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Sarkozy challenges Turkey to face its history

Such a smart move, what will we gain by this?

if it's my post you mean it's pretty simple, remember "Türk'ün türk'den baska dostu yoktur." with exception of our brothers in Pakistan. and I think it's about time we take control of that part with a heavy hand.

If we help take back karabakh and hold it with our army present there as well, we'll have linked Azerbaijan with a big part of their occupied land and they'll recognize KKTC in return. Boosting cooperation across turkic speaking countries we'll start turkifying things.
 
Yes it's best Turkey forms a EU style Middle East Union, remember now Arabs look up to you more then Iran.
 
Yes it's best Turkey forms a EU style Middle East Union, remember now Arabs look up to you more then Iran.

not interested in that iran supports armenia to keep azerbaijan split, so it's important for turkey to assault Armenia. Iran won't interfere because there is an Amerikan army taking a breather from Iraq after 9 years. and with the tension about nuclear power plant it would be divinely stupid of Iran to try their hand against Turkey. Amerika would love the opportunity to jump in.

i hope my arab brothers can use their oil for anything other than hundreds of ferraries. and iraq is still unstable,
 
if it's my post you mean it's pretty simple, remember "Türk'ün türk'den baska dostu yoktur." with exception of our brothers in Pakistan. and I think it's about time we take control of that part with a heavy hand.

If we help take back karabakh and hold it with our army present there as well, we'll have linked Azerbaijan with a big part of their occupied land and they'll recognize KKTC in return. Boosting cooperation across turkic speaking countries we'll start turkifying things.

I meant your post before editting. I do like this plan however.
 
not interested in that iran supports armenia to keep azerbaijan split, so it's important for turkey to assault Armenia. Iran won't interfere because there is an Amerikan army taking a breather from Iraq after 9 years. and with the tension about nuclear power plant it would be divinely stupid of Iran to try their hand against Turkey. Amerika would love the opportunity to jump in.

i hope my arab brothers can use their oil for anything other than hundreds of ferraries. and iraq is still unstable,

You cannot take karabakh because you will be in a full scale war with CSTO, Azerbaijan has the advantage however it will lose because CSTO will intervene, No EU, you cannot form some Pan Turan because Russia has blocked Turkey from getting any influence in Central only country you can form anything is Azerbaijan however if it wants Karabakh back Russia not Turkey Holds the key. Your government is certainly smart on keeping Turkey in the Middle East where it belongs.
 
not interested in that iran supports armenia to keep azerbaijan split, so it's important for turkey to assault Armenia. Iran won't interfere because there is an Amerikan army taking a breather from Iraq after 9 years. and with the tension about nuclear power plant it would be divinely stupid of Iran to try their hand against Turkey. Amerika would love the opportunity to jump in.

i hope my arab brothers can use their oil for anything other than hundreds of ferraries. and iraq is still unstable,

What about the Russians, remeber there is a large Russian army stationed on our border with Armenia.
 
Saithan, those moves you describe are extremely drastic. Unfortunately in this day and age, we won't witness such actions. Turkey should forget EU from this moment. EU is indeed a christian club, instead we should heavily focus on how to enlighten and improve the Arab countries + Turkic speaking countries + Pakistan + Indonesiea Turkey and Indonesia can act as leaders (leadership should be given to those who has the greatest economy and brightest future, in other words those who really can make a change) and then focus on extreme integration, like the EU. When done integrating the zone, our economy will without any doubt surpass that of USA, EU and China. An Islamic Union, where there is free movement and free trade. It should be accomplish-able in a deacade or so, after poorer countries can stand on their own feet.

The above is also a dream scenario, sadly. Because there is so much conflict between Muslim countries:angry:

But we could start with Arabic and Turcic countries, then improve it. It is possible, if our countries can unite. If our quarrels continue the above mentioned will not be accomplished.

Edit: also we should not focus on Turkifying, but instead bring true islamic values. Like in the age of our Prophet SAV.
 
What about the Russians, remeber there is a large Russian army stationed on our border with Armenia.
I understand what you mean, but armenia has a defense agreement with Russia on it's soil, but Karabakh is not part of it, and Russia would and has not deployed any soldiers in the area of conflict. So I don't see how liberating that area from Armenia would make Russia enter the war. Doing so would jeapardize it's relations with turkey.
 
Some Turks destroying their Renault cars to protest against French genocide bill.:lol:


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Bloody cheese monkey!

This turd should revisit what his bloody pathetic ancestors did to algerians... bloody rats.
 
France will suffer

Turkey says


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Relations between France and rising regional power Turkey are likely to nose-dive after a vote in the French parliament on Thursday that would make it a crime to deny that the 1915 mass killing of Armenians was genocide.

Faced with French President Nicolas Sarkozy's open hostility to Turkey's all-but stagnant bid to join the European Union, and buoyed by a fast-growing economy, Ankara has little to lose by picking a political fight with Paris.

With Turkey taking an increasingly pivotal and influential role in the Middle East, especially over Syria, Iran and Libya, France could experience some diplomatic discomfort, and French firms could lose out on lucrative Turkish contracts.

Even though nearly 100 years have passed since the killings that coincided with World War One, successive Turkish governments and the vast majority of Turks feel the charge of genocide is a direct insult to their nation.

