By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Greece
With rugged terrain come defensive benefits, but also two geographic handicaps.
First, Greece is largely devoid of any land-based transport routes to mainland
Europe. The only two links between Greece and Europe are the Axios and Strimonas rivers, both
which drain into the Aegean in Greek Macedonia. The Axios
(also called the Vardar River) is key because it connects to the Morava River
in Central Serbia and thus forms an Axios-Morava-Danube
transportation corridor. While no part of the river is actually navigable, one
can travel up the Balkan Peninsula on valley roads. The Strimonas
takes one from Greek Macedonia to Sofia, Bulgaria’s capital, and from there via
the Iskar River through the Balkan Mountains to the Danubian
plain of present-day Romania. Neither of these valleys is an ideal
transportation route, however, since each forces the Greeks to depend on their
Balkan neighbors to the north for links to Europe, historically an unenviable
position for Greece.
The second handicap for Greece is that its high mountains and jagged
coastline leave very little room for fertile valleys and plains, which are
necessary for supporting large population centers. Greece has many rivers and
streams that are formed in its mountains, but because of the extreme slope of
most hills, most of these waterways create narrow valleys, gorges or ravines in
the interior of the peninsula. This terrain is conducive to sheep- and
goat-herding but not to large-scale agriculture.
This does not mean that there is no room for crops to grow. Indeed,
rivers meeting the Aegean and Ionian seas carve short valleys that open to the
coast where the sea breeze creates excellent conditions for agriculture. The
problem is that, other than in Thessaly and Greek Macedonia, most of these
valleys are limited in area. This explains to an extent why Greece, throughout
its history, has retained a regionalized character, with each river estuary
providing sufficient food production for literally one city-state and with
jagged mountain peaks greatly complicating overland communication among these
population centers. The only place where this is not the case is in Greek
Macedonia — the location of present-day Thessaloniki — where a relatively large
agricultural area provided for the West’s first true empire, led by Alexander
the Great.
Lack of large areas of arable land combined with poor overland
transportation also complicate capital formation. Each river valley can supply
its one regional center with food and sufficient capital for one trading port,
but this only reinforces Greece’s regionalized mentality. From the perspective
of each region, there is no reason why it should supply the little capital it
generates to a central government when it could just as well use that capital
to develop a naval capability of its own, crucial for bringing in food via the
Aegean. This creates a situation where the whole suffers from a lack of
coordination and capital generation while substantial resources are spent on
dozens of independent maritime regions, a situation best illustrated by ancient
Greek city-states, most of which had independent navies. Considering that
developing a competent navy is one of the costliest of state endeavors, one can
imagine how such a regionalized approach to naval development constrained an
already capital-poor Greece.
The lack of capital generation is therefore the most serious implication
of Greek geography. Situated as far from global flows of capital as any
European country that considers itself part of the West, Greece finds itself
surrounded by sheltered ports, most of which are protected by mountains and
cliffs that drop off into the sea. This affords Greece little room for
population growth, and contributes to its inability to produce much domestic
capital. This, combined with the regionalized approach to political authority
encouraged by mountainous geography, has made Greece a country that has been
inefficiently distributing what little capital it has had for millennia.
Countries that have low capital growth and considerable infrastructural
costs usually tend to develop a very uneven distribution of wealth. The reason
is simple: Those who have access to capital get to build and control vital
infrastructure and thereby make the decisions both in public and working life.
In countries that have to import capital, this becomes even more pronounced,
since those who control industries and businesses that bring in foreign cash
have more control than those who control fixed infrastructure, which can always
be nationalized (industries and businesses can move elsewhere if threatened
with nationalization). When such uneven distribution of wealth is entrenched in
a society, a serious labor-capital (or, in the European context, a left-right)
split emerges. This is why Greece is politically similar to Latin American
countries, which face the same infrastructural and capital problems, right down
to periods of military rule and an ongoing and vicious labor-capital
split.
