Turkey, After America || Peter Zeihan

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @randomcontent2205
    @randomcontent2205 8 месяцев назад +800

    My dad was a Korean Conflict veteran, purple heart, saved by divine intervention and a M.A.S.H. unite. He had great respect for the Turkish soldiers he briefly interacted with.

    • @blokeabouttown2490
      @blokeabouttown2490 8 месяцев назад +6

      Did he meet Hawkeye or Klinger?

    • @randomcontent2205
      @randomcontent2205 8 месяцев назад +25

      @@blokeabouttown2490 lost his right eye, lost a lot of his hearing, had over 1000 open wounds a couple weeks later. Don't think he was conscious enough to recognize any characters, but he did like the TV show.

    • @Tom_McMurtry
      @Tom_McMurtry 8 месяцев назад +57

      Kiwis have a lot of respect for Turks after Gallipolo in ww1 in which Brittish command sent them and Australians to the wrong place where they got slaughtered up against the cliff face and High dune hills from the sea landing. But also in bonding after the war as civilians rather than empires clashing.

    • @godschild6694
      @godschild6694 8 месяцев назад

      why be rude and disrespectful? @@grrrbrrr9053

    • @3three3
      @3three3 8 месяцев назад +35

      @@grrrbrrr9053 hmm, based on your comment history, is there any reason you live on videos that mention Turkey? Might be based on your own ethnicity perhaps?

  • @obriets
    @obriets 8 месяцев назад +98

    It’s pretty obvious that the Central Asian countries need a Turkic alliance. The latest issue with Russian comments on annexing Uzbekistan demonstrate the need for these countries to organize a defense alliance to replace CSTO, that is, if they don’t want to completely fold into a Chinese umbrella, which is just as injurious as a Russian one.

    • @kaaner4814
      @kaaner4814 8 месяцев назад +22

      Organization of Turkic States is slowly evolving into an economic and security union, the countries do not want to go super fast with this because they dont want to spook Russia and China. So it will take another 20 years to complete that

    • @SacClass650
      @SacClass650 8 месяцев назад +6

      A Turkic alliance would be welcome; but as you allude to, Russia will want to assert itself in it. For good or ill. Eurasianism is the most developed political philosophy pertaining to pan-Turkic movements, and it is a Russian philosophy. Turkey's awakening to its _Turkic_ antecedents is relatively recent (19th cen.), for most of their history, the Ottomans used "Turk" as a pejorative for their Turkic brethren.
      Whereas Russia has been more accepting of the role Turkic peoples have made in the development of their nation.

    • @devalapar7878
      @devalapar7878 8 месяцев назад +12

      @@SacClass650 Russia was more accepting of Turkic tribes? Do you read history?

    • @SacClass650
      @SacClass650 8 месяцев назад

      @@devalapar7878 Yes, I am well read. Russia has been _relatively_ more accepting of Turkic peoples historically, with widespread acknowledgment of the role that they played in the formative years of Rus'. This has resulted in a popular and extensive political philosophy called Eurasianism.
      Notwithstanding the early wars; and later, the pogroms under Stalin.

    • @avniceylan7322
      @avniceylan7322 8 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@SacClass650Don't try to make a perception campaign in vain. It was not my grandfather who forcibly deported Tatars, Turkıcs and Caucasian people from the Caucasus, Crimea and many other geographies. We only have 5 million Turkish citizens and kinsmen of Tatar origin who were deported at various times under Russian domination.

  • @darthkek1953
    @darthkek1953 8 месяцев назад +307

    Another thing to bear in mind is Turkey has kept shipbuilding expertise. OK, they are for yachts including superyachts. But they have a tax-free (or so low as to be functionally meaningless to the state) shipbuilding region and they are enormously successful and respected. My point is the SKILLS and SHIPYARDS to build naval vessels, well, it's not starting at zero.

    • @landontesar3070
      @landontesar3070 8 месяцев назад +9

      Such skills are well underappreciated in the globalized world.

    • @Troglodytarum
      @Troglodytarum 8 месяцев назад +11

      Do you have the skills to equip these ships with anything more than dumbfire artillery pieces? Can you produce advanced weapons systems domestically and at a sufficient number to outfit multiple modern warships simultaneously?

    • @darthkek1953
      @darthkek1953 8 месяцев назад +41

      @@Troglodytarum the Turks are very well developed militarily, for the economy. Made extraordinary use of drones. A ship laden with drones would be a terror of the seas. I do take your point (they are not at mil spec) but my point is going from civ spec to mil spec is MUCH shorter training and cost leap than Absolute Zero to mil spec.

    • @StrategyMasterSSF
      @StrategyMasterSSF 8 месяцев назад +8

      Yes@@Troglodytarum

    • @Mukation
      @Mukation 8 месяцев назад +9

      @@Troglodytarum Part of the reason Erdogan is stalling the Nato accension of Sweden is because of the defense industry that Sweden has, which is completly domestic and not dependant on other nations tech. Particularlly the naval sector. Swedish ships have defeated american Aircraft carriers in several war games in the past.
      It's not something they'd ever go public with, we know he wants planes from the US aswell, but don't be surprised if Saab happens to open an office in Turkey in a few years.

  • @bruteforce7746
    @bruteforce7746 8 месяцев назад +192

    Refreshing to see an American who is very well versed in the Turkish geopolitics. Great video ❤

    • @Sece1
      @Sece1 8 месяцев назад +2

      I guess it is the Colorado mountains. Political pundits in DC are mainly stuck between potomac river and its foggy weather.

    • @KenanTurkiye
      @KenanTurkiye 8 месяцев назад +2

      🚅 don't you all enjoy railroad
      🚈 trams, trains etc are just so cool
      🚞 take a ride in my ''transportation'' folder :)

    • @4CelciusDegree
      @4CelciusDegree 7 месяцев назад +2

      He is literally not. I am Turkish and it took him 20 seconds to spread his first misinformation in this video and there are countless misinformation in the rest of the video too

  • @rahatlatcvehuzurverici946
    @rahatlatcvehuzurverici946 8 месяцев назад +149

    I have lived in Turkey for about 7 years doing my postgraduate there. I speak fluent Turkish... I am from Somalia and the Turkish military and business are already in Mogadishu and Hargeisa.

    • @SoccerStars128
      @SoccerStars128 8 месяцев назад +6

      That’s not a good thing bro 💀

    • @avniceylan7322
      @avniceylan7322 8 месяцев назад +3

      What's the not so good part?​@@SoccerStars128

    • @alpt1980
      @alpt1980 8 месяцев назад +46

      @@SoccerStars128 It is a good thing, because Turkey doesnt invade or took her imperalism to Somali. It is a win-win strategy for both countries.

    • @ilbilgehatun278
      @ilbilgehatun278 8 месяцев назад +21

      Merhaba Somalili dostum,İstanbuldan selamlar.❤️

    • @id6113
      @id6113 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@ilbilgehatun278teşekkürler dostum

  • @yigitfratl1007
    @yigitfratl1007 8 месяцев назад +417

    Turk here,
    One major aspect you didn't mention is the society, Turkish society is quite polarized due to recent 20 years of politics to the extent that it resembles the US nowadays. A Rep or Dem leadership would change the fabric of the state after 2 decades, and it already has in Turkey. Could always change in the other direction though.

    • @k.e.2658
      @k.e.2658 8 месяцев назад +79

      We're going through times of change that's for sure, as some random American dude, good luck out there brotha.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 8 месяцев назад +49

      Kolay gelsin from NYC, bro!

    • @HICHAM-FINANCIER
      @HICHAM-FINANCIER 8 месяцев назад

      I don't think that the CHP will win ans election soon, they are very incompetent even with very high inflation and erdogan economic miss management they've lost so it will continue with the current coalition !

    • @paulpierce2051
      @paulpierce2051 8 месяцев назад +19

      Just asking, isn’t Crimea actually majority ethnic Turkish?

    • @veeli1106
      @veeli1106 8 месяцев назад +62

      @@paulpierce2051 …think you got Turkish and Tartar mixed up…

  • @brrkbtl
    @brrkbtl 7 месяцев назад +120

    I m Turkish and I am amazed by your knowledge about the history and geography of the area

    • @ihsan7826
      @ihsan7826 7 месяцев назад +14

      Adam Türkler 1200'lerde Moğollardan ayrıldı dedi videonun başında ben orda koptum

    • @brrkbtl
      @brrkbtl 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@ihsan7826 yanlis mi?

    • @ihsan7826
      @ihsan7826 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@brrkbtl Türkler 11. yüzyılda Anadoluya girdiğine göre, Moğollardan ayrılmaları 1200'lerden önce olmalı öyle değil mi ?

    • @brrkbtl
      @brrkbtl 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@ihsan7826ahh evet bn tarihe dikkat etmedim . Genelde Turks are Mongolians dediklerj icin , en azindan bu ayrımı yapabilmesi impressive 😂

    • @ecenker
      @ecenker 7 месяцев назад +5

      Daha son 20 yılı bilmiyor, 1200 yılı kusur kalsın.

  • @KC__coffee
    @KC__coffee 8 месяцев назад +239

    13 minutes of Peter on Turkey, what a treat!

    • @darthkek1953
      @darthkek1953 8 месяцев назад +10

      Turkey for Christmas!

    • @nathanolson3135
      @nathanolson3135 8 месяцев назад +14

      He’s talking lots nonsense

    • @JoeZorzin
      @JoeZorzin 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@nathanolson3135 His "after America" theme is bull.

    • @gmw3083
      @gmw3083 8 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@JoeZorzinzeihans take is bull, but the American aftermath is guaranteed...

    • @YHauz-co
      @YHauz-co 8 месяцев назад +1

      It’s going to be Türkiye, Russia, and Iran to control Eurasia’s energy and trade

  • @zeynepman6224
    @zeynepman6224 7 месяцев назад +7

    "War is murder unless it is absolut necessary."
    Gazi Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

  • @opmeg11
    @opmeg11 6 месяцев назад +6

    i love how you are millions of miles better educated about turkey and surrounding countries than our own people who lives in the country... very interesting video sir keep the good work up!

