It was cited in a Youtube video by a commenter without giving an original source.Source?
Help yourself finding it. Ships are waiting we know that by just being an İstanbulite, we can only not tell how long.
It was cited in a Youtube video by a commenter without giving an original source.Source?
One thing we haven't taken into consideration is that Istanbul straight is a bottle neck - a bottle neck that could keep us out of the Black Sea. Same for Canakale Straight, another bottle neck that could keep us out of the sea of islands.. Wouldn't it be an advantage for the Navy to have multiple routes of access to both seas ?
That's for sure, actually as I mentioned earlier a tanker passing through one of the straights can be sunken by a terrorist attack blocking passage for months cutting all traffic both civilian and military.One thing we haven't taken into consideration is that Istanbul straight is a bottle neck - a bottle neck that could keep us out of the Black Sea. Same for Canakale Straight, another bottle neck that could keep us out of the sea of islands.. Wouldn't it be an advantage for the Navy to have multiple routes of access to both seas ?
Don't think that a second route in the Canakkale strait would be much of a strategic advantage, overall not worth the money.One thing we haven't taken into consideration is that Istanbul straight is a bottle neck - a bottle neck that could keep us out of the Black Sea. Same for Canakale Straight, another bottle neck that could keep us out of the sea of islands.. Wouldn't it be an advantage for the Navy to have multiple routes of access to both seas ?
Show me a tanker that is big enough to block the Istanbul strait, let's not even talk about Canakkale...That'
That's for sure, actually as I mentioned earlier a tanker passing through one of the straights can be sunken by a terrorist attack blocking passage for months cutting all traffic both civilian and military.
This canal and others are multifaceted issues and can not be looked at just for its obvious monetary profit.
It is about your sovereignty on your geographic assets. We can't leave them untapped.
That'
That's for sure, actually as I mentioned earlier a tanker passing through one of the straights can be sunken by a terrorist attack blocking passage for months cutting all traffic both civilian and military.
This canal and others are multifaceted issues and can not be looked at just for its obvious monetary profit.
It is about your sovereignty on your geographic assets. We can't leave them untapped.
Don't think that a second route in the Canakkale strait would be much of a strategic advantage, overall not worth the money.
Yeah but do you expect that a Canal sized passage would be a safe route? And i don't think that any sane country would try to send it's subs or other vessels so close to the Turkish shore.Both straights could be blockaded by submarines, having two exits and entrances would push adversary to split it's forces. The shortest distance between land connection on Canakale side is 4-5km, seems even more feasible to me.
IMO, if turkey really did build the canal, then they should leave the mentreux convention
Are you aware that if Turkey leave the Montreux convention then Lausanne treaty would take effect again which means the straits get demilitarized?IMO, if turkey really did build the canal, then they should leave the mentreux convention
The treaty was a sacrifice from turkey to solidify whatever they could save from the fall of the otoman empire. In the 1920s, turkey didnt have an army, was weak economically as well as technologically. Moreover, it wasnt a part of NATO!
However, things are different now
Turkey is one of the G20, has quite a decent army and defense industry, has a robust technological level, has a high level of population and workforce and is a member of NATO; thus, it would be beneficial for turkey to use both the new canal and the bosphorous maximally especially donsidering that the canal will disrupt russia canal that will take potential revenue of 8 billion dollars annually from turkey
The most important thing here is timing! They should never leave the treaty unless all bases are covered
If There is any political power left,it should be used for updating montreux convention,not for leaving it.then they should leave the mentreux convention
Just by reading the first sentence i see that you know NOTHING about the Montreux Convention, nothing!IMO, if turkey really did build the canal, then they should leave the mentreux convention
The treaty was a sacrifice from turkey to solidify whatever they could save from the fall of the otoman empire. In the 1920s, turkey didnt have an army, was weak economically as well as technologically. Moreover, it wasnt a part of NATO!
I do know that such treaty normally ends after 100 years; thus, either in 2023 or in 2024Are you aware that if Turkey leave the Montreux convention then Lausanne treaty would take effect again which means the straits get demilitarized?
The questions is, which country would be willing to support turkey in doing this?If There is any political power left,it should be used for updating montreux convention,not for leaving it.
The convention can be updated according to recent values, and turned into Turkish interest at greater extends,
They can start with:
making pilotage and tug assistance compulsory
declaring bosphorous,marmara sea and dardanelles no-emission-zone so all ships except military service should run on low-emission fuel or no-emission fuel
updating fee per GT at some favorable rates
forcing military ships to pass unarmed (guns deactivated), with unarmed personnel on deck, with all combat sensors turned off
But wait, these do not really provide any particular gain for certain people and companies so why bother?
Nobody has to support, those are sovereign waters of Turkish Republic which is governed by mutually agreed convention as long as it is not affecting safety of the Black Sea, or passage right of the military vessels, they have no reason to object Turkey's demands on security and environmental measures. This can be taken to international court and Turkey will win in this case (except of updating passage fees), there is no way they can ignore demands for the measures for safety and environment, regardless of who is opposing.The questions is, which country would be willing to support turkey in doing this?
If it could have been solved this peacefully, then you guys would have done it long ago