Greek Core: The Aegean
Despite the limitations on its capital generation, Greece has no
alternative but to create an expensive defensive capability that allows it to
control the Aegean Sea. Put simply, the core of Greece is neither the
breadbaskets of Thessaly and Greek Macedonia, nor the Athens-Piraeus
metropolitan area, where around half of the population lives. The core of
Greece is the Aegean Sea — the actual water, not the coastland — which allows
these three critical areas of Greece to be connected for trade, defense and
communication. Control of the Aegean also gives Greece the additional benefit
of influencing trade between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean. Without
control of the Aegean, there simply is no Greece.
To control the Aegean and Cretan seas, Greece has to control two key
islands in its archipelago, Rhodes and Crete, as well as the Dodecanese
archipelago. With those islands under its control, the Aegean and Cretan seas
truly become Greek “lakes.” The other island of importance to Athens is Corfu,
which gives Greece an anchor in the Otranto Strait and thus an awareness of
threats emerging from the Adriatic.
Anything beyond the main Aegean islands and Corfu is not within the
scope of Greece’s basic national security interests and can only be gained by
the projection of power. In this strategic context, Cyprus becomes important as
a way to distract and flank Turkey and break its communications with the Levant
and Egypt, traditional spheres of Istanbul’s (and later Ankara’s) influence.
Sicily is also within the range of Greek power projection, and at the height of
Greece’s power in ancient times, Sicily was frequently colonized by Greek
powers. Controlling Sicily gives Greece the key gateway into the western
Mediterranean and brackets off the entire eastern half of the Mediterranean for
itself. But neither is essential, and projecting Greek power toward either
Sicily or Cyprus in the modern day is extremely taxing, although Greece has
attempted it with Cyprus, an attempt that led to a near disastrous military
confrontation with neighboring Turkey.
The cost of controlling just the Aegean Sea and its multitude of islands
cannot be overstated. Aside from the monumental expense of maintaining a navy,
Greece has the additional problem of having to compete with Turkey, which is
still considered an existential threat for Greece.
In the modern context, this has also underscored the importance of air
superiority over the Aegean. The Greek air force prides itself on maintaining a
large and advanced fleet of front-line combat aircraft well in excess of the
country’s economic means, and many observers believe that their fighter pilots
are among the best and most experienced in Europe — and beyond (they regularly
tangle with Turkish pilots over the Aegean).
But maintaining, owning and training a superior air force means that
Greece was spending more than 6 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) on
defense, twice what other European countries were spending, just prior to the
onset of the current financial crisis (it has since pledged to reduce it
significantly, to below 3 percent). With no indigenous capital generation of
its own, Greece has been forced to import capital from abroad to maintain such
an advanced military. This is in addition to a generous social welfare system
and considerable infrastructural needs created by its rugged geography. The
result is the ongoing debt crisis that is threatening not only to collapse
Greece but also to take the rest of the eurozone with it. The Greek budget
deficit reached 13.6 percent of GDP in 2009, and government debt is approaching
150 percent of GDP.
Greece has not always been a fiscal mess. It has, in fact, been
everything from a global superpower to a moderately wealthy European state to a
political and economic backwater. To understand how this isolated, capital-poor
country has devolved, we need to look beyond physical geography and contemplate
the political geography of the region in which Greece has found itself
throughout history.
From Ancient Superpower…
Ancient Greece gave the Western world its first culture and philosophy.
It also gave birth to the study of geopolitics with Thucydides’ History of the
Peloponnesian War, which is considered to be a seminal work on international
relations. It is an injustice to give the ancient Greek period a quick
overview, since it deserves a geopolitical monograph of its own, but a brief
look provides a relevant glimpse at how geography played a role in turning Greek
city-states into a superpower. The political geography of the period was vastly
different from that of the present day. The Mediterranean Sea was the center of
the world, one in which a handful of Greek city-states clutching the coast of
the Aegean Sea could launch “colonial” expeditions across the Mediterranean.
The rugged geography also afforded these city-states a terrain that favored
defense and allowed them to defeat more powerful opponents.
Nonetheless, the ancient Greek period is the last time that Greece had
some semblance of political independence. It therefore offers insights into how
Greek geography has crafted Greek strategy.