  • @borademir7294
    @borademir7294 7 месяцев назад +16

    It was amazing to listen, as a Turk I couldn’t agree more on these scenarios. I just came across with your channel and really amazed by your knowledgr!

  • @elifoztan6213
    @elifoztan6213 8 месяцев назад +55

    I’m Turkish and this was one of the best and the most objective commentary about a very wide and complicated history/geography in the world. Thank you!!

    • @ledlight1487
      @ledlight1487 7 месяцев назад

      Was it? Lmao! 😂

    • @cihangirakyol4170
      @cihangirakyol4170 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@ledlight1487 You must be the "a" in the lmao.

    • @oguzdrvirus3119
      @oguzdrvirus3119 7 месяцев назад +1

      Split off from the Mongol hordes??.. Moreover, in the 1200s.... The video loses it from the beginning. Damn biases.. :))
      Ne objektifi bacım. Tüklerden Moğol sürülerinden ayrılanlar diye bahsediyor. Hem de 1200 lerde.. Baştan belli saçmalık..

    • @izachu904
      @izachu904 6 месяцев назад

      @@oguzdrvirus3119 I think he still managed to get along with being somewhat more reasonable not objective but US-centric point of view at best

  • @jerryp7721
    @jerryp7721 8 месяцев назад +61

    I did not read the book, but George Friedman predicted a superpower alliance, consisting of Turkey, Poland, and Japan, by 2050. From what I understand, not adversarial to the US, but potentially a peer superpower. Interesting collection of nations, but all three definitely have military, and, with the exception of Japan, Strong local economic opportunities. Would love to hear your thoughts on his predictions. Great video. Thanks! By the way, Turkey is one nation I think the US should make every effort to stay closely allied to, and maybe even help broker an agreement between them and Israel. I can definitely see Turkey as an emerging superpower in a couple decades.

    • @Ablequerq
      @Ablequerq 8 месяцев назад +6

      Friedman also said that the USA and Japan would go to war in the 1990s, but nothing happened.

    • @devalapar7878
      @devalapar7878 8 месяцев назад

      @@Ablequerq I think there was a potential. Risks are not the same as predictions.
      Japan was stagnating. So if they wanted a war, the 90s would have been the right time.
      I believe it was forbidden for Japan to have a big army until the 90s.
      Today, Japan is a close US ally. If they go to war, they will be allies.

    • @avniceylan7322
      @avniceylan7322 8 месяцев назад

      As long as it continues to maintain close relations with the West, especially Israel, represented by America and Europe, let alone becoming a superpower, this will not bring peace, happiness, success or prosperity to Turkey.

    • @emyrgrznsky9943
      @emyrgrznsky9943 8 месяцев назад +10

      instead of allying us USA likes pesmerghe and PKK and PYD lol little kurdish rebellions, while 15m+ Kurds live in Turkey safely and quite normally

    • @ullymolly4966
      @ullymolly4966 7 месяцев назад

      Tell me poland or japan was a superpower before?

  • @emreisler4593
    @emreisler4593 8 месяцев назад +37

    As a Turk, I'd say 100% of the things you say is culturally and geopolitically very well understood, well defined and beautifully told. Thank you for that.

    • @KenanTurkiye
      @KenanTurkiye 8 месяцев назад +1

      LÜTFEN herkes gerçekleri gösteren bir 'dosya' yapsın kanalında, nasıl mı? Bak anlarsın.
      Sonra başkalarınında aynısını yapmasını isteyebilir benim şu an yaptığım gibi.
      Ve 'dosya' hazır olduğunda, kalabalık yorumlara bir yorum atın, kanalınıza baktıracak nitelikte. Bu şekilde diğer 'dosyalar da' gözleri önlerinde oluyor.
      Bir kişi üç kişiyi etkilese, milyonlar, milyarlar oluruz.

    • @KenanTurkiye
      @KenanTurkiye 8 месяцев назад

      As a Turk there's quite a few inaccuracies (geostrategically) I would disagree with.
      The narrative is dry just like the meat of turkey bird.

    • @KenanTurkiye
      @KenanTurkiye 8 месяцев назад +1

      @ESKiTUFEK1 :) adres karıştırdın sanırım. Yukarıda ki msjımda hindi etinin yavanlığından bahsediyorum.

    • @KenanTurkiye
      @KenanTurkiye 8 месяцев назад +1

      @ESKiTUFEK1 Ülkemin adını yanlış yazanlara benim devamlı yolladığım (kendi) yazım aşağıdadır:
      ----------------------------------------------------------
      Heres something you may find interesting. :)
      The name of my country has nothing to do with the interesting and delicious bird ''turkey''......
      .....but the name of the bird does have a connection with the name of my country, let me explain. :)
      Name of my country has always been Türkiye, it's been known as such since around the 1200's.
      The name it self has a suffix, '' -iye '', that is Turk-iye, where the -iye suffix means 'land of/belonging to',
      just like the Latin suffix of '' -ia '', which exists in such country names like
      Austr-ia, Austral-ia, Latv-ia, Roman-ia etc etc again meaning 'land of/belonging to'.
      Many would remember the country Czechoslovak-ia which changed it's name to Czech Republic and a few years ago changed that to Czechia (that is Czech-ia).
      The Latin suffix -ia probably originates from Turkish -iye as Turkish is much older, ancient Turkish been over ten thousand years old.
      Spelled in different languages in different ways to phonetically resemble '' Türkiye ''
      we got various spellings like;
      Turquía (in Spanish),
      Turchia (in Italian),
      Turquie (in French) and
      Turkey (in English)
      all trying to resemble the pronounciation of ''Turk-ia'' thus Turkiye.
      Mind you this was way before the animal we currently know as 'turkey'' was found by the europeans when they explored the north americas. The bird was first sent to europe from north americas in the year 1519, so up until that point there was no bird named 'turkey'....
      ...they came across the bird and thought it was a specie of the fowl/chicken they had been buying from the country of Turkiye at the time, so they named the bird ''Turkey Fowl'' meaning ''Turkish Chicken''.....
      ....just like how a dog breed is known as German Shepherd (because it's from Germany), American Bulldog, British Terrier, Greek Harehound etc etc.
      In time you don't get to call the Greek Harehound as simply as ''Greek''; or you don't call the British Terrier as ''British''; or the German Shepherd as ''German'', but in time the Turkish Fowl started to be called just ''Turkey'' and later ''turkey'', and has been going on for hundreds of years.
      Now in modern times, this is causing confusion, especially when we have people across the world unable to point to their own country on the map, this ''confusion over the naming'' needed to be corrected.
      So my country decided to rectify this confusion that has been going on for so long and corrected the name to Türkiye, which it always was. Basically we didn't change the name of our country, we changed the mistake made in the English language. : )
      So, there's some tid bit information for you to have a great day, if you read upto this point you have a great night too, ohh just have a wonderfull life. : )
      Best wishes. ;)

    • @KenanTurkiye
      @KenanTurkiye 8 месяцев назад +1

      Ülkemin adını yanlış yazanlara benim devamlı yolladığım (kendi) yazım aşağıdadır:
      ----------------------------------------------------------
      Heres something you may find interesting. :)
      The name of my country has nothing to do with the interesting and delicious bird ''turkey''......
      .....but the name of the bird does have a connection with the name of my country, let me explain. :)
      Name of my country has always been Türkiye, it's been known as such since around the 1200's.
      The name it self has a suffix, '' -iye '', that is Turk-iye, where the -iye suffix means 'land of/belonging to',
      just like the Latin suffix of '' -ia '', which exists in such country names like
      Austr-ia, Austral-ia, Latv-ia, Roman-ia etc etc again meaning 'land of/belonging to'.
      Many would remember the country Czechoslovak-ia which changed it's name to Czech Republic and a few years ago changed that to Czechia (that is Czech-ia).
      The Latin suffix -ia probably originates from Turkish -iye as Turkish is much older, ancient Turkish been over ten thousand years old.
      Spelled in different languages in different ways to phonetically resemble '' Türkiye ''
      we got various spellings like;
      Turquía (in Spanish),
      Turchia (in Italian),
      Turquie (in French) and
      Turkey (in English)
      all trying to resemble the pronounciation of ''Turk-ia'' thus Turkiye.
      Mind you this was way before the animal we currently know as 'turkey'' was found by the europeans when they explored the north americas. The bird was first sent to europe from north americas in the year 1519, so up until that point there was no bird named 'turkey'....
      ...they came across the bird and thought it was a specie of the fowl/chicken they had been buying from the country of Turkiye at the time, so they named the bird ''Turkey Fowl'' meaning ''Turkish Chicken''.....
      ....just like how a dog breed is known as German Shepherd (because it's from Germany), American Bulldog, British Terrier, Greek Harehound etc etc.
      In time you don't get to call the Greek Harehound as simply as ''Greek''; or you don't call the British Terrier as ''British''; or the German Shepherd as ''German'', but in time the Turkish Fowl started to be called just ''Turkey'' and later ''turkey'', and has been going on for hundreds of years.
      Now in modern times, this is causing confusion, especially when we have people across the world unable to point to their own country on the map, this ''confusion over the naming'' needed to be corrected.
      So my country decided to rectify this confusion that has been going on for so long and corrected the name to Türkiye, which it always was. Basically we didn't change the name of our country, we changed the mistake made in the English language. : )
      So, there's some tid bit information for you to have a great day, if you read upto this point you have a great night too, ohh just have a wonderfull life. : )
      Best wishes. ;)

  • @onur6145
    @onur6145 8 месяцев назад +51

    Actually, Turks and Mongols are two separate races like Germans and French. They shared a common region for a long time and have similar characteristics. Also, Turks came to Anatolia before Mongols didn't even united and invade most of the world. They came to Mid-East first as mercenaries and military commanders. In time they found their own kingdoms which has a Turkic dynasty and multi-ethnic subject. This formula always worked everywhere Turks went outside their heartland Central Asia and Siberia. For example, Mamluks in Egypt, Safavids in Iran, Mughals in India etc. The last and true heir of the Roman Empire was also Ottomans and they ruled a huge and such a complex region for 600 years. After the end of empires age, young Turkiye born from the ashes of the now once mighty Ottoman Empire. Though, this didn't came cheap for Turks. They lost a lot of people and land to stay independent as always. If there is one thing Turks cannot ignore is their sense of pride. These people can forget many malice against them and usually very hospitable, but they quickly get mad when they were insulted and fight to dead for their nation.

