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To: acw011
Russia would roll thru turkey in a week if they wanted to..

No, no actually they could not. Turkey has about 600,000 active military personnel and are generally a first world military (up to NATO standards). Russia has about 800,000 active military personnel with only about a 1/4th at first world standards (if that). As Russia would be the invading force they would need enormous force projection ability - and Russia does not have this. Force projection capability is what sets the US, France and the UK apart from most other nations - especially the US of course.

No Russia could not roll through Turkey. If they were actually going to fight that war they'd either need to use their nukes or have months of conscription, moving equipment into theater, etc. And of course Turkey would see all that going on and do the same, only it would be easier for them.

117 posted on 11/24/2015 11:31:51 AM PST by Longbow1969
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To: Longbow1969

“No, no actually they could not.”

Ok, I’ll bet ya a dollar.. I’ll take the Ruskie’s..

one week - it’s over...


121 posted on 11/24/2015 11:52:09 AM PST by acw011 (Great Goooogly Mooogly!)
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To: Longbow1969
No foreign power has conquered Turkey since the 11th Century, when the Seljuk Turks, originally from Central Asia, invaded and conquered most of Anatolia. It has not suffered a successful foreign invasion for about as long as England has. The country's terrain is as formidable an obstacle as the seas surrounding Britain. As the British mastered naval warfare to become the world's superpower from the Seven Years War to the First World War, the Turks became successful in land warfare. The Ottoman Empire ruled almost all of the Middle East at its height. Ethnic cleansing in the 19th and 20th Centuries removed nationalities that were historically Christians, such as the Greeks and the Armenians. With the exception of the Kurds, Turkey is remarkably homogeneous.

Russia and Turkey were on opposite sides in the Crimean War and World War I. Turkey was in the NATO camp during the Cold War. Both countries have leverage on the other. Turkey controls the Bosporus Straits, the primary sea route into Russia. Russia supplies the majority of Turkey's natural gas.

Beyond Putin's bluster, attacking Turkey could provoke NATO intervention. Ukraine and the Baltic States could then become a second front. No one, NATO, Turkey, or Russia, is in any condition to start what cannot be finished well.

137 posted on 11/24/2015 12:43:24 PM PST by Wallace T.
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