Greece is the home of
the headquarters of the European Union’s naval operation in the Red Sea, which
is dubbed “Aspides” and in Greek means “Shields.” “For us, it is a satisfaction that during
the past week we see a notable reduction in the number and intensity of
attacks. This is the reality,” Stylianides said, speaking on the sidelines
of the Posidonia shipping week in Athens.
“It is another proof that the international
community with decisiveness can stop this.”
Aspides was set up
this year to guard vessels against attacks by Iranian-aligned Houthi
militants, who have launched repeated drone and missile strikes in the Red Sea
region since November and have expanded attacks to other busy waterways.
Shipping has not seen such politically
motivated attacks since World War Two, said Stylianides, a former EU
Commissioner, adding that they have caused “tangible repercussions,
geopolitically, commercially, legally, environmentally.”
The recent reduction,
he said, showed that Aspides and the U.S-led Operation Prosperity Guardian
complement each other in helping restore freedom of trade in the area..
Greece, which is
leading the shipping sector in terms of tonnage, has also been
affected, he said, adding that that was also a reason behind the country’s
decision to play a more leading role in the EU initiative. The Houthis have launched attacks against at least two Greek
operated ships in recent weeks.
“There is no
reluctance to be in the frontline,” he said. “As a country, first in the
maritime field, we have to take our responsibilities and our duties.”