Isn't it a hangover from the Turkish-Greek conflict? Cyprus is still an unsettled issue, isn't it? Though maybe it is. Otherwise how could Greece and Turkey be in NATO?
Yeah. No. Republic of Cyprus. I don't know.
Well, everything makes sense if you involve the Cold War. Greece and Turkey had a common enemy in the East-bloc and on top of that, Turkey had the USSR next to its doorstop while Greece was fighting a civil war, against Communists of all people.
It is quite easy to imagine why Greece and Turkey were not so reserved on joining.
You oppose liberal democracy. Destroying fundamental aspects of Western society is your schtick.
We evolved into liberal democracies. Even we do not fully agree with it, we have to defend it in the face of something more alien.
Besides, my views evolved somewhat; Culturally European countries have a citizenry that is enlightened enough to be entrusted with liberal democracy as we are able to temper democracy by rule of law, unlike Muslim majority countries. Maybe it is far from optimal, though it least we can work with it without fundamentally destroying ourselves with it.
Iraq 2003 was a failure because the US vainly attempted to have a non-reformed Muslim country follow both liberalism and democracy. Most Muslim countries simply cannot follow both, considering how Turkey's secularism was upheld in a series of military coups and is now withering away as it is becoming more democratic. Azerbaijan and Bosnia are perhaps the only Muslim countries in the world to have joined the West, which probably prove that it is possible with the right mentality, and perhaps luck as well, since the Azerbaijan went through numerous secularisation programmes enacted by the Soviet Union.
Since World War II, there is been a trend to internationalise conflict between two nations that most of the world should not care about except perhaps in the context of power politics. All of this in the name of peace. Ironically, all it does is prolong conflicts. To put in the context of this thread OP: Should Greece be such a hot issue if it didn't owe West-European countries like ours money?
Eh, policies that anger a few groups who would be angry no matter what certainly aren't comparable to the kind of terrorism magnet that the US' overwhelmingly pro-Israel policies are.
Terrorism is never good. Even when the very thing terrorists fight against is evil, it doesn't stop making themselves such. Or make easier to exempt them from retribution.