saving democracy and the anthropoce­ntric political and social systems. History is not just what happened, but also what happened because of it. Since then, Thermopyla­e has remained the ecumenical symbol of valor, heroism and sacrifice. “No surrender.” And Salamis is the paradigm for political and military leadership, strategy, as well as psychologi­cal warfare.

Two thousand five hundred years ago, Xerxes embarked on an unpreceden­ted military expedition against Hellas. Herodotus offers an amazing account of the Persian multiethni­c army. He also offers us an account of the Greeks’ state of mind. Xerxes, Persia’s king, asked Demaratus, the ex-king of Sparta self-exiled to Susa, to explain the state of the Hellenes. Demaratus commented: “…there is no way that they will accept your stated intention to enslave Hellas. Next, even if all the others come to see things in your way, the Spartans will certainly oppose you in battle. You need not ask as to their number in order to consider how they could possibly do this, for if there are 1,000 of them marching out, they will fight you, and if they number more or less than that they will fight you all the same” (Herodotus, Polymnia, 102103). Any overwhelmi­ng difference in the size of the aggressor’s army never deterred the Greeks. Demaratus further elaborated that the Hellenes were fighting as free men, not from fear. They wanted to defend their homeland and their freedom.

With “The Persians,” Aeschylus offers us an epic and lyric account of the naval encounter of Salamis. Written in 472 BC, “The Persians” is the oldest surviving Greek tragedy. It is the first known play based not on myth but on historical fact, the defeat of the Persian Army in the straits of Salamis. My favorite extract from “The Persians” is the following: In the presence of the chorus of Persian Elders, the Persian Messenger gives Queen Atossa, Xerxes’ mother, his account of the battle, describing the way the Hellenes launched the naval attack: “…They rushed hard at us with a great shout: ‘Charge! Greek men, set your country free! Save your children, your wives, the holy temples of your fathers’ gods, the sacred tombs of your ancestors! Now is the time to fight for all these things!”

Let me now put a marker on a few facts related to the past, yet so relevant to the present: 1. Greece, Europe’s gatekeeper: Xerxes was fully aware that by defeating Hellas he was also going to conquer Europe. He confessed to his fellow Persians: “…There is no state, there is no human nation who could resist us on the battlefiel­d, once we defeat the Hellenes” (Herodotus, Polymnia, 8-9). Today the situation is not much different. In March 2020, Turkey orchestrat­ed a hybrid attack using mostly irregulars, mixed with illegal immigrants and some refugees against the common land border with Greece at the Evros River as well as illegal crossing attempts in the Aegean Sea.

The alarming daily aggressive air and naval operations by Turkish forces targeting Greece, Cyprus and occasional­ly France are a threat to internatio­nal peace and security. Turkey’s despotic President Recep Tayyip Erdogan publicly stated several times in March that by marching against Greek borders he was aiming at Europe. His adventuris­m matches that of Xerxes. With his characteri­stic arrogance, he directly insults and challenges European and transatlan­tic values on a daily basis. 2. Back to Herodotus. Before launching the military campaign, Xerxes dispatched envoys to the Hellenic cities demanding the traditiona­l symbol of surrender and submission – an “offering of earth and water.” The cities refusing the “offer” were bound to be destroyed. Two thousand five hundred years later, President Erdogan’s message is: Accept my terms on everything we forward as our own bilateral agenda or you will face the consequenc­es of war. Since 1975, Turkey has been threatenin­g Greece with a casus belli (declaratio­n of war). This menace is a violation of Article 2, Paragraph 4 of the United Nations Charter, which states that “all members shall refrain from the threat or use of force against the territoria­l integrity… of any state.” It is also a blunt violation of NATO’s Charter, which states (Article 1): “The Parties undertake, as set forth in the Charter of the United Nations, to settle any internatio­nal dispute… by peaceful means in such a manner that internatio­nal peace and security and justice are not endangered, and to refrain in their internatio­nal relations from the threat or use of force in any manner inconsiste­nt with the UN purposes.” While Turkey is targeting two NATO allies, France and Greece, implementi­ng Article 1 would be enough. This is not the case. NATO’s credibilit­y is at its lowest. Apathy, double standards and a non-principled stance could lead to the hazardous implementa­tion of NATO’s Article 5 (intra-allied solidarity) on an opt-in/opt-out basis. 3. Painting the picture of today’s Xerxes could also include: A) Since July 1974, Turkey has illegally occupied the territory of the Republic of Cyprus. Formally, since 1996, it has been threatenin­g Greece with war. In 1976, 1987, 1996 and now in 2020, Turkey’s unlawful policies have brought the two countries close to conflict. Megalomani­a and fanaticism with now clear religious connotatio­ns prevail in Ankara. B) Russian weapons such as S-400 missiles are being purchased by Erdogan’s Turkey. Russia’s President Vladimir Putin would never provide such lethal weapons without formal guarantees that they should never be used against Russia. So, possible targets are NATO allies such as Greece, France, the United States and eventually Israel, Cyprus, Egypt, the Emirates etc. C) Israel’s enemies are President Erdogan’s associates; apparently, the Hamas leadership now has a Turkish passport. Turkey has no ambassador­s in Israel and Egypt and is almost at war with Armenia. Wherever they live (Turkey, Syria and many in Iraq), Kurds are also considered Turkey’s targets. President Erdogan likes to discover enemies: enemies at home, in the neighborho­od, in Europe, in the US Congress and among key American political leaders. Enemies everywhere. D) According to the US State Department’s annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices released in March 2020: “…Significan­t human rights issues included: reports of arbitrary killings; suspicious deaths of persons in custody; forced disappeara­nces; torture; arbitrary arrest and detention of tens of thousands of persons, including former opposition members of parliament, lawyers, journalist­s; …the existence of political prisoners, including elected officials and academics; significan­t problems with judicial independen­ce; severe restrictio­ns on freedom of expression, the press, and the internet, including violence and threats of violence against journalist­s, closure of media outlets, and unjustifie­d arrests or criminal prosecutio­n of journalist­s…” Yet, European Union members and officials seem well-accommodat­ed. 4. Peace in accordance with internatio­nal law and the UN Charter is the backbone of Greece’s policy. “Peace is not merely the absence of war; it is the presence of justice” (Martin Luther King Jr). Two thousand five hundred years after Thermopyla­e and Salamis, Hellenes have the will and the capabiliti­es to defend their homeland. Any unilateral action by Turkey will probably result in an allout confrontat­ion adversely affecting US, NATO and European security interests.

Demaratus elaborated that the Hellenes were fighting as free men, not from fear. They wanted to defend their homeland and their freedom

Any unilateral action by Turkey will probably result in an all-out confrontat­ion adversely affecting US, NATO and European security interests

 ??  ?? The alarming daily aggressive air and naval operations by Turkish forces targeting Greece, Cyprus and occasional­ly France are a threat to internatio­nal peace and security, says Alexandros P. Mallias, a former ambassador of Greece to the US.
The alarming daily aggressive air and naval operations by Turkish forces targeting Greece, Cyprus and occasional­ly France are a threat to internatio­nal peace and security, says Alexandros P. Mallias, a former ambassador of Greece to the US.

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