by Maria Petrakis
June 12, 2015 — 2:01 AM EEST
A bronze
statue of Harry S. Truman stands unguarded along a busy Athens
road, a reminder of Greece ’s
post-World War II position as a strategic bulwark for the U.S. and Europe .
If
euro-area policy makers overcome their frustration over Greek financial
brinkmanship and cough up more aid, it will be in no small part because of that
role.
“Greece ’s geopolitical potential has been used as
a promise, but mostly as a threat,” said Eirini Karamouzi, lecturer in
contemporary history at Sheffield University and author of a book on Greece ’s relationship with Europe
during the Cold War. “There’s always been the threat of a catastrophic
spillover effect if Greece
was left to its own devices or, worse, turn into a failed state in Europe ’s backyard.”