“We might come suddenly one night.”
Erdogan indirectly threatens Athens with rocket attack
Turkey’s President Erdogan has threatened Athens. His new ballistic missile might even reach Athens – and might soon be put to use.
Erdogan has once more threatened Athens.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (68) has indirectly threatened a missile attack in the dispute over Greek islands in the eastern Mediterranean if Greece “does not rest”. Greece is nervous because the “Tayfun” rocket developed by Turkey might also hit Athens, Erdogan said on Sunday evening at a meeting with young people in Samsun, northern Turkey.
“Of course, this production makes the Greeks nervous. You mention Tayfun and the Greek gets nervous.” The Greeks said the rocket might hit Athens. “Yes, of course she will,” he added. If Greece does not rest on the islands, “if you try to take something away from us here and there, then of course a country like Turkey will not stand by and do something.”
Turkey is challenging Greek sovereignty over numerous inhabited and uninhabited Greek islands in the eastern Mediterranean and is demanding the withdrawal of all Greek troops from those islands. The situation between the two NATO partners in the Aegean is extremely tense at the moment. Erdogan had repeatedly threatened Greece in the past few weeks with the sentence: “We might suddenly come one night.”
The range of the ballistic missile “Tayfun” developed by the arms manufacturer Roketsan is estimated at at least 300 kilometers, according to the state broadcaster TRT. The rocket was successfully tested on the Black Sea in October. (SDA/chs)