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Greece ratifies defence agreement with the U.S. amid anti-war protests

January 31, 2020 02:59 am | Updated 02:59 am IST - Athens

The agreement, which updates a deal originally signed in 1990 when Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’ father was Premier, enables the use of the Greek military facilities, including the airbases of Larissa and Stefanovikio, by U.S. forces.

Communist-affiliated and leftist protesters hold an anti-NATO rally outside the Greek Parliament in Athens on January 30, 2020.

Greece’s Parliament on Thursday approved an updated Defence Agreement with the U.S. allowing the use of Greek military facilities as hundreds protested outside.

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A majority of lawmakers ratified the Mutual Defence Cooperation Agreement (MDCA) as hundreds of Communist, left-wing and anti-war demonstrators protested on central Syntagma Square. The agreement, which updates a deal originally signed in 1990 when Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’ father was Premier, enables the use of the Greek military facilities, including the airbases of Larissa and Stefanovikio, by U.S. forces.

Permitted actions

Permitted actions for U.S. forces at these facilities include training, refuelling, temporary maintenance, storage and emergency response. The updated deal was originally signed in October during a visit by U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

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“This agreement is beneficial to national interests,” Greece Defence Minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos told Parliament. The U.S. is also granted priority status for “unimpeded access and use” within 48 hours of the port of Alexandroupolis, a Balkans and Black Sea gateway of strategic value to the U.S. Navy and NATO.

The U.S. paid approximately $2.3 million to remove last year a sunken dredging barge that had blocked part of the harbour since 2010. “This agreement upgrades (Greece’s) importance in U.S. planning and can help deterrence,” the Defence Minister said, adding that U.S. forces were expected to invest over 12 million Euros ($13 million) on the Larissa base and around six million Euros at Marathi, part of the US base of Souda, Crete.

F-16 upgrade programme

Athens has signed on to an F-16 upgrade programme worth $1.5 billion, and is also interested in U.S.-made drones and, eventually, F-35 warplanes, Mr. Mitsotakis has said.

The agreement has been roundly condemned by left-wing opposition parties. “Wherever they are, U.S. and NATO bases are targets for reprisals...NATO bases do not protect,” said Communist party chairman Dimitris Koutsoumbas, warning that the government was “deepening” its involvement in “adventurism.”

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