Cyprus’s EU Presidency: Reunification as Opportunity or Geopolitical Gambit?
How Nikos Christodoulides’s ZDF interview reframes the Cyprus issue amid broader EU strategic shifts
How Nikos Christodoulides’s ZDF interview reframes the Cyprus issue amid broader EU strategic shifts
Referencing threats in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Turkish “Blue Homeland,” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sends a forceful message that impacts Greece-Turkey relations and regional stability.
From Politico’s warnings to closed-door anxiety in Brussels, Europe’s geopolitical cohesion is being tested at the worst possible moment.
Greece enters a new geopolitical doctrine of power, investing in layered air and missile defense, fifth-generation fighter jets and naval superiority at a time of heightened regional tensions and strategic volatility.
In a sharp political counterattack, Plevris and Georgiadis demand respect for national sovereignty and critique “ideologically biased” international bodies, emphasizing Greek security, law and order, and citizens’ interests over traditional left‑leaning narratives.
A little-known territory at the Horn of Africa becomes a strategic fault line, as Israel moves first, Turkey reacts nervously and global powers recalibrate their interests along the world’s most critical maritime corridor.