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The ‘unyielding struggle’ we’ll never win

How can we solve it? (keep it civilized)

Re: The ‘unyielding struggle’ we’ll never win

Postby Get Real! » Sun Oct 23, 2011 7:40 pm

kurupetos wrote:M. Droushiotis is a paid traitor like Bananiot. :wink: BTW, is he related to Fanos Droushiotis?

The name “Droushiotis” in Cyprus, is synonymous to toilet paper.
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Re: The ‘unyielding struggle’ we’ll never win

Postby Piratis » Sun Oct 23, 2011 8:41 pm

The mistake of our leadership was that they believed that the Cyprus problem could be solved with negotiations. UN resolutions will not solve the Cyprus problem but neither negotiations will. The so called "solution" that Droushiotis supports is nothing more than partition, that not only would officially divide Cyprus into Greek and Turkish, but would also downgrade us to a mere community under the control of Turkey. Such "solution" is far worst than the status quo and worst even than a standard kind of partition.

We will win this struggle eventually, as long as we never sign away our own lands. The balance of power is always changing and the time for liberation will come sooner or later. Until then we will take the least bad feasible option, which is what we what we have now.
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Re: The ‘unyielding struggle’ we’ll never win

Postby humanist » Sun Oct 23, 2011 9:29 pm

I agree with you what you state above Piratis.

I think the TC's through their blindness and stupidity though will not only destroy themselves they will cause irrevesrible damage to the Republic.
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Re: The ‘unyielding struggle’ we’ll never win

Postby Pyrpolizer » Sun Oct 23, 2011 10:01 pm

Makarios Droushiotis is getting old and confused.
I attended almost all speeches at Pnevmatiki Stegi. There was no such speech from Klerides in 1975.And he did not resign from negotiator back then, in fact in August he signed the 3rd Vienna agreement. Makarios was talking for the long struggle (makroxronios agon) after he realized that the Turkish side was playing with us.
And the way he tries to explain how presumably each politician had different views on the matter of Federal solution, does not differ from his usual conspiracy theories. All personal opinions meshed together with questionable strings...
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Re: The ‘unyielding struggle’ we’ll never win

Postby Nikitas » Tue Oct 25, 2011 1:57 am

Piratis referred to the balance of power above. To that add the ongoing technological changes that cancel out the advantages of monolithic militaries like the Turkish one. Yes, I know, it sounds like wishful thinking, but if you do a serious search of current military technology you will see how things can change.

Stealth planes were touted as the way to beat radar. And up comes an idea developed by two British amateurs which uses the web of normal civilian radio communications as a background against which stealth planes can be identified. The idea is called Celldar and it takes no more than a simple computer to use. However, to develop such agile approaches you need agile minds, not arteriosclerotic fossils, like those that apparently are at the helm now.
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