So, nearly everyone in "the west" ?And countries that were part of the embargo against us.
Latest Thread
So, nearly everyone in "the west" ?And countries that were part of the embargo against us.
Yeah. I love to see them sitting on our laps and tell ‘em, tables have turned now but it doesn’t work that way. You need to be richer, disciplined and stabilized to dictate the terms.So, nearly everyone in "the west" ?
Exporting defence to west should be limited and just enough to use for PR. Exporting for a few 100 million is peanuts and doesn't really benefit our country in the long run. I think an arms deal should include commercial deal too. So if they import for 100 million. Missiles and such, they should import consumer products for 100 million too.Yeah. I love to see them sitting on our laps and tell ‘em, tables have turned now but it doesn’t work that way. You need to be richer, disciplined and stabilized to dictate the terms.
Only direct benefit we offer is shorter lead times on munitions and drone tech. All the rest is stuff they can make themselves or buy from many other interested sellers. We simply do not have such a luxury to reject a business proposal.Exporting defence to west should be limited and just enough to use for PR. Exporting for a few 100 million is peanuts and doesn't really benefit our country in the long run. I think an arms deal should include commercial deal too. So if they import for 100 million. Missiles and such, they should import consumer products for 100 million too.
Wow, you got cocky real fastYeah. I love to see them sitting on our laps and tell ‘em, tables have turned now but it doesn’t work that way. You need to be richer, disciplined and stabilized to dictate the terms.
Read again.Wow, you got cocky real fast
They are. Ex-Akhisar new Roman was modified a bit, probably to allow hangar space for Romanian IAR-330 Puma. The added section is nicely visible below. Another notch on the flexibility of the design and the Turkish builders tbh.Is it just me or do the hangars on the opvs look different?
Private equity firms kill everything they touch. Everything. There isn't a single bloody company that have been acquired by one and did well in the long run, they are all stripped of their assets for short term gain and when the private equity firm drains them of anything of value like, a vampire, they are sold. Even a minority share should be considered high treason for anyone who approves it, Aselsan is the single most critical company we have for our military.I'd say this is bordering on absurdity, but pretty big claim if true. BlackRock already owns more than 1% of Aselsan's public shares.
@Yasar_TR @TR_123456 @Bogeyman @Sanchez @Ripley @Anastasius @Zafer @Anmdt @dBSPL @Ryder
Fatih Altaylı: (On ASELSAN) “According to what Oda TV wrote, the giant American fund called BlackRock is supposedly after a company in Turkey. Through the mediation of Tom Barrack—the U.S. Ambassador to Ankara, businessman, and banker—BlackRock, which wants to acquire a public giant from Turkey, has its sights set on Aselsan, the apple of the eye and also a giant of the Turkish defense industry. I see the possibility of Aselsan—Turkey's largest defense industry company, which also holds a considerable place and share in the global defense industry—being sold to a foreigner, especially an American company, as less than zero. It's the world's 43rd largest defense industry company, and in Turkey, we don't have any company that has reached this ranking not just in the strategic sector of defense industry, but in other fields either. In other words, both its importance and value are immense. It's the 50-year accumulation of the country, of our people. I hope this backchannel information from Oda TV is not true. Even if it is true, I hope such a sale does not take place.”
Blackrock’s co-founder and CEO , Larry Fink is Jewish.Private equity firms kill everything they touch. Everything. There isn't a single bloody company that have been acquired by one and did well in the long run, they are all stripped of their assets for short term gain and when the private equity firm drains them of anything of value like, a vampire, they are sold. Even a minority share should be considered high treason for anyone who approves it, Aselsan is the single most critical company we have for our military.
Do safeguards matter when the government is known to break the law openly? All trust has been erodedTo avoid any misunderstanding: the state has several safeguards in place.
He is pointing out that the government and the stupidity of a certain someone raped our nations economy and we're in this situation because of how his political party and bigotry has hallowed out the trust.I don’t know what you’re getting at – 82–83% self-sufficiency in defence by June 2026 is anything but a sell-off of capabilities.
It’s by no means a given that you can go from18–20% to 82–83% in 15-20 Years. To achieve that, you need a great deal of political and strategic staying power.
There are many things one can criticise the current government for, such as its botched interest rate policy or certain moves in foreign and domestic policy. But if there’s one thing the AKP has achieved, it is that Turkey has become more independent in terms of its foreign policy capabilities and possesses the strategic and political will to create a self-sustaining military-industrial complex.
View attachment 81178
Do you even realise what’s being built here?
We’re building a Turkish Pentagon where the entire military command – including the Air Force, Navy and Army – is concentrated in a single complex that also houses part of the defence industry, along with institutions such as TÜBİTAK and MSB AR-GE, as well as liaison offices for the Defence and Civilian industries.
Do you know just how strongly Germany and north-western Europe react to this and not in a positive way! They see it as a self-sustaining foundation – which means that every party, even a Kurdish or left-liberal party, must bow to this system, however unlikely it may be that they will come to power, just as in the US, where the Republicans and Democrats must be guided strategically and in foreign policy by the Pentagon and its think tanks. We are talking here about ‘Devlet akli’.
If it is so easy, if it is so simple to do all these things – against a backdrop of external political and economic pressure from the US, Israel and the EU, and to some extent from Russia and China, all of whom regard the country merely as a weak link in their hemisphere – then you really ought to give some thought to what was achieved between 1950 and 2006, and between 2006 and 2026, in terms of industrial, economic and military infrastructure.
There are Galaxies between them – I’m telling you: Galaxies!
I really do respect your opinion, and yes, the AKP has reached its zenith with Erdogan; he should step down by 2030/32 at the latest so that a new strategic era can begin, but as far as I’m concerned, his work is not yet done.
The system he has created is so deeply entrenched that every subsequent government must adopt it as a strategic legacy, whether it wants to or not. The military-industrial complex will shape a large part of Turkish foreign policy, as it should.