Turkish leaders also argue that the bill, proposed by 40 deputies from Sarkozy's party, is a blatant attempt at winning the votes of 500,000 ethnic Armenians in France in next year's elections, limits freedom of speech and is an unnecessary meddling by politicians in a business best left to historians.

"This proposed law targets and is hostile to the Republic of Turkey, the Turkish nation and the Turkish community living in France," Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan wrote in a tersely worded letter to Sarkozy last week.

"I want to state clearly that such steps will have grave consequences for future relations between Turkey and France in political, economic, cultural and all areas," he said.

The volume of trade between France and Turkey from January to November this year was more than $13.5 billion, according to Turkish government statistics. France is Turkey's fifth biggest export market and the sixth biggest source of its imports.

FRENCH FIRMS FACE LOSSES

The French government has stressed that the bill, which mandates a 45,000-euro fine and a year in jail for offenders, is not its own initiative and pointed out that Turkey cannot impose unilateral trade sanctions.

"We have to remember international rules and with regard to Turkey it's a member of the WTO (World Trade Organisation) and is linked to the European Union by a customs union and these two commitments mean a non-discriminatory policy towards all companies within the European Union," said French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero.

The Turkish government has ruled out an embargo, but has hinted at a boycott. "There will be an effect on consumer preferences," said Turkish Industry Minister Nihat Ergun.

Others went further and suggested French firms might lose out in profitable defence deals and contracts to build energy pipelines and Turkey's first nuclear power station.

"France is about to commit a political sin. Newly arising French-Turkish ties in the energy sector may not be in a position to overcome this," state-run Anatolian news agency quoted Energy Minister Taner Yildiz as saying.

When France passed a law recognising the killing of Armenians as genocide in 2001, Turkey was in the midst of an economic crisis, and reacted in a similar vein, but figures show trade between the two countries nevertheless grew steadily.

The French lower house of parliament first passed a bill criminalising the denial of an Armenian genocide in 2006, but it was finally rejected by the Senate in May of this year.

The new bill was made more general to outlaw the denial of any genocide, partly in the hope of appeasing the Turks. While it is very likely to be approved by the lower house, it could also face a long passage into law, though its backers want to see it completed before April's French presidential election.

Armenia, backed by many historians and parliaments, says some 1.5 million Christian Armenians were killed in what is now eastern Turkey during World War One in a deliberate policy of genocide ordered by the Ottoman Empire.

Ankara denies the killings constitute genocide and says many Muslim Turks and Kurds were also put to death as Russian troops invaded eastern Anatolia, often aided by Armenian militias.

CONFIDENT TURKEY

The Republic of Turkey emerged from the remnants of the Ottoman Empire in 1923 after more than 10 years of almost continual warfare against the British, French, Russians, Arabs, Armenians and Greeks, all of them intent on carving off territory from the dying state.

After war, massacres, famine and massive population movements, the new republic was much more religiously and ethnically homogenous than ever before and Turkey's new leaders pursued a secular nationalism that turned its back on the past.

"The problem is that the Turkish people don't know what happened," said Cengiz Aktar, professor of political science at Istanbul's Bahcesehir University.

While folk memories of the trauma survive in the villages of eastern Turkey, the education system has always set out to deny any official policy to kill off the Armenians, instead painting a picture of valiant Turks emerging victorious from onslaughts on all sides from treacherous former friends and allies.

The French bill feeds into the sense that many Turks have that they are unwanted by an arrogant Europe and fires up nationalist fervour, though in a more self-confident Turkey, Turkish popular reaction has been more muted than in the past.

Francois Rochebloine, president of the Franco-Armenian friendship group in the French lower house and a leading proponent of the bill, said he did not expect any lasting repercussions.

"These pressures already existed when France in 2001 recognised the Armenia genocide," said Rochebloine. At that time, he said, "we received two cubic metres of mail and faxes (opposing it), but life continued and Turkey is not mad."

But the Turkey of 2011 is a very different place from 10 years ago.

"Today, unfortunately (Turkey's) EU process ... is almost dead and Turkey's hands are not tied anymore. Turkey's economy is one of the strongest in the world so for this Turkey, one should make a different calculation," Volkan Bozkir, the head of Turkey's Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee, said in Paris after lobbying French officials.

REUTERS, Jon Hemming


France will suffer-HABERTÜRK
 
France FM warns Turkey: Don't overreact over genocide bill


Alain Juppe spoke after Turkish PM Erdogan announced the recall of Turkey's ambassador, as part of package of diplomatic, military, economic reprisals.


French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe on Thursday warned Turkey against "overreacting" to the adoption by France's lower house of parliament of a bill making it a crime to deny that Armenians suffered a genocide at the hands of Ottoman Turks.

“What I wish is that our Turkish friends do not overreact to this decision by the French National Assembly," Juppe told reporters in Bordeaux.



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French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe


He was speaking after Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced he was recalling the Turkish ambassador, as part of a package of diplomatic, military and economic reprisals.

Juppe deplored Turkey's reaction and called for "common sense and restraint insisting France and Turkey had "a lot of things to do together."

France's National Assembly approved the bill, which punishes denial of genocides by a year's imprisonment and a fine of $ 58,000 dollars, by a large majority.

To become law it must also be approved by the Senate.

Meanwhile, Armenia officially thanked France for the move.


France FM warns Turkey: Don't overreact over genocide bill - Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
 
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