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Greeks in Turkey on the Verge of Extinction
Clarion Project ^
| February 15, 2017
| Uzay Bulut
Posted on 02/15/2017 7:02:26 PM PST by Texas Fossil
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To: cradle of freedom
Current issue is Erdogan the Islamist.
Yes, we are chumps to a degree.
21
posted on
02/15/2017 9:05:52 PM PST
by
Texas Fossil
((Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!))
To: House Atreides
No not a friend.
Not even friendly.
22
posted on
02/15/2017 9:06:36 PM PST
by
Texas Fossil
((Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!))
To: yarddog
The Greeks (or most of them) united in 480-479 to defeat Xerxes' attempt to conquer Greece, and afterwards the Athenians liberated the Greek cities in Asia Minor which had been under Persian rule. Later the Spartans made a deal with the Persians, betraying the interests of the Anatolian Greeks in return for Persian assistance in defeating Athens in the Peloponnesian War. In the 390s (after Sparta had antagonized Artaxerxes II) the Spartans tried to free the Anatolian Greeks but failed.
Alexander's conquest of the Persian Empire was a Macedonian achievement, with some Greek troops among his forces--while other Greeks were fighting on the Persian side as mercenaries.
During the Cold War Turkey was a reliable ally because of their enmity with Russia, while the Greeks were seemingly less worried about the Soviet danger (after all, the Russians were also Orthodox, and many Greeks had supported the Communist side in the Greek Civil War) than about Turkish threats to Greek interests (in Cyprus and elsewhere). But after the Cold War and the rise of more aggressive forms of Islamism in the Near East, I don't think we can rely on Turkey.
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