From this ancient period, we note that control of the Aegean was of
paramount importance, as it still is today. The Greeks — faced with nearly
impassible terrain on the Peloponnesian Peninsula — were forced to become
excellent mariners. Securing the Aegean was also crucial in repelling two major
Persian invasions in antiquity, and each major land battle had its contemporary
naval battle to sever Persian supply lines. Once the existential Persian threat
was eliminated, Athens, the most powerful of the Greek city-states, launched an
attempt to expand itself into an empire. This included establishing control of
key Aegean islands. That imperial extension essentially ended with a long,
drawn-out campaign to occupy and hold Sicily, which would have formed the basis
of control of the entire eastern Mediterranean, and to wrestle Cyprus from
Persian control.
While the Athenians may have understood the geopolitics of the
Mediterranean well, they did not have advanced bureaucratic and communications
technology that makes running a country much easier in the modern age or the
population with which to prosecute their plans. Athenian expeditions to Cyprus
and Egypt were repulsed while Sicily became Athens’ endgame, causing dissent in
the coalition of city-states that eventually brought about the end of Athenian
power. This example only serves to illustrate how difficult it was to maintain
control of mainland Greece. Athens settled for a loose confederation of
city-states, which was not a sufficient basis of control on which to establish
an empire.
Bitter rivalries among the various Peloponnesian city-states created a
power vacuum in the 4th century B.C. that was quickly filled by the Kingdom of
Macedon. Despite its reputation as the most “backward” of the Greek regions —
in terms of culture, system of government, philosophy and arts — Macedon had
something that the city-states did not: the ample agricultural land of the Axios and Strimonas river valleys
— ample, at least, compared to the Peloponnesian Peninsula. Whereas Athens and
other city-states depended on seaborne trade to obtain grain from regions
beyond the Turkish straits and the Black Sea, Macedon had domestic agriculture.
It also had an absolute authoritarian system of government that allowed it to
launch the first truly Greek-dominant foray into global power projection under
Alexander the Great.
This effort, however, could not be sustained. Ultimately, the estuary of
Axios did not provide the necessary agricultural base
to counter the rise of Rome, which was able to draw not only on the Tiber and
Arno river valleys but also, in time, the large Po river valley. Rome first
extended itself into the Greek domain by capturing the island of Corfu —
illustrating the island’s importance as a point of invasion from the west —
which had already fallen out of Greek hands in the 3rd century B.C. With Corfu
secured, Rome had nothing standing between it and the Greek mainland, and
through military campaigns ultimately secured control over all of Greece by 86
B.C.
The fall of Greece to Rome essentially wiped Greece out of the annals of
history as an independent entity for the next 2,000 years and destined mainland
Greece and the Peloponnesian Peninsula to the backwater status it had under
Byzantine and Ottoman rule (save for Thessaloniki, which remained a key port
and trading city in the Ottoman Empire). While it may be tempting to include
Byzantium in the discussion of Greek geopolitics, since its culture and
language were essentially Greek, the Byzantine geography was much more
approximate to that of the Ottoman Empire and later Turkey than that of Greece
proper. The core of Byzantium was the Sea of Marmara, which Byzantium held onto
against the encroaching Ottoman Turks until the mid-15th century.
In the story of the Ottoman conquest of the Balkans, the territory of
modern Greece is essentially an afterthought. It was the Ottoman advance
through the Maritsa River valley that destroyed Bulgarian and Serbian kingdoms
in the 14th century, allowing the Ottomans to then concentrate on consolidating
the remaining Byzantine territories and conquering Constantinople in the
mid-15th century after a brief interregnum caused by Mongol invasions of
Anatolia. Greece proper was not conquered as much as it was abruptly severed from
the rest of the Balkans — and therefore Christian Europe — by the Ottoman power
that thoroughly dominated all the land and sea surrounding it.
