The problem in Islands Sea is quite different. According to the Lausanne agreement, arming these islands prohibited. The sovereign rights of these islands were approved by some clearly stated conditions. Greece is in violation of these treaty provisions.
And there are about 150 islands and islets which sovereignty has not been transferred by any agreement. Greece's claim on these islands is not based on any international agreement for us. After all, the issue in the Island Sea is legally very deep and has complex problems with a historical background. It would be more beneficial to discuss these issues under a related-title in order to be able to explain such details.
This is a very poisonous post and I would never expect anything like this from you. Iraqi lands belong to the Iraqi people.
With the Treaty of Ankara between Turkey and England in 1926, the Mosul problem was solved. The oil share item, on the other hand, was accepted by the Turkish side to end with a payment in 1950. One reason for this gesture was its good relations with Iraq. Two countries are actually very close betwwen them. The two countries had warm relations from the first years. If you look at the first Iraqi diplomats and military cadres, most of them were employees of Ottoman diplomacy or military institutions, just like Turkey. In fact; the two states would almost form a confederation in 1936, but the day before this agreement there are a series of assassination attempts targeting the Iraqi general staff and the prime minister. With the coup that followed, these attempts remained inconclusive.
Offically starting from the Sadabat pact: Turkey always wanted good relations with Iraq and showed maximum sensitivity despite its own security concerns. We can discuss the security problems caused by the PKK's settlement in Iraq, under relevant thread, if anyone wants.
While this thread was opened for the purpose of future projections of the Egyptian state, I cannot understand why topic drifting into Turkey's geopolitics. Let people discuss the future of Egypt instead of reading unnecessary polemics. Best regards.