Agreed. Perhaps Greece or Italy would be a better location.Richard de Florennes wrote:Time to withdraw any nuclear weapons from Turkey as soon as possible, I would suggest. Not really a host nation now to trust any more. Unbelievable that NATO still relies on Turkish F-16s as part of their nuclear deterrence ...
And I do not believe moving the nukes yes or no will make us loose Turkey as an ally. Erdogan does that all by his own account. With or without the nukes. Most of the officer corps removed after the coup was US oriented. They are gone now for a reason...With a few hours and the right tools and training, you could open one of NATO’s nuclear-weapons storage vaults, remove a weapon, and bypass the PAL inside it. Within seconds, you could place an explosive device on top of a storage vault, destroy the weapon, and release a lethal radioactive cloud.
Wow, we're really going off-topic with this subject now : it seems that, besides this impending Turkish dictatorship, a two-party political system (USA) is also not the answer then, with the upcoming US-elections in mind .PNegri wrote:The US media will only report what it wants as it does was obummer wants them to say
Easy question first:Therefore, the world might need to reconsider what democracy actually means...
Unfortunately, that seems too simplistic a view. Since the coup, the Turkish media and with less strong words, the Turkish government, has accused the US of being behind the coup. That will partly be because of the fact Gulen is in the US and Turkey will try to put pressure on the US to extradite him.dverhees wrote:An interesting bunch of different opinions. Good stuff. As far as I know, the attention that Incirlik has been getting since day 1 of the coup attempt has to do with the semi-renegade Turkish Tanker squadron stationed there, not at all the US units present or the nukes that might still be there. I think the US media has missed this nuance. Cheers, Don
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