…To Vassal State
The ascent of the Ottoman Empire created a new political geography
around Greece that made an independent and powerful Greece impossible. The
Ottoman Empire was an impressive political entity that plugged up the Balkans
by controlling the southern flanks of the Carpathians in present-day Romania
and the central Balkan Mountains of present-day Serbia and Bulgaria. Greece, as
part of the Ottoman Empire, was not vital for Ottoman defense or purse,
although Greeks as people were valued as administrators and were assigned as
such to various parts of the empire. Greece itself, however, had become an afterthought.
If we had to pinpoint the exact time and place where political geography
in southeastern Europe changed, we could look at Sept. 11, 1683, at around 5
p.m. on the battlefields near Vienna. It was here that Polish King Jan Sobieski
III led what was, at the time, the largest cavalry charge in history against
the Ottoman forces besieging Vienna. The result was not just a symbolic defeat
for Istanbul but also a failure to plug the Vienna gap that the Danube and
Morava (the Slovak, not Serbian Morava) rivers create between the Alps and the
Carpathians.
Holding the Vienna gap would have allowed the Ottomans to focus their
military resources in defense of the empire at a geographical bottleneck —
Vienna — freeing up resources to concentrate on developing the Balkan
hinterland. The Pannonian plain, fertile and capital rich because of the
Danube, would have added additional resources. The Ottoman Empire did not
crumble immediately after its failure in Vienna, but its stranglehold on the
Balkans slowly began to erode as two new powers — the Russian and
Austro-Hungarian empires — rose to challenge it.
Without the Vienna gap secured, the Ottoman Empire was left without
natural boundaries to the northwest. From Vienna down to the confluence of the
Danube and Sava, where present-day Belgrade is located, the Pannonian plain is
borderless save for rivers. The mountainous Balkans provide some protection but
are equally difficult for the Ottomans to control without the time and
resources to concentrate on assimilating the region. The loss of Vienna,
therefore, exposed portions of the Balkan Peninsula to Western (and, crucially,
Russian) influence and interests as well as Western notions of nationalism,
which began circulating throughout the Continent with great force following the
French Revolution.
First to turn against the Ottomans was Serbia in the early 19th
century. The Greek struggle followed closely afterward. While initial Greek
gains against the Ottomans in the 1820s were impressive, the Ottomans unleashed
their Egyptian forces on Greece in 1826. The Europeans were at first resistant
to help Christian Greece because the precedent set by the nationalist rebellion
was equally unwelcome in multiethnic Russia and Austro-Hungary or the imperial
United Kingdom. Ultimately, the Europeans had a greater fear that one of the
three would move in and profit from the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire and
gain access to the eastern Mediterranean.
While Austro-Hungary and Russia had designs on the Balkans, more
established European powers like the United Kingdom, France and (later in the
19th century) Germany wanted to limit any territorial gains by
Vienna and St. Petersburg. This was vital for the United Kingdom, which did not
want to allow the Russian Empire access to the Mediterranean.
Since the end of its war against the Ottomans in 1832, Greece has been
geopolitically vital for the West. First it was vital for the British, as a
bulwark against great-power encroachment on the crumbling Ottoman hold in the
Balkans. The United Kingdom retained a presence — at various periods and in
various capacities — in Corfu, Crete and Cyprus. To this day, the United
Kingdom still has military installations in Cyprus that are considered
sovereign territory under direct British rule.
Greece also became vital for the United States as part of the U.S.
Soviet-containment strategy. To maintain influence in Greece, the United States
intervened in the Greek Civil War (1946-1949), furnished the Greek merchant
marine with ships after World War II, rushed Greece and Turkey into NATO in
1952 and continued to underwrite Greek defense outlays throughout the 20th
century. Even a brief military junta in Greece, referred to as the “Rule of the
Colonels” (1967-1974), did not affect Greek membership in NATO. Neither did
Greece’s near-wars with fellow NATO member Turkey in 1964 (over Cyprus), in
1974 (over Cyprus again), in 1987 (over the Aegean Sea) and in 1996 (over an
uninhabited island in the Aegean).
The United Kingdom and later the United States were willing to
underwrite Greek defense expenditures and provide Greece with sufficient
capital to be a viable independent state and enjoy a near-Western standard of
living. In exchange, Greece offered the West a key location from which to plug
Russian and later Soviet penetration into the Mediterranean basin.
