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Read JNS coverage of the third Israel-Hellenic Forum, organized by the B’nai B’rith World Center and being held this year in Nicosia, Cyprus. The Forum is a major platform for furthering trilateral relations between the three liberal democracies in the Eastern Mediterranean: Israel, Greece and Cyprus.

Read at JNS.org.

The relationship between Cyprus, Greece and Israel has developed into a strategic one, based on a shared common vision for a thriving eastern Mediterranean, the President of the Republic of Cyprus said on Monday.

The remarks, made at the Israel Hellenic Forum underway in Nicosia, come amid burgeoning relations between Israel and both Cyprus and Greece in a variety of fields including energy, defense, tourism, hi-tech and cybersecurity.

“Our trilateral cooperation has evolved considerably since its inception and we can proudly say that it is nothing else but a strategic partnership,” said President Nikos Christodoulides.

“For the Republic of Cyprus, the strengthening and deepening of our already excellent relations with Israel, always in cooperation with Greece of course, is part of a holistic strategy with regards to our foreign policy, which has high on the agenda the cooperation with all like-minded countries in the region,” he added.

The three-day conference, which is being organized by the B’nai B’rith World Center in cooperation with the Cyprus Center for European and International Affairs, the University of Nicosia and the Institute of International Relations (IDIS) at Panteion University in Athens, comes as cooperation between the three eastern Mediterranean countries has reached an all-time high.

“The fact that we are speaking today of this trilateral relationship in terms of a strategic partnership speaks volumes and was simply inconceivable just 20 years ago,” Israel’s Ambassador to Cyprus Oren Anolik told JNS.

“We share the same vision of regional cooperation via the creation of many linkages on different levels,” added Cypriot Justice Minister Anna Koukkides-Procopiou, a founding member of the Israel-Hellenic Forum. “Our plans on energy will only further deepen our ties over time.”

Energy cooperation

The conference comes amid the construction of an “energy highway” that will connect the national electricity grids of Israel, Cyprus and Greece.

The mammoth European Union-backed energy project is taking place as the war in Ukraine and sanctions on Russia are fueling a global energy crisis that has hit the European Union hard, spotlighting the continent’s dependence on foreign energy.