Friday, 7 October 2011

Bankrupt Greece Buys Tanks

Via Ironies Too, it's being reported that soon-to-default Greece has bought US tanks, 400 of them, at a cost of €3.2m each. Given that Greece is not under threat of invasion, certainly not from the EU (you and whose army) what does it need tanks for? And where did it find €1.3bn from?

It seems a rather sinister move, given that Greece is getting ripe for a coup d'état. Dark days are ahead.

One thought, if Greece falls to a military dictatorship, will the EU kick it out because it fails the 'democracy test'?

Update, Richard North has in the comments kindly added important information:
The report is based on a miss-translation - the original refers to an upgrade of the existing fleet, purchased by the Greeks in a deal negotiated in 2001.

No prices were mentioned in the original report - just letters of intent. The work has not been done, with the options of basic refurbishment and capability enhancement.

This version of the Abrams, with a fuel-hungry gas turbine, would in any event hardly be suitable for civil disorder/coups ... they would run out of fuel mid-morning, just idling in Independence Square.

5 comments:

  1. You have to watch those Turkish chaps though!

    Turkey is following an increasingly "forward" diplomatic policy in the Balkans where aims to be regarded as the "motherland" of all Balkan Muslims. There is a thriving Turkish Muslim population in Greek Thrace (as opposed to the Orthodox Greek Community in
    the Istanbul area which has been ethnically cleansed to near vanishing point)
    Of course, if the EU bungs the Greek general staff enough euros, the tanks may come in handy for keeping and/or restoring order.

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  2. The report is based on a miss-translation - the original refers to an upgrade of the existing fleet, purchased by the Greeks in a deal negotiated in 2001.

    No prices were mentioned in the original report - just letters of intent. The work has not been done, with the options of basic refurbishment and capability enhancement.

    This version of the Abrams, with a fuel-hungry gas turbine, would in any event hardly be suitable for civil disorder/coups ... they would run out of fuel mid-morning, just idling in Independence Square.

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  3. I've been saying to my friends the only way the EU can keep Greece on the 'correct' moneytory policy is if they roll out Greek tanks onto the Greek streets. Looks like th EU agrees with me.

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  4. @Edward Spalton, true about the Turks though Greece is hardly in a situation to repel them with or without 400 tanks

    Thanks Richard, have amended my post

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  5. I read about it on a Dutch news website, they said that Greece was buying 400 tanks at €3.2m each.

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