The 3rd Greece-Cyprus Intergovernmental Summit, taking place tomorrow, Wednesday, in Athens, brings together Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and President Nicos Christodoulides, two years after its official launch in 2023. According to government sources, the aim is to intensify and broaden bilateral cooperation in areas that go far beyond traditional foreign policy coordination.
Environment, Health, Education, Transportation, Digital Policy, Housing, Civil Protection, Justice, Culture are expected to be at the center of discussions. Ministers from both countries will explore ways to coordinate actions, exchange best practices, and strengthen cross-border collaboration.
At the same time, the backroom political spotlight focuses on issues with regional and geopolitical significance. The Cyprus issue, especially following the election of Tufan Erhürman as leader of the Turkish Cypriot community, is expected to dominate the agenda, while Cyprus’s preparations for the EU Council Presidency in the first half of 2026 add further political weight to the summit.
“The agenda is not just bilateral; it’s geopolitical,” a senior government official commented, hinting that the talks will include energy-related issues in light of recent developments and agreements that enhance Greece’s geopolitical and energy role in the wider region, reaching even to Ukraine.
Sources indicate that the Prime Minister will brief Christodoulides on meetings with U.S. officials, as well as agreements signed in Athens that upgrade Greece’s strategic and energy profile.
The summit will be followed by a session of the Intergovernmental Summit Plenary, after which the two leaders will make joint statements to the press. Yet the real intrigue lies behind the scenes: which issues will remain undisclosed, which strategic moves will be made, and how will they reshape the political landscape of Greece and Cyprus?
This summit, combining bilateral talks with international power dynamics, leaves many questions about the next steps for Athens and Nicosia, both in energy and broader geopolitical strategy.
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