Zaev-Mitsotakis New York meeting – breaking the ice

Zaev focused on winning Greek support for EU enlargement

- Advertisement -

The prime ministers of Greece and North Macedonia held their first face-to-face meeting on the sidelines of the 74th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) 24 September, ending a long period since the 7 July election victory of Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who has sought to keep the issue of bilateral relations on the back burner in order to handle other challenges.
The opposite is true for North Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev, who has staked his political career on his country joining NATO and the European Union. Zaev must demonstrate forward movement on both fronts and the EU is due to decide on the timetable for enlargement discussions with North Macedonia and Albania in October.
Mitsotakis, as the newly elected Greek PM in a period of difficult relations between Turkey and the western allies, was scheduled to meet US President Donald J. Trump in New York later on September 24, but that meeting was cancelled abruptly after political developments in Washington concerning a likely impeachment motion grabbed Trump’s full attention. Zaev was not scheduled to do so this year. In any event, Zaev will still be making history for his country as the first leader of the newly renamed North Macedonia to address the UNGA, later in the week.
Meeting readout
Greek government sources indicated an energetic but positive discussion ensued, in which Mitsotakis told Zaev he would never have signed the Prespes Agreement if he was in power and had done all he could while in opposition to block it, but now that it had been ratified, the document would have to be respected. Mitsotakis warned that the deal’s commercial clauses — mainly impacting the use of the name Macedonia for Greek products — needed to be fully respected. These comments are fully consistent with Mitsotakis’ position over the last several months.
Zaev was focused on his country’s EU accession, as to be expected. Zaev also claimed the implementation of the agreement would help Greek investors increase their profile in his country but Mitsotakis noted that was not quite accurate, as Greek companies faced no real barriers to investment in the years before the Prespes deal was signed.
No mention was made of any discussion of any form of official visit to Greece by Zaev, returning former Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ April then-labeled “historic” visit to Skopje.
Given that Zaev’s government had developed remarkably few lines of communication with Greek politicians other than from Syriza — Greece’s former ruling party and the one that signed the widely despised Prespes Agreement in 2018 — expanded contacts between top elected leaders in both countries makes perfect sense, especially in view of the looming increase in the flow of refugees from Turkey (both countries’ foreign ministers have met once in August).
US role in the meeting?
What is not known at this point is which side took the initiative to request the bilateral meeting in New York. It is of course quite possible the US offered its good offices, and it is very likely some kind of bilateral “heads of state” meeting was discussed during the July visit to both Athens and Skopje of US Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Phillip Reeker. American diplomats traditionally spend the summer months arranging high-level UNGA bilateral and regional group sessions and may have quietly suggested in Athens that the meeting with Zaev would help build the case for scheduling the all-important Trump-Mitsotakis New York meeting which never came to pass.

- Advertisement -

Subscribe to our newsletter

CEO/Editor-in-Chief.  Former US diplomat with previous assignments in Eastern Europe, the UN, SE Asia, Greece, across the Balkans, as well as Washington DC.  Although trained in economics, development policy and international affairs, these days such specialties are frequently referred to as international political economy and even geoeconomics.

Latest

Serbia’s energy dilemma: How to break from Russia and save its stability

Serbia’s energy “decoupling” from Russia seems to be on...

Europe Should Regulate, Not Ban, Nicotine Pouches

As France moves toward banning nicotine pouches, it risks...

EU-Uzbekistan agreement to boost trade, regional integration

After the historic visit to Brussels of the President...

Israel’s planned Nitzana pipeline to Egypt gains momentum

Israel's planned Nitzana pipeline that will be constructed from...

Don't miss

Serbia’s energy dilemma: How to break from Russia and save its stability

Serbia’s energy “decoupling” from Russia seems to be on...

Europe Should Regulate, Not Ban, Nicotine Pouches

As France moves toward banning nicotine pouches, it risks...

EU-Uzbekistan agreement to boost trade, regional integration

After the historic visit to Brussels of the President...

Israel’s planned Nitzana pipeline to Egypt gains momentum

Israel's planned Nitzana pipeline that will be constructed from...

Three elements of EU cooperation with Kazakhstan: connectivity, sustainability and partnership

The European Union views Kazakhstan as an important partner...

EU-Uzbekistan agreement to boost trade, regional integration

After the historic visit to Brussels of the President of Uzbekistan, Shavkat Mirziyoyev, NE Global discussed with Eldor Tulyakov, Executive Director at the Development...

Israel’s planned Nitzana pipeline to Egypt gains momentum

Israel's planned Nitzana pipeline that will be constructed from Ramat Hovav, near Beersheba in the Negev desert, to the border with Egypt in the...

Three elements of EU cooperation with Kazakhstan: connectivity, sustainability and partnership

The European Union views Kazakhstan as an important partner in Central Asia linking East and West, advancing interregional connectivity as Brussels and Astana expand...

As Trump’s Ukraine peace initiative fades, new U.S. sanctions unleashed

The war in Ukraine is again front and center in the White House. While U.S. President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace drive had started to...

Take a deep breath — the UK Budget is on its way

We have been softened up for what is going to be bad news, although no doubt there will be some sweeteners snuck in. So,...

AI solutions for energy and environmental sustainability

In an exclusive interview with NE Global at India’s Woxsen University in Hyderabad, Raul V. Rodriguez, Vice President and Steven Pinker Professor of Cognitive...

How Europe should avoid the fate of Ophelia

In her hit single “The Fate of Ophelia” Taylor Swift sings about the plight of the Shakespearean heroine and draws parallels with her own...

Taking a digital leap forward, the new EU Entry/Exit System progressively starts operations

The Entry/Exit System (EES), the European Union’s new digital border system which will apply to non-EU travellers entering or leaving the EU, became operational...