ref:topbtw-2912.html/ 22 Marzo 2021/A
Come invadere 131 isolette, isolotti, e scogli affioranti..
Milano
Del tutto casualmente salta fuori uno studio tattico , completo di particolari, planimetrie, considerazioni militari,
per una rapida occupazione di isolette, isolotti, scoglietti greci da parte delle forze armate turche.
Studio realizzato " a prescindere" dal fatto che entrambe le nazioni sono ancora nella NATO.
Ma, evidentemente gli autori avevano già previsto da tempo l'uscita della Turchia dalla Nato.
Uscita che si concretizza sempre di più, giorno per giorno, con gli acquisti di missili e di aerei da
combattimento dalla Russia..
D'altra parte l'insofferenza di Erdogan per la cultura occidentale, NATO inclusa, si accentua in continuazione,
non ultima la clamorosa "uscita" dalla convenzione per la protezione delle donne..
Insomma il sogno paranoico del "grande califfato", piano piano diventerà l'ennesimo incubo per l'Europa.
New York
Already listed 131 islands, islets and rock formations..
The Turkish military listed 131 islands, islets and rock formations in the Aegean Sea whose status was disputed
with neighboring Greece and prepared plans to take them over during a conflict, according to a confidential
document obtained by Nordic Monitor.
The secret document, a PowerPoint presentation with 16 slides, included a map with the disputed locations marked.
The presentation appears to have been prepared by the War Academies and lacks a date stamp.
It was part of a study that focused on coordination among branches of the Turkish armed forces in a time of
crisis between the two NATO allies and the odds against each one in a number of disputes in the Aegean and airspace.
The presentation talks about how the Turkish military would move to take over the islands with the deployment
of special forces from air and sea.
The secret document was found buried in the annexes of a case file in Izmir.
Prosecutor Okan Bato seems to have dropped the ball by incorporating the secret plan into the evidentiary
file when he was supposed to only make a brief note and put it away in a safe in the courthouse.
Such documents can only be reviewed in a closed court setting presided over by a judge.
The same document was also shared with another prosecutor, Cihat ?pekçi, in Ankara in another case.
That prosecutor overlooked the sensitivity of the document as well.
The disputed islands, islets and rock formations were listed as follows: three locations on Zurefa (Ladoxer in Greek),
13 on Koyun Adalar? (Oinousses), 21 on Hur?it (Fimena), 18 on Nergiscik (Arki), 15 Keçi (Pserimos),
12 on Gelemez (Kalolimnos), 2 on Bulamaç (Farmakonisi), 10 on Sakarc?lar (Yali), 11 on Koçbaba (Levita),
2 on Karaada (Strongili) and 24 locations around the island of Crete.
The study was based on lessons drawn from the Kardak (Imia) islet crisis, which brought Turkey and Greece to the brink
of war in 1996.
It underlined that the Kardak crisis made clear that smaller force units would be key in operations in future
Kardak-like tensions with Greece.
Both the Special Forces Command, controlled directly by the General Staff, as well as the Turkish navy's elite special
forces unit, Underwater Offense (Su Alt? Taarruz, or SAT), would be mobilized separately or jointly from the sea in
speedboats and the air through utility choppers to take control of the targeted islands and islets.
The operations would be conducted under the cover of firepower from the air force, naval frigates and artillery fire
from the mainland.
The entire operation would be coordinated by a joint special operations command to be established under the name
of Mü?terek Özel Harekat Görev Birli?i Komutanli?i (MÖHGBK).
The tension between Turkey and Greece has been on the rise in recent years with more hawkish posturing
by the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his nationalist/neonationalist allies, often driven
by a domestic agenda to get more votes or deflect the public's attention from economic problems.
The Erdogan government's belligerent talk and mobilization of military assets in the Aegean and eastern Mediterranean
have fueled concerns about a possible military conflict that may be set off either accidentally or intentionally.
The two neighbors are already at odds over the boundaries of their territorial waters and airspace in the Aegean,
where Greek islands are lined up along Turkey's western coast.
The delimitation of the Aegean continental shelf, a dispute that concerns Turkish and Greek rights to economic
exploitation of resources on and under the Aegean seabed in an area that stretches between their territorial
waters and the high seas, remains unresolved.
The two countries also have differences on a range of other issues, from demarcation lines of exclusive economic zones (EEZ)
to airspace.
Turkey also maintains troops on the divided island of Cyprus, the northern third of which it has controlled since 1974,
after Ankara's troops occupied the area in response to a coup sponsored by a Greek military junta.
Source:
https://nordicmonitor.com/2021/03/turkey-planned-to-invade-131-aegean-islands-islets-formations-that-were-considered-as-disputed-with-greece/
( REDAZIONE GAGRULE - Abdullah Bozkurt )