    • @gokalpmetininpapyonlusu5810
      @gokalpmetininpapyonlusu5810 7 месяцев назад +3

      Franks are a German tribe first of all, not too much difference between them. Mongol word first mentioned in 840 AD, they were the part of same budun(nation).
      You can't expect Peter to know Huns,Gokturks,Avars,... Just enjoy the other parts.

    • @cartesian_doubt6230
      @cartesian_doubt6230 Месяц назад +1

      They came as slave soldiers, not mercenaries. Then they rose to be military commanders.

  • @tchugra
    @tchugra 8 месяцев назад +6

    The only plausible and true way for us the Turks is to form a Turkic Union, enable the Middle Corridor and provide a geogeaphy of peace for all those willing to join in, as well. This will do the world tons of good.

  • @Baris_of_sicily
    @Baris_of_sicily 7 месяцев назад +3

    As a turk, I agree with you on cooperating with the israelis. We would be much stronger as allies.

  • @Roland.Deschain
    @Roland.Deschain 8 месяцев назад +14

    I´m Turkish who visited most of Balkan countries and cant agree more of that Balkan part. Turks have an strong influence in the Balkans that surprises even me.

    • @brrkbtl
      @brrkbtl 7 месяцев назад +3

      Yes Even we Turks are not aware that Balkans are actually very ‘ Turkish’. They made us forget the huge part of history.

    • @alpddar2518
      @alpddar2518 7 месяцев назад +1

      Balkans were more Turkish than Eastern Anatolia. Anatolia is a Greek word whereas Balkan is Turkish. Dont forget and dont forgive.

    • @brrkbtl
      @brrkbtl 7 месяцев назад +6

      @@alpddar2518 Turkish ruling party is also at fault. They have a discourse that belittles Turks from Balkans and even implying that they are not really Turkish. (Bir de Osmanlıcı geçinirler sorsan) Moreover, while Greeks and Armenians play the victim and their world revolve around this victimhood , we Turks never talk about what happened to Turks in Balkans. ...

    • @Roland.Deschain
      @Roland.Deschain 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@alpddar2518 Anatolia is our homeland, not Balkans. We just have an influence there but not as Germans have. About the Greek word... Our a lot of city names have greek roots not just continent "Anadolu". So... İkiniz de saçmalamışsınız.

    • @sh.osmanov6792
      @sh.osmanov6792 7 месяцев назад +1

      "Turks have strong influence in the Balkans"
      Ofcourse millions of Turks been living here for centuries.
      We may be living in the Balkans but we are turks. Kept our traditions, language and religion for centuries. Dare I say even more Turk than the Turks living in Türkiye.

  • @russgaulke1364
    @russgaulke1364 8 месяцев назад +200

    Spent some time in Turkey in a NATO assignment, more years ago than I like to admit, and the influence of religion in Turkey's worldview can not be discounted. While moderate religiously, when compared to Iran, religion is still something that has to be factored into the equation.

    • @karacaddy
      @karacaddy 8 месяцев назад +51

      Unfortunately, what you say is true, as a 40% secular minority, we experience the pain of this every day!

    • @nbansal
      @nbansal 8 месяцев назад +56

      There is no such thing as moderate Islam.

    • @arcar66
      @arcar66 8 месяцев назад +26

      Maybe because I'm living in a tiny village, I only see the old men and women becoming more religious. The younger generation have turned money into their new deity.....

    • @russgaulke1364
      @russgaulke1364 8 месяцев назад +19

      Bullshit
      @@nbansal

    • @TS-zp7pe
      @TS-zp7pe 8 месяцев назад +10

      I always heard that Turks aren’t religious and don’t even bother fasting during the holy month of Ramadan.

  • @fricatus
    @fricatus 8 месяцев назад +198

    One thing Peter does over and over again is forget the role of the EU and NATO. Most member countries of both organisations are very happy with this situation because it gives them a voice and stops them being pushed around by bigger countries (yes this happens still, but within the rules of fair play). There’s no way somewhere like Bulgaria wants to be bounced between the Russian and Turkish empires again, so it turns to the EU and NATO, where it can have a say on what happens (primarily by joining forces with other small countries that have similar interests. Physical geography still matters hugely but it’s hard to take his commentary seriously if he doesn’t at least acknowledge this factor.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 8 месяцев назад +61

      NATO (and the EU for that matter) are nothing without US money.

    • @juricakovac5667
      @juricakovac5667 8 месяцев назад +65

      @@juniorjames7076 I agree with your point on NATO, disagree on EU, EU is nothing without money from Germany, also as a Balkanoid myself, to think we want anything to do with Turkey is laughable, they are our biggest enemy (historically speaking)

    • @JUAN_OLIVIER
      @JUAN_OLIVIER 8 месяцев назад +35

      ​@juniorjames7076 - The EU does not really require US money to survive. As for NATO you are only half right. If the US leaves, NATO would lose roughly about half of its power. That said even half of NATO is still a gigantic military power.

    • @davidjones6389
      @davidjones6389 8 месяцев назад

      The US and NATO have survived, and they are incrementally taking down Russia. Turkey benefits, and is playing all sides. Look how they got the Israelis to aid Azerbaijan to challenge Armenia. Deal with reality not your hates.

    • @haakoflo
      @haakoflo 8 месяцев назад +45

      @@JUAN_OLIVIER Without the US, Nato would lose about 80% of it's ability to project power beyond national borders. Take away Britain and her former colonies, and that would be 90%. The EU _does_ have the economic muscle to rebuild military power comparable to China or even the US, but that would take 20 years and involve a lot of coordination difficulties.
      Still, even without any of the English speaking countries, the EU is significantly stronger than Turkey and probably Russia too, at least in a conflict within Europe.

  • @0l_pops531
    @0l_pops531 8 месяцев назад +22

    Peter, would love to hear your comments on the Venezuela-Guyana conflict, especially with the British involvement.

    • @williamdudleybass9302
      @williamdudleybass9302 8 месяцев назад +2

      Agreed…and that would be more of a US versus Venezuela problem. Maduro wants to pound his drum fiercely in the nightfall of the jungle to keep the shadows at bay. This is one of these festering post-Cold War cold sores. Guyana has such a tiny military. For the UK, the ghost of the Falklands/Malvinas war looms over this dispute because of the sheer economic costs of projecting any significant military force to the region. The US would have to step in for Guyana, and the US - Venezuelan relations are in a bit of a thaw, altho a shallow thaw. Brazil is also engaged on the borders there, but they are so preoccupied internally and face their own logistical challenges in moving any substantial military forces thru the Amazon into the remote tepui country. Border conflicts between Venezuela & Columbia with their simmering narco/guerrilla insurgencies is another post-Cold War slow boil.

    • @Jabberstax
      @Jabberstax 8 месяцев назад +1

      British involvement? Sending one small warship to take part in naval exercises barely constitutes involvement from the British. It's American assurances the Gyanese are relying on.

  • @jacarandaization
    @jacarandaization 8 месяцев назад +39

    No mention in this talk about Erdoğan's domestic economic policies. Those have raised enough eyebrows (and inflation rates) within Turkey and beyond for that particular topic to require at least some sort of commentary.

    • @user-vr6io5xb9e
      @user-vr6io5xb9e 8 месяцев назад +6

      Their economy is about to collapse and it’s a blessing for Turks otherwise that crazy guy would drag the Turkish army into the Gazza conflict and bring the country to it’s knees

    • @jacarandaization
      @jacarandaization 8 месяцев назад

      Possibly. At any rate, the birthrate in Turkey, while significantly better than, say, Russia's, is still below replacement level. This is yet another topic that could have been addressed, especially given that birthrates in Arab countries are, on average, higher than replacement level - which would complicate any Turkish influence in those countries.@@user-vr6io5xb9e

    • @SignalCorps1
      @SignalCorps1 8 месяцев назад +1

      You’re right about Turkey’s economy, but this is a short YT vid, not a college course. Also PZ typically focuses on geopolitics and upcoming economic events, not the current state of an economy.

    • @jacarandaization
      @jacarandaization 8 месяцев назад

      Touché. But I simply don't see how Turkey - or, indeed, any nation state - can exert significant power beyond its borders unless its economy is in good order (well, perhaps Iran proves me wrong on that point, but I would imagine that Iran has incurred heavy costs of one sort or another). So Zeihan's points presuppose a bit too much, at least for the time being.@@SignalCorps1

    • @shafsteryellow
      @shafsteryellow 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@user-vr6io5xb9e😂 no it's not it's growing

  • @ed9763
    @ed9763 8 месяцев назад +5

    I can't understand the wisdom behind making this video on Turkey while walking in some hilly area in the US.

  • @CMVBrielman
    @CMVBrielman 8 месяцев назад +21

    0:05 Thats a very… unique interpretation of Turkish history.

    • @SacClass650
      @SacClass650 8 месяцев назад

      In what way? Relatively speaking, Turkey has been in the embers of empire, and the West, the architects of their downfall, couldn't care less.

    • @CMVBrielman
      @CMVBrielman 8 месяцев назад +24

      @@SacClass650 They did not break off from the Mongols in the 1200s. The Seljuk Turks established themselves over a century before the rise of the Mongols, and were effectively defeated by the Khwarezmians (sic) who themselves were most famous for being conquered by the Mongols. The rump Turkish states fought amongst themselves, with the Turks led by the house of Osman becoming pre-eminent, before themselves also being crushed by the Mongols, only rising back up after the Mongols collapses.
      In short: saying the Turks broke off from the Mongols is like saying the Poles broke off from the Russians. Wildly wrong, as anyone with passing familiarity of the topic would know, but just close enough to be confusing.

    • @SacClass650
      @SacClass650 8 месяцев назад

      @@CMVBrielman Indeed, but your timestamp is confusing, then, as the issues arise prior to 27secs not after!

