Aktuelles
  • Herzlich Willkommen im Balkanforum
    Sind Sie neu hier? Dann werden Sie Mitglied in unserer Community.
    Bitte hier registrieren

Wieder Unterbrechung in den Zypernverhandlungen

mutmassliche-kaempfer-des-islamischen-staats-neben-einer-is-fahne-die-auf-einem-huegel-in-der-syrischen-stadt-kobane-weht.jpg

1318.gif
 
Ich bezweifle, dass deine geistigen Kapazitäten ausreichend sind, um eine Stelle zu bekleiden, welche immense Steuerausgaben hat. Und wo hat denn Russland unter Hilfe der Amis hunderttausende von Leuten in einem fremden Land aus ihren Häusern vertrieben - geschweige denn alleine?
 
wieso lebst du im Westen wenn alles besser ist in Russland ?
Das sind die Polizisten Stylischer Gekleidet :greco:
Sie haben keine Berechtigung Anhänge anzusehen. Anhänge sind ausgeblendet.

Hatten wir in Serbien auch
Sie haben keine Berechtigung Anhänge anzusehen. Anhänge sind ausgeblendet.

Jetzt leider nicht mehr ich will das wiederhaben :(
Wieso die Gendamerie überhaupt Grau oder Grüne Camoflague-Uniformen Tragen wenn die als Breitschafts-Polizei eingesetzt eh dumm jeder weiß das Blau Polizei farbe ist
 

Anhänge

    Sie haben keine Berechtigung Anhänge anzusehen. Anhänge sind ausgeblendet.
Das sind die Polizisten Stylischer Gekleidet :greco:
Sie haben keine Berechtigung Anhänge anzusehen. Anhänge sind ausgeblendet.

Hatten wir in Serbien auch
Sie haben keine Berechtigung Anhänge anzusehen. Anhänge sind ausgeblendet.

Jetzt leider nicht mehr ich will das wiederhaben :(



Wenn Interesse besteht kann ich ja mal paar Belgrad Fotos von mir posten


Sind aber von 2012
 
[h=2]Turkey's Mediterranean Provocations[/h]
WASHINGTON - On Sept. 23, the drill ship SAIPEM 10000 - built in South Korea at the cost of $250 million and flying the flag of the Bahamas - arrived in the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of Cyprus to begin exploring for gas under a license awarded to an Italian-South Korean consortium, ENI-KOGAS. The Cyprus government hopes that additional discoveries over the next 18 months in its EEZ will be sufficient to make its plans to build a liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant on the island, to condition gas for export, commercially viable.
The Turkish authorities declared that the drill ship violated Turkey's area of maritime jurisdiction and sent the Corvette Bafra to monitor operations. Another Turkish warship, theGelibolu, engaged in planned maneuvers south of Cyprus, ostensibly to ensure maritime safety in the eastern Mediterranean. Cypriot Foreign Minister Ioannis Kasoulides said that exploration would continue despite Turkey's "potential harassment."

On Oct. 3, a Turkish NAVTEX (navigational warning) notified mariners that Turkey would conduct its own seismic surveys starting on Oct. 20 in sea areas that encroach on Cyprus's EEZ. Cyprus's president, Nicos Anastasiades, asked U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to persuade Turkey not to violate Cyprus's EEZ. Anastasiades also announced that he would not participate in further talks with Turkish Cypriot leader Derviş Eroğlu aimed at ending the division of the island as long as Turkish activities, which he deemed unlawful and threatening, continued offshore.


Why has Turkey escalated tensions at this moment, when the two Cypriot leaders have begun renewed, albeit wearisome, efforts to find a solution to the division of the island? The simplest explanation, offered by observers close to the Turkish foreign ministry, is that Turkey is following its consistent policy of opposing explorations offshore pending such a solution. Others suggest that Turkey is seeking to move the offshore energy issue into the settlement talks, a step opposed by the Greek Cypriot side. Eroğlu may also wish to look tough in the run-up to the April 2015 leadership election in the northern part of the island.
But the broader geopolitical context may also be relevant. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan may be signaling that Turkey remains a power to be reckoned with at a time when he is facing a number of serious setbacks. On Tuesday, a curfew was declared in six Turkish provinces following demonstrations against the government for inaction over the advance by fighters from the Islamic State on Kobane, just over the border in Syria. Twenty-three people are reported to have been killed during these demonstrations. There has been a further outpouring of refugees into Turkey as a result of fighting over Kobane. Erdoğan claimed that "ISIS and the PKK (The Kurdistan Workers' Party) are the same for Turkey," implying that Turkey would lose from the struggle along its border, whatever its outcome. His position on Turkish involvement in the Iraq-Syria conflict remains ambiguous despite a pledge from the new NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg that the alliance would protect Turkey from any spillover of the conflict with fighters from the Islamic State.
Turkey's Mediterranean Provocations | RealClearWorld
 
Zurück
Oben