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Opinion

Why Greece is Israel’s latest unlikely friend

Israel and Greece have just signed a defence deal worth around £1.2 billion

April 22, 2021 10:29
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2 min read

Summer is coming to the Mediterranean and, with it, the consummation of new friendships. Israel and Greece have just signed a defence deal worth around £1.2 billion. Elbit Systems will establish a training centre for the Hellenic Air Force, supply new training aircraft and the very latest in equipment to Greece’s pilots.

Where politics goes, money invariably follows. And this deal is as much about international relations as it is about cash.

Greece was once proudly anti-Israel. When PASOK took power in 1981 to form Greece’s first socialist government since 1924, it brought with it a worldview steeped in anti-imperialism. Greece, it raged, was a perennial underdog exploited by Great Powers. Greek political discourse swelled with the language of grievance and defiance. Athens was angry.

Nothing encapsulated this trend so much as the annual 17 November March — a procession that takes place each year to commemorate the Athens Polytechnic uprising of November 1973, when students protesting against the Greek military junta began demonstrations that would lead to its eventual downfall.