    • @CMVBrielman
      @CMVBrielman 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@SacClass650 Fair. I paused when he was finished. I’ll edit it to be less confusing.

    • @canoaslan1011
      @canoaslan1011 7 месяцев назад

      His not making a "Where did Turks come from facts history" video. do you know how long it will take, look how long it took you to write what you think the history of Turks are, which you couldnt be any more inaccurate and wrong. His making a "Whats going on in the Geopolitics world today" video, which is very refreshing to see, not just an Amerian, but anyone online, to understand, not just Turkeys geopolitics, but whats going in the geopolitics of the whole area. Hence it seems like you actually missed the opportunity to maybe learn something usefull, while you were trying to school him and prove him wrong, you totally missed the point, like most typers of comments on here.@@CMVBrielman

  • @USCisgay
    @USCisgay 8 месяцев назад +6

    Turkey and Mexico are both going to be huge players this next 100 years. Way bigger than most would believe

  • @rayfleming2053
    @rayfleming2053 8 месяцев назад +5

    I lived in Bulgaria for a while and they like Turks about as much as they like Roma. They will trade out of necessity but don't expect an alliance. Bulgaria is reliant on NATO to keep them safe from the Turks. And yes, Turkey is in NATO too but they are the NATO country most likely to go to war against NATO.

    • @mahcem
      @mahcem 8 месяцев назад

      Turkey joined NATO back in 1954 in order to protect itself from NATO. Otherwise it would have shared the same destiny with Korea and Vietnam and been invaded and split shared by the US and Soviet Russia. And Turkey took a lot of embarrassing and self-deprecating punches on the chin just to be able stay under the radar on the way to build muscle without getting noticed and ganged up on like it got in the WWI. Roll forward 100 years, things are very different today, though.

    • @tarkgundogdu8940
      @tarkgundogdu8940 8 месяцев назад +1

      Turkey will not go to war against NATO, this I can guarantee that. Because it is very illogical to do so. The best option for Turkey is to remain side-less in the war between the USA + UK + EU + Japan + Australia + Israel VS China + Russia + Iran + India + Brazil + South Africa.

    • @mahcem
      @mahcem 8 месяцев назад

      @@tarkgundogdu8940 NATO is currently at war with Turkey already. What are you talking about?

    • @tarkgundogdu8940
      @tarkgundogdu8940 8 месяцев назад

      @@mahcemIt is NATO which is attacking Turkey not the other way around.

    • @mahcem
      @mahcem 8 месяцев назад

      @@tarkgundogdu8940 who said the contrary? Are you sure you really understand what your eyes read?

  • @reuvenbisk3220
    @reuvenbisk3220 8 месяцев назад +19

    The worst possible choice is not to choose and be mired in all of the region’s problems. Quite likely.

    • @siddarthshah1773
      @siddarthshah1773 8 месяцев назад

      the best choice is not take control over others but to start controlling ourselves.. we are our own enemy.. dis is what dharma in india teaches us

  • @RawandCookedVegan
    @RawandCookedVegan 8 месяцев назад +59

    Thanks Peter. Would be interesting to hear you do a video on the Turkish economy and currency. It seems that the Turkish Lira has been devaluing ever since I can remember. It has to stop sometime right?

    • @gotchakii
      @gotchakii 8 месяцев назад +9

      It has a long road to go... towards bottom

    • @amyiyen
      @amyiyen 8 месяцев назад +6

      Its not gonna stop until they raise the rates to around 100% - which is the real inflation figure.

    • @GrahamLaight
      @GrahamLaight 8 месяцев назад +11

      Excessive inflation usually ends with the issue of a new currency.

    • @sw6155
      @sw6155 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@amyiyenwhat do you suppose Erdogan has been thinking about the economy after all these years?
      I don’t remember Turkey’s Econ being that bad when he took over to be only going downhill ever since… 25/20yrs ago I was thinking Turkey was about to burst into a new level of economic growth as it “westernized” its businesses and economy… You know, growing judicial/contractual security, better fiscal/auditing controls, reduction in crime/corruption… But did THAT not happen… At all… I was hoping Turkey would be a successful model to other Islamic nations showing you can westernize on key elements without secularizing, which is a true fear for most Islamic nations… It seems so to me at least… 😓💔💔

    • @devalapar7878
      @devalapar7878 8 месяцев назад +12

      @@sw6155 Turkey had huge inflation in the past too.
      There are several factors why they have inflation. The primary reason is bad economic policies.
      When Erdogan started to become truly authoritarian, he fucked up the economy.

  • @thegroovee
    @thegroovee 8 месяцев назад +10

    The Turks came to Anatolia in 10th century, forming Seljuk Empire. They emigrated from Transoxiama. 3 centuries before the Mongols came to the Region

    • @asryorumcu5208
      @asryorumcu5208 8 месяцев назад

      So where did Americans come from then!? Stop being a hypocrite. It is illogical for a dinosaur to come and claim land from the land where you have lived for a thousand years.

  • @seriousstuff7059
    @seriousstuff7059 8 месяцев назад +8

    As a Turk, I believe the Turkish-Israeli dispute is a big lost opportunity, especially since most of the common Turkish public is anti-Palestinian due to the heritage of Arab revolt. Considering the founders of Israel were the Ottoman Jews after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, and how both the Ottoman Empire and the early Turkish Republic always rescued Jews from European oppressions, there isn't any historical bad blood either.
    Türkiye as the region's strongest land & naval power could easily provide Israel the security guarantees they would otherwise lack. Excluding airpower Israel doesn't have a really powerful military, they struggle in unconventional warfare against militias for months with very high losses, especially in urban settings, while the Turkish military secures victories in days with minimal casualties in similar settings as seen in Northern Syria & Iraq. Turkish military is a force built to face modern conventional militaries, and even great powers such as Russia. Meanwhile, the Israeli military is built to deter rag-tag unprofessional, and untrained Arab militaries, as well as armed militias.
    While Türkiye provides security guarantees in the Middle East and the Mediterranean Sea, Israel could easily provide diplomatic support which Türkiye needs. Unfortunately, Turkish diplomacy has been at an all-time low recently, resulting in us getting bogged down in Syria, getting sanctioned for fighting designated t-e-rr0-rist organizations, getting sour relations with the EU for blocking literal Russian expansion in Libya, and a weaker position in the East. Med. crisis despite having a more powerful military. Israel, with its vast diplomatic network and lobbies inside the United States & European countries, could provide the much-needed assistance.
    It is sad to see a pro-Arab Islamist government in Türkiye, as well as a portion of anti-Turkish European Ashkenazi Jews in Israel running this possibility. If only a secular nationalistic government secures power in Türkiye, and if only more Turkish-friendly Sephardic Jews gains more influence in Israeli governance, then both countries could secure much needed cooperation.

    • @Ghost29676
      @Ghost29676 8 месяцев назад

      Yes but at the begin israel was supporting erdoğan they should support to kemalist now it's too late

    • @Zeryab2014
      @Zeryab2014 8 месяцев назад

      It's amazing how someone can come and pretend t speak for 80 million people ...at least say you speak for 48% you got in the last election!
      Which I doubt even all of them agree with you
      You people are worse enemies of turkey than the pkk and such!
      90 years of begging Europe and they still look at you as an internal enemy and look down at you...are you people ever going to learn!!
      God protects the good people of turkey from you traitors

    • @yuzeymaokanime583
      @yuzeymaokanime583 7 месяцев назад

      Just because you hate the arabs doesnt make the israelis right with what they do to the palestinians

  • @bakdakal
    @bakdakal 7 месяцев назад +3

    The Turks haven't split from the Mongols... They were in Anatolia 200 years before Genghis Khan was born and they had many empires before the Mongols. You should research for the Gokturks, Kyrgyz khanate, Uighur khanate etc.

  • @timothybarry2981
    @timothybarry2981 8 месяцев назад +15

    I think Peter needs to do hiking tours with a focus on political events. That would be cool.

  • @hakanokan5073
    @hakanokan5073 8 месяцев назад +4

    history is real. American history is hardly a rosy tale. especially by exploiting the natural resources of Native Americans.. Love and respect from Turkey

  • @base99498
    @base99498 8 месяцев назад +7

    Great analysis
    Amazing mic 🎤

  • @gordonj.wallis2826
    @gordonj.wallis2826 8 месяцев назад +15

    Thank you. I have learned a lot from your videos. I wish some of these world leaders would listen to your videos.

  • @kaanmuglal843
    @kaanmuglal843 8 месяцев назад +18

    Yesss finally the episode I was waiting for

  • @JinKee
    @JinKee 8 месяцев назад +8

    Turkey is the most interesting one, because they are the most successful at becoming a regional power in the black sea. Usually the United States will not tolerate such a rise in power.

    • @Bayard1503
      @Bayard1503 8 месяцев назад +3

      Why wouldn't US tolerate an ally growing stronger?? Turkey's power has been backed by US all the way until maybe the past decade when Erdogan started acting a little ambivalent.

    • @devalapar7878
      @devalapar7878 8 месяцев назад +2

      The evidence proves you wrong. Japan is a very strong country and it is a US ally.
      The US would be only against a strong country, if that country was able to challenge it or invade it. Today, no country can invade the US. Mexico is probably best position to invade the US, but they are still cooperating very closely.

    • @drmwpn
      @drmwpn 8 месяцев назад

      @@devalapar7878 LOL, I get what you're saying, but if Mexico "invaded" a single border town, several Marine divisions would land in Veracruz a couple of days later and within 48 hours Mexico City would be captured and the government would collapse. :-)

    • @devalapar7878
      @devalapar7878 8 месяцев назад

      @@drmwpn Maybe but that doesn't prove your point which was that the US wouldn't allow it's ally to become more powerful.