Geopolitical Imperatives
Before we go into a discussion of the contemporary Greek predicament, we
can summarize the story of Greek geography as told by history in a few
strategic imperatives:
Secure control of the Aegean to maintain defensive and communication
lines with key mainland population centers.
Establish control of Corfu, Crete and Rhodes to prevent invasions from
the sea.
Hold the Axios River valley and as far up the
valley as possible for agricultural land and access to mainland Europe.
Consolidate the hold on inland Greece by eliminating regional power
centers and brigands, then collect taxes and concentrate capital in accordance
with the needs of the state.
Extend control to outer islands such as Cyprus and Sicily to dominate
the eastern Mediterranean (this is an imperative that Greece has not
accomplished since ancient times).
Greece Today
With the collapse of the Soviet threat at the end of the Cold War and
the subsequent end of the Balkan wars with the 1999 NATO bombing of Serbia, the
political geography of the region changed once again. This time the change was
unfavorable for Athens. With the West largely uninterested in the affairs of
the region, Greece lost its status as a strategic ally. And along with that
status, Athens lost the political and economic support that allowed it to
overcome its capital deficiencies.
This was evident to everyone but the Greeks. Countries rarely accept
their geopolitical irrelevance lightly. Athens absolutely refused to. Instead
it did everything it could to retain its membership in the first-world club,
borrowing enormous sums of money to spend on the most sophisticated military
equipment available and producing erroneous financial records to get into the
eurozone. This is often lost amid the ongoing debt crisis, which is commonly
described — mainly by the Western European press — as a result of Greek
laziness, profligate spending habits and irresponsibility. But faced with a
geography that engenders a capital- poor environment and an existential threat
from Turkey that challenges its Aegean core, Greece had no alternative but to
indebt itself after its Western patrons lost interest, and now even that option
is in doubt. (Trying to keep up with its fellow EU states in terms of quality
of life obviously played a role in Greece’s financ ial overextension, but this can also be placed in the
context of keeping up with a modernizing Turkey next door.)
Today, Greece cannot even dream of achieving its fifth geopolitical
imperative, dominating the eastern Mediterranean. Even its fourth imperative,
the consolidation of inland Greece, is in question, as illustrated by Greece’s
inability to collect taxes. Nearly 25 percent of the Greek economy is in the so-called
“shadow” sector, by far the highest rate among the world’s developed countries.
Succeeding in maintaining control of the Aegean, Greece’s most important
imperative, in the face of regional opposition is simply impossible without an
outside patron. Going forward, the question for Greece is whether it will be
able to accept its much-reduced geopolitical role. This, too, is out of its
hands, depending as it does on the strategies that Turkey adopts. Turkey is a
rising geopolitical power intent on spreading its influence in the Balkans, the
Middle East and the Caucasus. The question is now whether Turkey will focus its
intentions on the Aegean, or instead will be willing to make a deal with Greece
in order to concentrate on other interests.
Ultimately, Greece needs to find a way to become useful again to one or
more great powers — unlikely, unless a great-power conflict returns to the
Balkans — or to sue for lasting peace with Turkey and begin learning how to
live within its geopolitical means. Either way, the next three years will be
defining ones in Greek history. The joint 110 billion-euro bailout package from
the International Monetary Fund and European Union comes with severe austerity
strings attached, which are likely to destabilize the country to a significant
degree. Grafted onto Greece’s regionalized social geography, vicious left-right
split and history of political and social violence, the IMF-EU measures will
further weaken the central government and undermine its control. An eventual
default is almost assured by the level of government debt, which will soon be
above 150 percent of GDP.
It is only a question of when, not if, the Europeans pull the plug on
Athens — which most likely will be at the first opportunity, when Greece does
not present a systemic risk to the rest of Europe. At that point, without
access to international capital or more bailout money, Greece could face a
total collapse of political control and social violence not seen since the
military junta of the 1970s. Greece, therefore, finds itself in a very
unfamiliar situation. For the first time since the 1820s, it is truly alone.
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