U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry praised Greece on Friday for embracing strategic
energy projects that will lessen Europe's dependence on Russian gas and voiced
support for its economic reforms as it grapples with debt and refugee crises.
"The United States is enthusiastic
about Greece's growing role in European energy security, which is in the end a
major strategic interest that we share," he said at a news conference with
Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias. "We applaud the Greek government for
moving forward on the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline and the Greece-Bulgaria
interconnector."
Those planned gas links would lessen Italy's
and Bulgaria's dependence on Russia as an energy provider. They are part of a
geopolitical tug-of-war to keep Greece in the Western energy orbit. Leftist
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras raised eyebrows in Washington earlier this year
when he held talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on joining Russian
pipeline projects.
Among those was the Turkish Stream gas
pipeline, now on hold, that has been conceived as an alternative to the South
Stream project that Moscow scrapped in December. Kerry also said Washington
wanted to do what it could to help Greece emerge from its economic crisis and
offered warm words for Tsipras' efforts to revive the economy despite
scepticism among some EU governments that Athens will keep its promises on debt
and reform.
"I appreciate the way in which you have
been approaching the economic reform effort and the challenges of the
debt," he told Tsipras earlier, at the start of their meeting. "It's
not easy, and we want to try to be as helpful as we can to see Greece come out
of this," he added.
Kerry began his short stay in Athens by
visiting a network for migrant women in Greece, called Melissa, which is
involved in helping some of the hundreds of thousands of Syrian and other
refugees who have streamed through Greece this year.
Standing with members of the group, Kerry
stuffed a small blue bag with items designed to bring comfort to refugee
children, including gloves, hats, scarves, toys and stuffed animals.
Πηγή: reuters.com
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