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Backgrounds: Greece Foreign Relations
Greece's foreign policy is increasingly aligned with that of its European partners. Greece gives particular emphasis to its close relations with Cyprus, but has growing political and economic ties with the Balkan countries and the Middle East.
Greece maintains full diplomatic, political, and economic relations with its south-central European neighbors. It provides peacekeeping contingents for Bosnia and Kosovo. Greece has good relations with Russia and has opened embassies in a number of the former Soviet republics, which it sees as potentially important trading partners. Prominent issues in Greek foreign policy include a dispute over the name of The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (F.Y.R.O.M.), the enduring Cyprus problem, Greek-Turkish differences over the Aegean, and Greek-American relations. The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (F.Y.R.O.M.) Albania Greece-Turkey-Cyprus Relations At times over the past three decades, tensions between Greece and Turkey have almost reached the point of armed confrontation, usually caused by one side or the other's attempting to clarify an ambiguous status quo in the Aegean. In 1996, President Clinton intervened to help avert a possible armed exchange after Greek and Turkish journalists generated a dispute over ownership of an uninhabited rock called Imia. A significant breakthrough in relations took place with the major earthquakes that hit Turkey and Greece in 1999. Both countries and peoples responded generously to the other's need, helping turn around official perceptions that rapprochement was politically too risky. Since that time, Greek and Turkish Foreign Ministers George Papandreou and Ismail Cem (and his successor Abdullah Gul) have steadily increased the quantity and quality of bilateral exchanges, both official and unofficial. Greece has endorsed and supported Turkey's bid for candidacy to the European Union since the Helsinki EU Summit in 1999. Greece's advocacy was a key element of the EU's decision at the 2002 Copenhagen Summit: that if the European Council in December 2004 decides that Turkey has met certain criteria on economic and political reform, and has made progress on the resolution of regional disputes, "the EU will open negotiations without delay." Despite continuing disagreements with Ankara over Cyprus and the Aegean, Greek opinion leaders across the political spectrum are convinced that Greece's long-term interests are best served by Turkey's successfully fulfilling the requirements for European Union membership. The EU's Copenhagen Summit also approved the accession of the Republic of Cyprus as of May 1, 2004--a key foreign policy goal for Greece, which is still pressing for resolution of the Cyprus problem. Turkey has criticized the EU's decision, warning that it will complicate efforts to reach a Cyprus agreement. Actual negotiations have been moribund since early 2003. The Middle East
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