
Mustafa
205 posts























🚨🇹🇷 KAAN Fighter Jet Pushing Limits Turkey’s KAAN has a takeoff weight of 34.5 tons but is engineered to withstand forces up to 9 times that during maneuvers, equal to 310 tons. Engineers are stress testing it at an extreme 13.5 times load, reaching 465 tons to ensure maximum durability. Step by step toward one of the world’s most advanced fighter jets.







If you ask Turkey what “peace” in the Aegean looks like, the answer is stark: it begins with Greece making concessions. In practice, the Turkish vision of “peace” entails Greek islands left undefended opposite a heavily militarised Turkish coastline and stripped of full territorial waters, so that Turkish warships and jets can operate freely around in what is, by geography and international law, a Greek island sea. It means Greece accepting a permanently occupied Cyprus and giving up exclusive rights in its own seas. In short, for Turkey, “peace” would mean Greece becoming smaller, weaker, and quieter-while Turkey steadily expands its influence. At its core, this is not a technical dispute over legal interpretation - it is Turkish irredentism. ❌Turkey simply refuses to recognise where its borders end and Greece’s begin. This dynamic reveals the true nature of the relationship: not that of a difficult neighbour, but of a revisionist aggressor that still harbours imperial ambitions over territory and waters that do not belong to it. These borders are not ambiguous, nor are they recent. They were settled in the aftermath of the Treaty of Lausanne, which definitively established the modern boundaries between Greece and Turkey. Under that settlement, Turkey secured full sovereignty over Anatolia, while Greece retained its islands in the Aegean. Until Turkey demonstrably abandons these claims, respects the sovereignty and integrity of Greek territory, it will always be seen as a security threat that has to be contained. 🔵Greece harbours no desire for war or confrontation. Its position is clear, lawful, and purely defensive: it seeks only to uphold its sovereignty within borders and rights already recognised under international law -nothing more, nothing less. 🔴But that is not enough. Deterrence cannot remain passive or declaratory. It must be decisive and credible. Greek foreign policy has to send an unambiguous message: any violation of its sovereignty will not just be blocked-it will be met with consequences that impose real, strategic loss. Those who choose escalation must understand that they risk not only failure, but the loss of what they already hold. This is the only language bullies understand.











Turkish Cypriots defended Saint Hilarion Castle from Greek Cypriot attacks which continued from 1963 to 1974 🇹🇷










