CLOSE
Loading...
12° Nicosia,
10 June, 2026
 

On the European Path

The European Union’s public and firm support toward Greece and Cyprus is of historical significance

Alexis Papachelas

Alexis Papachelas

The European Union’s public and firm support toward Greece and Cyprus is of historical significance. I’m not sure whether it will have any practical impact. This will become evident in the coming days and weeks.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is unpredictable and, unfortunately, Greek-Turkish ties have accumulated a lot of negative energy over the past few months.

However, it’s important to consider how Greece would be viewed by Turkey, and by every other regional foe, if the country were not a member of the European family. Late statesman Constantine Karamanlis has been rightfully vindicated. He believed that EU membership would protect Greece against a dual threat. One threat was the country itself.

His experience taught him that every 20-30 years, we tend to release our bad self, to deregulate our political system, and get ourselves into trouble.

Greek-Turkish ties have accumulated a lot of negative energy over the past few months

At the same time, Karamanlis knew that Greece would be stronger – vis-a-vis friends as well as enemies – as part of a bigger group of nations with economic and geostrategic influence.

Because Greeks are, in the words of professor Kostas Kostis, “history’s spoiled children,” for a long time we were addicted to the benefits of EU membership. We ended up taking them for granted. We even reached the point, after the big economic crisis and the bankruptcy of the Greek republic, of questioning the point of our participation in the bloc.

With no shortage of immaturity and naive passion, we were charmed by the vague promise of a different path that was bound to bring us closer to our southerly neighbors. Thankfully, we stepped back from that.

It’s worth keeping in mind that Europe is not only about economic and strategic gains but also about obligations. There are tough days ahead of us. Turkey might push things to the extremes because it has entered a phase of instability, of unpredictability. If the worst came to the worst, it’s not certain that European support would bring immediate, practical results. Further alliances would be needed.

But let’s focus on today for a moment. And let’s realize how lucky we are to be in a relatively safe haven when storms are breaking out all around. The geopolitical implications would be devastating had history taken a different turn either 40 or three years ago.

P.S. Let us also reflect on how Cyprus’s accession to the EU was a wise and a great success for Hellenism. Because we have a tendency to forget this as well.

TAGS
Greece  |  Turkey  |  Cyprus  |  EU politics

Comment: Latest Articles

The question is not whether change is coming, but how Cyprus responds. Photo credit: www.consilium.europa.eu

Veto or not?

Cyprus risks losing influence if it remains attached to an outdated view of the veto.
Opinion
 |  OPINION
Social Media photo courtesy Visit Cyprus

Coffee shop conversations

How a village café becomes the heartbeat of community life, memory, and everyday connection in rural Cyprus.
Michalis Michaelides
 |  OPINION
Composure

Composure

Voters back familiar parties and send a warning to louder, anti-establishment voices that politics still runs on trust, ...
Opinion
 |  OPINION
Turkey did not hide its intentions. The maps, coordinates, and warnings were there from the beginning, while Cyprus chose delay over confrontation. Photo credit: kibrispostasi.com

15 Years

For 15 years, Cyprus watched Turkey formalize its claims in silence. Now, after Ankara prepares to cement them into law, ...
Pavlos Xanthoulis
 |  OPINION
Platforms continue promising a better user experience while demanding more sharing and more noise from people already stretched to their limit. Image is AI

No more noise

Information overload is no longer a side effect of digital life but one of its defining conditions, leaving less room for ...
Paris Demetriades
 |  OPINION
The real issue is not how investors see us, but how willingly we trade heritage, identity, and community for quick money. Photo credit: @trozena.cy Facebook

Talking past the real issue

We had more outrage for a foreign investor pointing out that Cypriots speak English than for the unchecked development that ...
Paris Demetriades
 |  OPINION
Israel at Eurovision

Israel at Eurovision

Why are Russian bans in sports and culture not matched with similar restrictions on Israel?
Opinion
 |  OPINION
File photo of Constantinos the Great Beach Hotel in Protaras, Cyprus

Prudently & sparingly

As tourism takes a hit from regional tensions, questions grow over whether profitable hotels should receive state aid while ...
Dorita Yiannakou
 |  OPINION
In Trozena, investors see opportunity while the state once again looks unprepared and absent. Photo credit: trozena.cy

On Trozena’s pitch-black ridge

A forgotten Cypriot village becomes the latest battleground between unchecked development and the loss of local identity. ...
Apostolos Kouroupakis
 |  OPINION
From Suez to Iran, history offers a reminder that even the best-laid military plans can quickly unravel. Photo credit: @whitehouse Instagram

Give peace a chance

Trump’s unpredictable war strategy has left allies uneasy and searching for clarity.
Costas Iordanidis
 |  OPINION
Behind the push for investment, a quiet power struggle between Cyprus’s top business bodies is becoming impossible to ignore. Photo credit: Unsplash

In the trenches

A long-simmering rivalry spills into the open as business groups clash over influence and exclusion.
Dorita Yiannakou
 |  OPINION
Growth for a few, hardship for many, and the quiet collapse behind the success story. Photo credit: Unsplash

The wreckage of a narrative

A decade after the crisis, the story of economic recovery looks far less convincing for most Cypriots.
Paris Demetriades
 |  OPINION
X