Athens Says No to Trump’s ‘Peace Council’ — European Allies Also Hesitant”
Greece hesitates to join the U.S. president’s proposed international forum, raising diplomatic eyebrows across Europe
Greece hesitates to join the U.S. president’s proposed international forum, raising diplomatic eyebrows across Europe
Energy leadership, falling futures, and Trump’s Greenland insistence create market jitters
National anthem in Strasbourg, political symbolism and a strategic message to Brussels
Greece’s decision to deepen defence cooperation with Israel on counter-drone technologies marks far more than a technical upgrade of its armed forces. It signals a strategic recalibration in Athens’ security doctrine—one shaped by Turkey’s rapid military-technological ascent, Europe’s strategic hesitation, and the changing nature of warfare in the Eastern Mediterranean.
After a marathon 4.5‑hour meeting, Athens and farm representatives discuss electricity costs, fuel tax relief and broader support — but farmers plan to take decisions at roadblocks.
EU finance ministers meet in Brussels; Greek‑headed Eurogroup stresses cohesion, investment unions, single market and digital euro.