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@ictinus_x The Blue Homeland is Turkey's maritime jurisdiction under the guarantee of Lausanne and international law. You are lost in your own map.
Turkey is the owner of the name "Blue Homeland." You, on the other hand, keep stealing everything.
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@Ati_Beg @ictinus_x Nope! Turkey gave up sovereignty beyond three miles of their coast per Treaty of Lausanne!
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@PappasPL @ictinus_x Your "3-mile limit" claim is false and misleading.
1- Lausanne 1923, Article 13: Lesvos, Chios, Samos, Ikaria = NO naval bases, NO fortifications. Greece violates this by arming them for decades.
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@PappasPL @ictinus_x 2. Greece unilaterally extended its own territorial waters from 3 to 6 miles in 1936. So even by your logic, Greece itself rejected the 3 mile limit first.
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@PappasPL @ictinus_x 3. UNCLOS Article 3 (customary international law) allows any state to claim up to 12 miles. Türkiye has every right to do the same.
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@PappasPL @ictinus_x Lozan Item 13: #Article_13" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">en.wikisource.org/wiki/Treaty_of…
Greece 1936, 6 mile: state.gov/wp-content/upl…
UNCLOS Item 3: un.org/depts/los/conv…
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@Ati_Beg @ictinus_x generally established that Turkish sovereignty in the Aegean Sea extends three nautical miles from the Anatolian coast. Under Articles 6 and 12, Turkey renounced rights to most islands and islets beyond this limit, ceding them.
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@PappasPL @ictinus_x Nowhere in the Treaty of Lausanne does it say “Turkish territorial waters are 3 miles.” Articles 6 and 12 talk about islands within 3 miles of the coast, not a fixed limit for Turkey's sovereignty at sea. You’re misreading the treaty or hoping others will.
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@PappasPL @ictinus_x Greece itself broke the 3-mile understanding in 1936 when it unilaterally extended its own waters to 6 miles. So if anyone “violated Lausanne first,” it was you. Turkey only followed in 1964 reluctantly, and decades later.
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