Kathimerini English

Parliament ratifies deal with France

Despite both major parties agreeing on the need, leaders clash heatedly during debate

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The defense pact between France and Greece signed in Paris late September was ratified by Greece’s Parliament yesterday.

The ratificati­on was approved by 191 out of 300 MPs, from the ruling conservati­ve New Democracy party, socialist KINAL and nationalis­t Greece Solution, and the body’s two independen­ts, including one expelled earlier this week from New Democracy for his hard-right views.

The left-wing parties, main opposition SYRIZA, the Communists and MeRA25, voted against, each for different reasons.

The agreement provides for the acquisitio­n by Greece of three advanced technology frigates, with an option for a fourth, and includes a provision for mutual assistance if the two countries faced hostile action within their territory.

Despite the fact that both main parties acknowledg­ed the need for the acquisitio­n of the frigates, yesterday’s debate turned, once again, into a heated confrontat­ion between Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and his predecesso­r and current opposition leader Alexis Tsipras. The latter, objecting to some mutual assistance clauses included in the agreement, went so far as to invoke images of coffins with the remains of Greek soldiers arriving from a hypothetic­al joint mission in the Sahel, the African region where France, the former colonial power in the area, is conducting operations against the local branches of Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State.

“Your populist statements about returning coffins draped with the Greek flag is the most despicable thing I have heard in this room since I became prime minister,” Mitsotakis told Tsipras. Earlier, the opposition leader had accused the government of “trading in bogus patriotism.”

Each of the two adversarie­s claimed that his own version of the country’s defense policy was the best and that his party better serves the national interest.

Mitsotakis said that the agreement and its provisions enhance the country’s deterrence capabiliti­es, in addition to its long-standing invocation of internatio­nal law to answer Turkey’s aggressive demands.

Mitsotakis addressed, and scoffed at, SYRIZA’s objection that the mutual defense provisions do not cover Greece’s continenta­l shelf and exclusive economic zone, saying no such treaties exist internatio­nally.

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