    • @drmwpn
      @drmwpn 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@devalapar7878 Oh, no, in general I would agree with that, in my view about 9/10 of the problem most Americans have with playing "Team America: World Police" is due to the fact (and for most of our allies, it's definitely fact rather than perception) that they simply haven't been carrying their weight, providing gold-plated social benefits to their populations while cutting their defense budgets to the bone. After close to 80 years of the same excuses, it gets old. How is an American politician supposed to explain to his voters, thousands of whom probably filed for medically-induced bankruptcy in just the past year (statistically it's a near certainty) that he needs to pony up to keep Ingmar and Wladislaw free when he's one missed paycheck from oblivion at any moment in time? Seems a bit unfair when the guys getting the protection are so well-off. And in many cases we bent over backwards to give a local ally a HUGE leg up on the competition--e.g. the Afghan provisional government had more than enough material to smash the Taliban, it just didn't have the heart or will to actually fight, or the South Vietnamese, who were similarly left armed to the teeth but who fell seemingly in an instant. Why help people who refuse to help themselves?

  • @ioannisspanos326
    @ioannisspanos326 8 месяцев назад +8

    I like everything of this video !!! the background , the language , the hiking movement ....the best geopolitics video I've ever seen besides not having maps and all that kind of stuff ,Perfect !

  • @Ciddiyetle
    @Ciddiyetle 6 месяцев назад +2

    As a Turk, I would like to clarify some ideas from my own perspective, Turks, currently having economical issues, also, we have a refugee problem, current government Managing country since 2001 and 50% of Turkish Ctizens Don’t want Erdoğan, but each Election However he won. Final conclusion, most of Turkish ctizen Has good family relations we love each other we care About each other And we protect each other, and we are standing on the same line on the same way with Ataturk’s World Perspective: Peace in country peace in world. we don’t want to Conquer any land, We just want to protect our land and live in peace. And our door is open to all tourists from the world. Turkish people, 70% Muslim, 25% deist/agnostic/ateist, 4,5% Christian, 0,5% Jewish and others. We don’t like drugs, Most of us don’t use drinks with alcohol. We show respect to every individual, especially Respect to police And army forces, We see them as hero. In our country crime rates are very low if you compare with the rest of the world. Turkey is the home of too many people escaped from the war from Ukraine from Russia from East Europe, etc.

  • @Yarenoglu
    @Yarenoglu 8 месяцев назад +2

    How did you find out all this stuff? Europeans, especially the Americans are usually quite ignorant of the geopolitics of Turkey. But one wrong piece of information was we didn't break from the Mongols in the 1200s. The Mongols and Turks come from the same common ancestor, but we aren't the same. We are more like cousins. Turks originally came from the Yamnaya culture around the Black Sea, who migrated East with the Andronovo culture migration. The "Turks" of today are a mixed people. After Yamnaya, we were known as the Eastern Schytians, and our lands were between Crimea and the Altai Mountains. When we migrated further East, we mixed with the Eastern people such as the Chinese, the ancestors of Tibetans (Quang, I believe), and a little with the ancestors of Koreans, around 3000-1000 BCE. Until then, small tribal migrations to the West had happened many times, but the big Turkic migration to the West happened around the 7th century, when we became allies with the Eastern Roman Empire in their war against the Sassanids. After that, we conquered Persia, mixed with them, and eventually the Middle East, mixed with them, and then we went further and finally conquered Anatolia in 1071, and mixed with them too. Then Balkans and North Africa etc. The rest is common knowledge. My own family were Afshar Turks who were raiders in the Balkan region during the Ottoman Empire.

    • @taidasun
      @taidasun 8 месяцев назад

      You dont need to explain anything, Peter is making up stories and narratives for US audience :) This is just ¨geopolitic expert¨ show looking world from poor USA perspective. These kind of experts dont exist ;)
      Divide and conquer, same startegy for too long. I have so much respect for Turkey and Iran and Greece, and Cyprus... for thier people and history. We should live in peace and respect eachother and we will be stronger. Greetings from Serbia.

    • @devalapar7878
      @devalapar7878 7 месяцев назад

      Peter didn't say Mongols and Turks were the same. Turks were Mongol slaves. And yes, they fled the Mongols. That's what he is talking about.

    • @Yarenoglu
      @Yarenoglu 7 месяцев назад

      @@devalapar7878 Turks were never the slaves of Mongols. You seem pretty ignorant of the subject. Do you even know what a Turk is? Please, if you don't know something, don't show off your hubris.

  • @sialababamak537
    @sialababamak537 8 месяцев назад +5

    Next video: Andromeda galaxy in post America world.

  • @Apistoleon
    @Apistoleon 7 месяцев назад +3

    Mongol hoards? Wrong!!!. Turkic languages are different than Mongolian languages. They are Not intelligible in any way. Türkiye is secular and in Eurasia, NOT Middle East. Stereotypical Middle East is Iranian people and people from Levant, the Arabicized people. This disgusting term called Middle East is made up by United Kingdom in 1800's. There was no term like that before that. UK with its primitive plundering colonial history created this fake term called Middle East. Firstly, it was adapted to Syria, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine, Egypt. Around 1950's and 1960's, the American colonial mindset, (the follower of the the mindset of British Empire) tried to push Türkiye into Middle East category. Big part of Turkish population rejects this colonial term with stomach nausea. Türkiye is still categorized in many platforms as Eurasian, Transcontinental country.

  • @nancyd2240
    @nancyd2240 8 месяцев назад +14

    These videos are excellent. I'm learning so much about geopolitics. Would you consider doing Britain after America? Thank you.

    • @omereroglu9208
      @omereroglu9208 8 месяцев назад +2

      @nancyd2240 videos can be educational if you’re watching how to fix your snowblower or something. Just about all political videos are propaganda to influence your opinion. There are always multiple interested sides, some fairly, some rightfully, some legitimately but not all. Educated, is having an understanding of all sides and forming your own opinion.

  • @karlgmeiner1180
    @karlgmeiner1180 8 месяцев назад +2

    Can you imagine hiking behind this guy on a trail?

  • @emrecanarduc4378
    @emrecanarduc4378 8 месяцев назад +2

    We didnt got split of from mongols btw. They pushed us away much like Huns did to Germans. We had many empires like Seljuks. Most mongols by 1400's got Turkified like Golden Horde

  • @allencohen4204
    @allencohen4204 8 месяцев назад +20

    this leaves out
    1 that turkey is having a severe economic crisis
    it's at war fighting syrians and kurds in border areas it has occupied
    this report also does not cover turkey's demographic future?
    which is usualy of main importance to Zeihan's predictions

    • @devalapar7878
      @devalapar7878 8 месяцев назад +12

      Turkey's demography is superb! He said that many times. Turkey's birthrate dropped below 2.1 in 2010. They had a linear decline in the decades before.
      So they have a great demography and 60 years time before they face issues.
      Also the Turkish culture is different. Turks live together with their families. So they don't need to be as rich as Europeans to solve the pension problem.
      It is just a different culture!

  • @NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek
    @NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek 8 месяцев назад +3

    Fascinating Strategic Analysis!!!!!

  • @Urgelt
    @Urgelt 8 месяцев назад +3

    Turkey also has to navigate a rather difficult economic situation - which means not pissing off Europe too badly. And though the US is retreating from globalization, it is still important. Pissing off the US - or Israel, almost a US proxy - is a nonstarter for Turkey.
    These realities make Turkish aggression towards Israel, Greece, Bulgaria and Romania unpalatable. Better to have good relations and healthy trade.
    I don't see Turkey finding enthusiasm for controlling the Suez. They'd have to take responsibility for Egypt. Not difficult to defend, but food and water while the delta is gradually inundated by salt water looks like a royal headache. Egypt sure could use some help, but I doubt Turkey's economic strength alone could handle those challenges, and aside from the canal, there's not much for Turkey to gain.
    Europe and the US care little about Armenia. No strategic importance. Turkey already has all the influence it could want in Azerbaijan. But the only thing to gain from Armenia is an economic sink hole and access to Iran. For trade? Not really. They are not friends. For war? Iran would not be fun at all. Armenia is, in the end, irrelevant to Turkey.
    The only realistic directions are Syria and the Caucuses.
    Syria lets the Turks expand their pogrom against the Kurds and suppress Iranian proxies, but there won't be an economic return. I expect limited activities from Turkey in Syria.
    The most attractive direction for Turkish ambition is the Caucuses. They could expand their naval control in the Black Sea, and help along the dissolution of the Russian Federation. They could also gain influence among Turkic peoples all the way to Kazakhstan, which is currently dominated by Russia, with China nibbling at it as Russian influence wanes. Activities in this region probably won't sound alarms in Europe or America; they could pull together a Turkic trading bloc and access lots of mineral wealth without much harming European and American interests.
    That's where I would go.
    Turkey really does not have the option to stick to the status quo. Their geopolitical position is very strong, but as an economic unit, Turkey is struggling, and as the former seat of an empire, they feel a need to take a larger role in world affairs. A proud people, the Turks.
    I don't think the US should discourage Turkish activities in the Caucuses and Eastward. Secular Islam beats the radical sort by a country mile. A strong Turkic bloc should inject some much-needed stability into the region as Russian influence wanes, and even place a check on Chinese communist ambitions. It will also tend to increase Iran's isolation.

    • @turistomer3702
      @turistomer3702 8 месяцев назад

      in Turkey, we regard both the americans and the EU as treachourus especialy the americans of late, our trade with both of them is less then 150 billion a year, it's not irreplacable

    • @Urgelt
      @Urgelt 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@turistomer3702 Every nation prioritizes its interests first. And those interests often diverge. Turkey will never receive unqualified support from the EU or the US - and those nations will never receive unqualified support from Turkey.
      But there are common interests. Cooperation is not only possible, it's inevitable.
      $150 billion in annual trade is not a small amount. As for replacing it...
      Possible, for raw materials and commodities.
      For advanced tech, the US, the EU, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan will be important trading partners for Turkey. Turkey needs them. The dollar value of that trade is not important. Unlocking productivity gains, efficiencies and economic performance depend on having at least tolerably good relations.
      Which Turkey generally has.
      There certainly is frictíon. It can't be permitted to spiral out of control.

