BaburKhan
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France declared NOTAM over the whole Island of Cyprus and the Area arround. It looks like that France rent the naval Base in Mari, southern Cyprus.
Tweet is not visible, did it get deleted ?France declared NOTAM over the whole Island of Cyprus and the Area arround. It looks like that France rent the naval Base in Mari, southern Cyprus.
Yes, it got deletedTweet is not visible, did it get deleted ?
France cant do that over Cyprus.France declared NOTAM over the whole Island of Cyprus and the Area arround. It looks like that France rent the naval Base in Mari, southern Cyprus.
France cant do that over Cyprus.
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Turkey’s invasion plans for Greece thwarted by US, France, provoking angry outbursts from Erdogan - Nordic Monitor
Abdullah Bozkurt/Stockholmnordicmonitor.com
Turkey’s military strategy for a potential incursion into Greek territory, particularly Western Thrace, was designed to exploit a narrow window of opportunity, which Turkish generals anticipated would close quickly with swift intervention from the US and Europe following any Turkish offensive.
The central focus of the war plan was a military operation in the Aegean, with supplementary actions in the Thrace region of Greece to support the primary theatre. The planners emphasized that any military action in Thrace should focus not on territorial conquest, but on inflicting maximum damage to enemy forces. The objective was to punish rather than occupy.
According to the seminar report, Turkish strategists anticipated that NATO and the EU would quickly intervene if Turkey launched a military offensive in Greece’s Thrace region. Consequently, they concluded that Turkey would have only three to four days to achieve its objectives — enough to inflict significant damage on Greek forces, but not enough for long-term occupation. The ultimate goal, they argued, was to seize control of the Aegean islands.
Greece’s recent military cooperation agreements with the US and France — particularly those granting the US expanded access to Greek military and naval bases — have severely undermined Turkey’s invasion plans. The presence of US troops at these facilities makes it considerably riskier for Turkey to target Greek military assets since doing so could provoke a direct confrontation with the United States, something Ankara is eager to avoid.
This is undoubtedly a key factor behind Ankara’s increasingly hostile rhetoric toward Washington’s defense engagement in Greece and its vocal opposition to Greece’s strengthened defense ties with both the US and France.
You have the same views as nordicmonitor news portal?I don't agree on that. I think it's an interesting POV and opinion. What is important is a country doing necessary moves to counter such political moves. Not making any moves is the same as admitting they have no moves aka cards in our hands to play.
Alas the king is naked.
No, but we're an open forum and should be grown up enough to accept that others have their own opinions.You have the same views as nordicmonitor news portal?
I don't agree on that. I think it's an interesting POV and opinion. What is important is a country doing necessary moves to counter such political moves. Not making any moves is the same as admitting they have no moves aka cards in our hands to play.
Alas the king is naked.
Did you read the article?No, but we're an open forum and should be grown up enough to accept that others have their own opinions.
I mean what did Türkiye do when the Greek came sailing all the way to our coast ?
No, but we're an open forum and should be grown up enough to accept that others have their own opinions.
22 year old contingency plan leaked back in 2011 by the gulenists.![]()
Turkey’s invasion plans for Greece thwarted by US, France, provoking angry outbursts from Erdogan - Nordic Monitor
Abdullah Bozkurt/Stockholmnordicmonitor.com
Turkey’s military strategy for a potential incursion into Greek territory, particularly Western Thrace, was designed to exploit a narrow window of opportunity, which Turkish generals anticipated would close quickly with swift intervention from the US and Europe following any Turkish offensive.
The central focus of the war plan was a military operation in the Aegean, with supplementary actions in the Thrace region of Greece to support the primary theatre. The planners emphasized that any military action in Thrace should focus not on territorial conquest, but on inflicting maximum damage to enemy forces. The objective was to punish rather than occupy.
According to the seminar report, Turkish strategists anticipated that NATO and the EU would quickly intervene if Turkey launched a military offensive in Greece’s Thrace region. Consequently, they concluded that Turkey would have only three to four days to achieve its objectives — enough to inflict significant damage on Greek forces, but not enough for long-term occupation. The ultimate goal, they argued, was to seize control of the Aegean islands.
Greece’s recent military cooperation agreements with the US and France — particularly those granting the US expanded access to Greek military and naval bases — have severely undermined Turkey’s invasion plans. The presence of US troops at these facilities makes it considerably riskier for Turkey to target Greek military assets since doing so could provoke a direct confrontation with the United States, something Ankara is eager to avoid.
This is undoubtedly a key factor behind Ankara’s increasingly hostile rhetoric toward Washington’s defense engagement in Greece and its vocal opposition to Greece’s strengthened defense ties with both the US and France.