    • @turistomer3702
      @turistomer3702 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Urgelt in an ideal world and in a conventional way, the state of affairs should be as you describe them above but the world is far from ideal.
      The americans and some european countries are colluding with the kurdish some of whom don't even Come from Syria, the americans shot down a turkish drone in syria two weeks ago that was targeting installations belonging to the kurdish terrorist organisation the PKK, whom had been terrorising the locals there for sometime, Turkey responded by destroying all eleven oil wells/rigs that were being operated by the kurdish terrorists, we are way past caring what pisses off the americans or the EU, and given how both of them behaved and still do towards the plight of the palestinians, we may call it a day with both the EU and NATO.

    • @Urgelt
      @Urgelt 8 месяцев назад

      @@turistomer3702I get it. The Kudish separatist impetus upsets Turks. Separatists everywhere make for uneasy neighbors and subjects. The Kurds are no exception.
      Not all Kurds are terrorists, but you would never know it by studying the pronouncements of Turkish leaders.
      The US has found some Kurdish groups - not all - to be cooperative, rational actors in the fight against ISIS.
      Turkey sees only Kurds. They're all terrorists.
      Is that a signal of US treachery? Really?
      Back Turkey when it attacks Kurdish civilians in Syria? That's the problem, you know. Terrorists are not armies. They mingle.
      I think perhaps the word 'terrorist' gets thrown around more than is justified. This is not only a Turkish sin. But it happens there. And it justifies atrocities. Which in turn justify retaliation. Hatred snowballs.
      De-escalation might be good. Negotiation. It worked in Northern Ireland, more or less. The US would really like to see that for Turkey and the Kurds. If you see that as treachery, I am tempted to wear the label proudly. The alternative is genocide.

  • @demirel8918
    @demirel8918 8 месяцев назад +2

    Actually, a possible disintegration of Russia would harm Turkey because the West would attack in any form to disintegrate TR as well. The conflict between RUS and West is beneficial to TR - that happened in the wake of WWI.
    Btw, TR did not emerge in Erdogan’s era. It enlarged by annexing Hatay in 38 and defended Turkish Cypriots in 74.

  • @imflyingoverclouds
    @imflyingoverclouds 8 месяцев назад +2

    Azerbayjanis are same ethnic with Turkish people. We are Oghuz Turks.

  • @craigch2005
    @craigch2005 8 месяцев назад +7

    If he is accurate I foresee a lot of conflict in the coming decades

  • @steelcitytv
    @steelcitytv 8 месяцев назад +71

    Shout out to Japan thank you for keeping United States steel open and running while our government was trying to completely shut him down in my area of Pittsburgh in the Mon valley we still have three mills left and it is great to see that you guys are going to upgrade and spend billions of dollars upgrading the three mills in the Mon valley opening more jobs and growth thank you Japan

    • @j.langer5949
      @j.langer5949 8 месяцев назад +2

      Why did you get rid of the industry in such a stupid and ill-conceived way?

    • @austinkunc6614
      @austinkunc6614 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@j.langer5949
      Because we are stupid

    • @JJthename55
      @JJthename55 8 месяцев назад +4

      Thank Diaper Joey...he's from Scranton. 😂😂😂

    • @Longlius
      @Longlius 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@j.langer5949 Most steel used in the US is recycled. US Steel makes new steel, a product with an ever-shrinking customer base in the US. It's not hard to see why it ran into problems.

    • @carlosandleon
      @carlosandleon 8 месяцев назад

      @@j.langer5949common sense

  • @Tennis2016
    @Tennis2016 8 месяцев назад +11

    Turks used to rule three continents from North Africa to Arabian peninsula to whole Balkans, including Romania and Crimea … until WW1

    • @yasintokat2268
      @yasintokat2268 8 месяцев назад

      The collapse began much earlier. The rise of nationalism was a big nail to the coffin of the Ottoman.

    • @achillesgeroko8714
      @achillesgeroko8714 8 месяцев назад +3

      I say this with all the love I have for Turkish people and their culture, this is a gross oversimplification

    • @Lyricsss34
      @Lyricsss34 8 месяцев назад

      Ottoman was never ruling in those areas. Our main objective was Istanbul and surrounded cities.

    • @mbndr6
      @mbndr6 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Lyricsss34 whatt??

    • @ullymolly4966
      @ullymolly4966 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@Lyricsss34magarada mi buyudun ?

  • @adibasdas
    @adibasdas 7 месяцев назад +1

    I would not say Turks hate Greeks, to be honest I have never met a greek that misbehaved me because I am Turkish or vice versa. But it is a fact that there is a very big problem waiting to be solved about Cyprus and Aegean islands.

  • @ZionistWorldOrder
    @ZionistWorldOrder 8 месяцев назад +1

    zeihan so much more competent walking than world affairs

  • @ModessyGuy
    @ModessyGuy 8 месяцев назад +4

    I am excited for the Northern Europe Scandinavian region!

    • @farzana6676
      @farzana6676 8 месяцев назад +2

      They need to have more babies in Scandinavia.

  • @ovidiuNa
    @ovidiuNa 8 месяцев назад +4

    So basically all countries from Asia are constantly looking for war? Because this is what I understand from these videos!

    • @thetaomega7816
      @thetaomega7816 8 месяцев назад +1

      arabs definetly do

    • @viveLaCifte
      @viveLaCifte 8 месяцев назад

      When talking about geopolitics, always bear in mind these quotes as a first principle:
      "War is just politics by other means" and "Only the dead have seen the end of war"

    • @ovidiuNa
      @ovidiuNa 8 месяцев назад

      @@viveLaCifte When we are sent to die for someone else's political aspirations it sounds to me like they are playing God.

    • @viveLaCifte
      @viveLaCifte 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@ovidiuNa I bet the commanders in the USA army are thinking to themselves like this: "China is so aggressive, look at how closely they established their country to our military bases!" :)

  • @BGpomakTR
    @BGpomakTR 8 месяцев назад +10

    I m turkish myself and we are very much politically divided..its like 51% to 49%...Erdoğan won by 51% again:( Turkey should keep supporting Ukraine! It is in our own interest. Iran isn't a partner for us..regarding Palestine and Israel we need to stay neutral...it's nothing we can fix and Netanyahu is a war criminal. Not even the US could stop him or would

    • @tedpreston4155
      @tedpreston4155 8 месяцев назад +2

      I'm curious whether the prolific series on Turkish public television have increased the appeal of Erdogan's political party in recent years? It seems obvious that there is an element of propaganda in these TV shows, promoting Turkish and Muslim nationalism. I started watching Dirilis Ertugrul when I found it on Netflix years ago. The writing and acting drew me in, and since then I've watched all of the other TNT shows that all promote the strength of Turkish states in the past: Dirilis Ertugrul, Kurulus Osman, Buyuk Selcuklu, Destan, Akdenizin Kilici, and now Salahudin.
      Is the propaganda working?

    • @BGpomakTR
      @BGpomakTR 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@tedpreston4155 yes. His voters don't research. They like what they are being told one way or the other. And when things go south if a foreign power trying to hinder us...

    • @trouaconti7812
      @trouaconti7812 8 месяцев назад +2

      Thats the nationalist playbook. Very similar in Russia, promise former glory while consolidating power and starving the populace

    • @oghuzkhan5117
      @oghuzkhan5117 8 месяцев назад

      With your logic, every country is divided if you are going to base tht on elections. The out come was 90% in the elections in europe or america this is just around 40-50%

    • @oghuzkhan5117
      @oghuzkhan5117 8 месяцев назад

      @@tedpreston4155 History is calling for us. Turkiye and the Turkish nation is to big to be contained. They could succeed for 100 years but this buubble evetually has to burst. ...It has nothing to do with movies....this will was always there...but it got crushed by military junta powers. ...those military juntas dont have the p[ower anymore, thats why they can not contain turkish people anymore ....but those movies you mentioed are very good. umber 1 : Dirilis Ertugrul....has reached 3 BILLION views and translated in to 19 diffret languages

  • @Slomsy
    @Slomsy 27 дней назад +1

    Some details about Turkey are kinda wrong but overall, the points you made stand well. Very interesting video.

  • @gloriahoulihan8717
    @gloriahoulihan8717 8 месяцев назад +2

    What about Ataturk??? The Turkish people modernised the alphabet, banned the Fez and moved into modern times. Istanbul is of great importance. The Bospherus provides the access to the world waterways. The Turkish men all train militarily. Erdogan is a wily fox and will be watching and waiting for the right moment to leap. Erdogan will put Turkey first. Sensitive and respectful negotiations are required. All these past conflicts will not improve life for Turkish people.

  • @BjornGevert
    @BjornGevert 8 месяцев назад +46

    Straight question to Peter: Could Turkey become to the EU, what Mexico has become to the US, in our times of Chinese manufacturing and export decline?

    • @bahattinslr
      @bahattinslr 8 месяцев назад +19

      Already it is i beliave.

    • @dagoncalves1986
      @dagoncalves1986 8 месяцев назад +13

      I second the comment above.. Turkey already has a huge production of clothing for example.
      There also a huuuge amount of turks in the EU so.. Not the same as Mexico/USA but similar

    • @axl1002
      @axl1002 8 месяцев назад +17

      Turkish labor is not so cheap compared to eastern EU plus you can add millions of Ukrainian emigrants in the mix.

    • @yngwiemainstream
      @yngwiemainstream 8 месяцев назад +6

      No. They're not even South Korea, let alone China.

    • @moreknowslessshows
      @moreknowslessshows 8 месяцев назад +4

      Poland is

  • @unojayc
    @unojayc 8 месяцев назад +5

    I seem to get the impression that your advocating the option of Turkish Imperialism?... Is this wise ?...isn't the age of Empire over or have we come full circle?...

    • @cmleibenguth
      @cmleibenguth 8 месяцев назад +2

      Coming full circle
      I don't know if he was advocating for it, more like saying what a potential path is (or what the leadership thinks a potential path is)

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 8 месяцев назад +4

      Haven't you been reading the news lately? The 1700s are back, baby!

    • @jamesclayton3388
      @jamesclayton3388 8 месяцев назад

      Yeah I thought so!..😂 ​@@juniorjames7076

  • @FullMetalPier
    @FullMetalPier 8 месяцев назад +7

    Not many people talk about the interest of the Turks in Kosovo and Bosnia, where there are many Muslims; in particular on Kosovo they have a common interest with the Italians, who want Albania to prosper. Albania is a strategic ally in the Balkans for both.

    • @gabriellakadar
      @gabriellakadar 8 месяцев назад +3

      Albanian population is shrinking. People are leaving. The population peaked at 3.3 million in the early 90s. It's now down to 2.8 million, same as it was in 1978. People are relying on remittances. The Chinese own the mines. Albania sold itself to the Chinese.

  • @Islowelowe
    @Islowelowe 8 месяцев назад +1

    Always interesting. Looking forward to your next book!

  • @hans-martinadorf3834
    @hans-martinadorf3834 4 месяца назад +1

    Congratulations. Informative as always. How can you keep all that stuff in your head and recall it in a logical easy to follow way?

  • @mali647
    @mali647 8 месяцев назад +11

    As a Turkish guy, it's one of the most informative speeches about our current geopolitical situation. Nice work.

  • @HoradrimBR
    @HoradrimBR 8 месяцев назад +3

    The overall premisse of Americans making the Turks less relevant is flawed, to say the least.
    The Age of Discovery, in the late 1400's was motivated by the desire of Europeans to reach India without having to deal with the Turks: their strategic decadence started there, when Portugal reached Calicut, not in the XX century.

  • @4CelciusDegree
    @4CelciusDegree 7 месяцев назад +7

    As a Turkish citizen I was curious after seeing the topic and clicked the video but boy I wish I hadn't. In just the first 20 seconds of the video you already said some ridiculous things with such a confidence 😂

    • @cts9213
      @cts9213 6 месяцев назад

      Typical American. With that illiterate boosted self-confidence they tried to shape the world with social engineering and the result is the World today🤷🏻‍♀️Plus, themselves are a neo-colony.

    • @ROBOROBOROBOROBO
      @ROBOROBOROBOROBO 4 месяца назад

      Also a Turk here, he basically split out historical facts in those first 20 seconds, even without comments.

  • @enginaliosman4491
    @enginaliosman4491 6 месяцев назад

    It's Türkiye for you Mr. Zeihan

    • @Davidtikva
      @Davidtikva 6 месяцев назад

      It's called Turki

  • @markholland5810
    @markholland5810 6 месяцев назад +1

    This guy is BRILLIANT

  • @omereroglu9208
    @omereroglu9208 8 месяцев назад +18

    Peter lists a fairly accurate list of the issues that concern Turkey but misses on order of whats most important for Turkey.
    I’ll try to give a quick summary, by far the most important for Turkey is not to allow a so called Kurdish state in northern Iraq and Syria that would actually have a terror group as a regime not much as an actual Kurdish state. This is an existential issue for the Turkish state that is worthy of a war with anyone including the US, which they have been already been fighting through proxies on US side.
    Next is in the Aegean sea with Greece’s insistence on the border and maritime rights of the islands and this would not be an issue if Greece accepted actual international laws that are already in place. There’s also a precedence for Turkeys thesis between England and France. Other than these two, other issues are small and not so much a threat as long as existing international treaties are upheld. Turkey doesn’t have any ambitions of expanding territory and if existing maps are not changed, Turkey becomes the central hub for a large amount of trade between east and west, especially for energy. This is all they are trying to protect.
    I’ll stop here as I don’t want to get into the plans of other countries, especially worthless Iran.

    • @harrywhitt2218
      @harrywhitt2218 8 месяцев назад +3

      This is well written. I looked at your profile to see if you publish any videos.

    • @Heegooat
      @Heegooat 8 месяцев назад

      Have you heard what Erdoğan has said? They want to recreate the Turkic states. Even that TB2 guy was saying they have lost centuries because of backward thinking. They are setting up military bases in far of places like Somalia.

    • @maartenvanleeuwen4481
      @maartenvanleeuwen4481 8 месяцев назад

      Can I ask you a question? Is there a chance Turkey accepts a Kurdish state in northern Iraq Syria if it wasn't run by a terror group? Or if the terror group would denounce violence/claims on Turkish territory a bit like how the IRA became a political party?

    • @omereroglu9208
      @omereroglu9208 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@maartenvanleeuwen4481 Theres already a Kurdish autonomous region as part of federal Iraq, how willingly rest of Iraq accepted this is a different matter, but Turkey established diplomatic relations from day one. Turkey will not tolerate another made up “state” in the region.

    • @omereroglu9208
      @omereroglu9208 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Heegooat have you heard of European Union? Union of Turkic states makes much more sense! Turkey doesn’t have a single uninvited military base anywhere, including Somalia. Turkish military brings stability to where ever they are.

  • @shanemacc
    @shanemacc 7 месяцев назад +5

    Dude , every video is like a short class. Thanks

  • @SparkyFinch
    @SparkyFinch 8 месяцев назад +3

    Peter is a true influencer in the wild

    • @108doublestitches
      @108doublestitches 8 месяцев назад +1

      Entertainer. Take current events, mixes with some popular history, writes a very shallow but hyperbolic monologue, memorizes it and then repeats it with a delivery that makes it appear as if it is from an authority. He is ... entertaining.

  • @tolgaakarcali7405
    @tolgaakarcali7405 8 месяцев назад +2

    As a Turk i think you really misunderstood modern Turkiye. Except for the current government which don't follow our founding principles, our country is founded to keep peace inside and in the world. As an American, as a member of a country which causes wars and death all over the world for decades; it can be hard for you to understand our people's way of humanity. You'll not be able to put us into wars with our neighbour countries as you plan to.

    • @devalapar7878
      @devalapar7878 7 месяцев назад

      Oh my god. You felt for propaganda. Show me an empire that was more accountable than the US?
      Also, you can't just say look what they are doing. Turkey doesn't have that power. If it had, would it act better than the US? I don't think so, because Turkey doesn't have good checks and balances.
      Furthermore, I ican explain to you all US wars if you want. Yes, some were bad, but they all had a bigger purpose. Most of US wars were understandable and necessary.
      Tell me which US war was bad and please don't say Iraq. That's just one war!

    • @tolgaakarcali7405
      @tolgaakarcali7405 7 месяцев назад

      @devalapar7878 All wars are bad, the problem is not about being accountable but being humanistic in the year of 2024. Instead of proposing wars on non-related countries to finance war lords, US can receive the respect of other countries with its technology and the way of life presented. Millions of innocent civil live lost in the wars caused by US. Don't you have any heart for them? Can you just put yourself in their position? What would you feel if it would be your child who has been killed? @@devalapar7878

  • @tabularasa4492
    @tabularasa4492 7 месяцев назад +1

    if Erdogan did not care for Israel, then why was he presented/accepted a Jewish medal from Netanyahu a few years ago?

    • @ugurboyac1114
      @ugurboyac1114 6 месяцев назад

      ÇÜNKÜ ERDOĞAN’IN ETNİK KÖKENİ, GÜRCİSTAN YAHUDİSİ OLMASIDIR. . ONU İKTİDAR YAPAN AMERİKA; ONA ORTADOĞU EŞBAŞKANLIĞI GÖREVİNİ DE VERDİ. ERDOĞANIN BEN TÜRKÜM DEDİĞİNİ DUYAN VARMI? İSRAİLİN GÜVENLİĞİ İÇİN GEREKLİ OLAN BÜYÜK KÜRDİSTAN PROJESİ, ERDOĞAN’IN ÇÖZÜM SÜRECİ İLE BAŞLADI. SURİYEDEN GETİRİLEN 6MİLYON MÜLTECİ, SURİYE KÜRDİSTANI İÇİN AMERİKANIN GELİŞTİRDİĞİ DEMOGRAFİK PROJEDİR. ERDOĞAN BUNU YERİNE GETİRDİ.🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷

  • @MrToradragon
    @MrToradragon 8 месяцев назад +40

    One small correction, in theory cargo can get in and out of Black Sea via R-M-D canal in Germany, but tat would only be limited to barges and possibly certain boats, but some of the boats that can cross R-M-D can perhaps operate in coastal waters as well. But the route is much longer and much slower than through Bosporus.
    It almost look like Europe should focus on canals again.

    • @wazukyan7696
      @wazukyan7696 8 месяцев назад +5

      Any artificial infrastructure has a higher maintenance.

    • @robinstuyvesant7187
      @robinstuyvesant7187 8 месяцев назад

      Far Canal!

    • @sockhal4595
      @sockhal4595 8 месяцев назад +2

      Provided there is no drought

    • @bleedingmay
      @bleedingmay 8 месяцев назад +4

      The RMD canal cannot be compared to an open shipping lane. We are talking even 15% at maximum capacity.

    • @haakoflo
      @haakoflo 8 месяцев назад +2

      There is also rail, which while being a bit more expensive than cargo world is also safer. And at least for now, the EU does have a sufficently strong navy that they would be able to secure much of their own shipping at least in the Med and the Atlantic (possibly globally), unless they somehow ended up at war with the US. For Russia or Turkey it might be easier to trade with the EU or China and let THEM handle trade from there.
      One thing is for sure. If the US goes into full turtle mode, SOMEONE will fill most of the void left behind. As long as there are no wars between current EU members (or with Britain or the US), the EU will have to protect their trade routes. They depend way too much on importing raw materials to ignore them.

  • @veeli1106
    @veeli1106 8 месяцев назад +13

    Last time I was this early, Constantinople just fell to the Ottomans…

  • @laudermarauder
    @laudermarauder 8 месяцев назад +27

    11:45 "When it comes to the Romanians and the Bulgarians they realize that there aren't a lot of other options" (besides the US, Russia and Turkey). Er, aren't Romania and Bulgaria meant to be member states of the European Union?

    • @bleedingmay
      @bleedingmay 8 месяцев назад

      European Union is a dumpster fire

    • @sportsfisher9677
      @sportsfisher9677 8 месяцев назад

      Pete you forgot about Houithis and Hezbelah, virtual extensions of Iran.
      Turkiye and Iran are a wash where neither wins.

    • @stephenderry9488
      @stephenderry9488 8 месяцев назад +21

      The EU is a big international player with power, influence and military capability. Until it isn't. If either France or Germany decide this isn't working for them any more, it's "seeya boys, you're on your own!"

    • @bg6159
      @bg6159 8 месяцев назад +12

      The EU is an economic giant but a political and military Gnome 😊

    • @Bayard1503
      @Bayard1503 8 месяцев назад +5

      Yes but is the EU really a military power? In a bad situation would EU help? Not to mention that both Romania and Bulgaria are connected to the rest of the EU through Hungary, which does whatever Putin wants. So, yeah... Turkey is much closer and safer.

  • @Adam_Himself
    @Adam_Himself 8 месяцев назад +2

    Peter keeps talking about America withdrawing, yet we see deployments in the South China Sea, Red Sea, and the closing of no foreign military outposts. I think Peter needs to start updating his model; it isn't 2018 anymore.

  • @BengiHanim
    @BengiHanim 7 месяцев назад +1

    Wrong. Turks have been a major power waaay before they conqured Istanbul. They have been ruling Anatolia (nowday Turkey excluding the European part) since 11 century AD, and before that they had Turkish Selçuk Empire which ruled nowaday Persia. And before that there was GökTürk Empire which was ruling all of the steppe from eastern Europe and China. And it goes on.
    And no Turks didnt just split from Mongols in 12th century. Turks and Mongols had lived side by side for centuries but them coming from the same ancestor is just a hypothesis and not well supported. Even in the case that this hypothesis is true, the split wasnt in 12th century AD nor was the conquest of Istanbul.
    Honestly i dont have time to correct every historically incorrect statement so i am just correcting the first 30 seconds.

  • @NoPickles.4Me
    @NoPickles.4Me 8 месяцев назад +3

    In this post America world I think the most important question to ask is, who takes our place and what are they going to do? Many of these scenarios assume a relatively benign stable power system where America has stepped back quietly. I see no potential for any of that to happen, exactly zero of a chance. Will we relegate/ingnore/push aside some of our historic responsibilities, probably. Will we cease to be the shining light on the hill? Collectively, we should ask is that what we want.

    • @daniellarson3068
      @daniellarson3068 8 месяцев назад

      South America may have remained in the shadows of history for far too long.

    • @campfireeverything
      @campfireeverything 8 месяцев назад

      This is what a big part of his book is about, The End of the World is Just the Beginning

  • @user-ke3vj6ds4o
    @user-ke3vj6ds4o 8 месяцев назад +5

    NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!! (I'm Bulgarian)

    • @trouaconti7812
      @trouaconti7812 8 месяцев назад

      There are still lots of Turks in Bulgaria now, no?

    • @noir1923
      @noir1923 8 месяцев назад

      dont worry we dont hate balkan people, its the opposite

    • @serdarates6750
      @serdarates6750 6 месяцев назад

      Part of bulgarians are christian turks lol

  • @christophercepeda560
    @christophercepeda560 8 месяцев назад +4

    Peter,
    After watching you videos regularly and reading your books, my question is this:
    If American isolationism is going to be the reality of the 21st century, where does that leave the dollar? Despite the American geopolitical advantages, we also enjoy currency hegemony.
    Doesn't isolationism equat to the death of the dollar as the world reserve currency, and if so - what does that mean for the way of life in the US post Pax Americana?

    • @johnk3743
      @johnk3743 8 месяцев назад

      The conflicts that are about to ensue...will guarantee the dollar.

    • @trouaconti7812
      @trouaconti7812 8 месяцев назад +1

      How will it guarantee the dollar?

    • @onurturhal6814
      @onurturhal6814 8 месяцев назад

      Well to ensure Dollar's fall you have to first severely break the petro-dollar bond. Even in isolation 🇺🇸 will be the biggest economy. I am not sure that an isolated 🇺🇸 means an 🇺🇸 that doesn't protect it's interests.

    • @esingeron517
      @esingeron517 7 месяцев назад

      you guys have the most liquidated bond and equity market. Whether you isolate or no, the money will end up in american assets, so dollar is safe :)

  • @david.d.calvache5082
    @david.d.calvache5082 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hit 300k today . thanks for the knowledge and nuggets you had thrown my way over last months.started with 8k in February

    • @lazyas8016
      @lazyas8016 8 месяцев назад

      Exactly Investing rightly today can save you a whole lot of stress in the nearest future

  • @randydutton1
    @randydutton1 8 месяцев назад +1

    No mention of the deal with Armenia and Azerbaijan creating a corridor that allows Turkey access to Azerbaijan without going through Iran.

  • @kingwest700
    @kingwest700 8 месяцев назад +7

    Peter, Thank you for your videos. Since I started following ( books, youtube etc).. i have become more worldly informed in a realistic , truthful manor.
    I truly appreciate you.
    Please know, you are making the world a better place just by being you.

  • @everTriumph
    @everTriumph 8 месяцев назад +17

    Are you going to do 'America - After America'?

    • @donkeysaurusrex7881
      @donkeysaurusrex7881 8 месяцев назад

      The greatest problem of America in a Post America World is doubling its industrial base in five years.

    • @guydreamr
      @guydreamr 8 месяцев назад

      The United States went through a fratricidal civil war and the Great Depression and still came out on top. It can handle whatever is going on now.

  • @hughjanis6439
    @hughjanis6439 8 месяцев назад +4

    Good stuff Pete. Thank you. Happy New Year.

  • @TheObiareus
    @TheObiareus 8 месяцев назад +2

    Could you do a video explaining how the Americans are stopping their policing of the global oceans? Because right now there is an operation to defend them from the Houthis, which seems like the precise opposite of what your entire thesis is based on.

  • @luvslogistics1725
    @luvslogistics1725 8 месяцев назад +2

    Please do Romania, 5% market growth last year, $98 BN in exports last year

  • @aldemir6127
    @aldemir6127 8 месяцев назад +5

    Thanks for your honesty and also thanks for being who and what you are.

  • @PendulumFlow
    @PendulumFlow 8 месяцев назад +7

    Thanks Peter

  • @guywilloughby5443
    @guywilloughby5443 8 месяцев назад +6

    Turkey has been denied EU membership a few times. China has invited Turkey to join the BRICS. Can a member of BRICS be a member of NATO? How would that play out?

    • @aj6365
      @aj6365 8 месяцев назад +3

      Brics is economical while NATO is military :/

    • @pseidee
      @pseidee 8 месяцев назад +1

      putin said no nato member can join brics after that invitation so it didnt happen

    • @precursors
      @precursors 6 месяцев назад +1

      Turkey was never officially "denied" EU membership. While we know that's never gonna happen, Turkey still remains an official candidate.

  • @Juergen732
    @Juergen732 8 месяцев назад +1

    ..not mentioned, the effect on Turkish (and German) society from the decades long Turkish settler migration into Germany..

  • @FedericoGrimaudo
    @FedericoGrimaudo 8 месяцев назад +2

    If the US is withdrawing why does it have bases and troops literally everywhere in the world?

  • @joerapso
    @joerapso 8 месяцев назад +11

    Great episode. Could you do an episode for Greece too please? :)

    • @aldareon
      @aldareon 8 месяцев назад +6

      Probably not! he thinks Greece is a joke

    • @Fantabiscuit
      @Fantabiscuit 8 месяцев назад

      Yeah he likes winning hands. History is written by the winners and that’s all Peter is interested in. Greece is a shrinking population and so he doesn’t care.

    • @3three3
      @3three3 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@aldareon He's not wrong. Greece is a joke. Every Greek I have met has been blaming the Turks for every single misfortune their country has. If only they focused more on their own faults than things that occurred over 100 years ago.. or even over 1000 years ago they would be much more advanced. . too bad the Greeks are known to be very stubborn that want no peace in the region.

    • @nihil_hd1598
      @nihil_hd1598 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@aldareon How so?

    • @leonrock2686
      @leonrock2686 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@nihil_hd1598 video will be too short like 10 sec :)

  • @crosslink1493
    @crosslink1493 8 месяцев назад +13

    I wonder how much elevation loss Peter went through while hiking downhill and recording this video - from an alpine area with early-season snow patches down to a well- forested area has got to be pretty good loss in elevation.

    • @SolaceEasy
      @SolaceEasy 8 месяцев назад +3

      Nah - a couple hundred feet at most .I've walked in the area.

    • @darthkek1953
      @darthkek1953 8 месяцев назад

      Depends where in the world you are, you can get early dustings on mountain tops in Scotland but they can be only a fewhundred yards from the carpark...

    • @paulstiles7738
      @paulstiles7738 8 месяцев назад +2

      I live about 10 miles from there and am very familiar with that trail. Probably about 500 foot drop in the time the video was made.

    • @kevinnix5495
      @kevinnix5495 8 месяцев назад

      Who cares 😂

    • @RichieRichpobutproud
      @RichieRichpobutproud 8 месяцев назад

      @@SolaceEasy White ranch in Golden?

  • @wramper
    @wramper 8 месяцев назад +3

    There is always a wild card that no one considers. Sometimes it is a series of compounding events, sometimes it is a nation and sometimes it can just be a single individual....

    • @mczaga
      @mczaga 8 месяцев назад

      I'm a Turk and I'm not a someones wild card anymore espacially USA espacially Islam we are in a war already and our economy keep collapsin from Iran Iraq war because no peace no money we can see it from Canada USA or France Germany Turkish people not stupid we are seeking peace but some countries not like USA like Greece.

  • @fbhistoriador
    @fbhistoriador 8 месяцев назад +1

    If Ucrania wins? I didn't get that part. Ucrania lost the war two years ago.

  • @billcarruth8122
    @billcarruth8122 8 месяцев назад +2

    If Russia and China fade away, I'm guessing Turkey fills that power vacuum. My only question is, if they do become a super power, will they change their name back to the Ottoman Empire?

    • @emirergun1474
      @emirergun1474 8 месяцев назад +3

      Even ottomans never called themselves ‘ottoman empire’. They used to call themselves ‘devlet-i aliyye ‘ (universal state)

    • @trouaconti7812
      @trouaconti7812 8 месяцев назад

      Where would China fade though? You mean break up like Russia?

    • @serdarates6750
      @serdarates6750 6 месяцев назад

      No, we had many 2.0 version empire and they didnt work. New name would be given.