Adana Conference
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The Adana Conference
Location
The event came to be known as the Adana meeting,[2][6] although it was held in Yenice, between Adana and Mersin.[7] Adana had the nearest airport to Yenice.[8]
Yenice a town in
The location was a compromise after a series of talks between the
Background
During World War II, all of Turkey's neighbours had joined the Axis or the Allies. In the west,
During the
Meeting
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/13/Churchill_and_%C4%B0n%C3%B6n%C3%BC.jpg/220px-Churchill_and_%C4%B0n%C3%B6n%C3%BC.jpg)
The teams were headed by İsmet İnönü and Winston Churchill. The other members of the Turkish side were Prime Minister
During the meeting, the British tried to persuade the Turkish side to join the Allies, but İnönü showed extreme reluctance to join the war.
The military advisors went in borrowed and ill-fitting plain clothes. Brooke was not impressed by the poor security for Churchill. He hoped that "Turkey’s neutrality will from now on assume a far more biased nature in favour of the allies", and while the Turkish forces could not have been trained to be of much use, the real value would have been the use of aerodromes and as a jumping-off place for future action. But he said that his "wild dreams" about Turkey remained that, as von Papen "fooled the Turks about fictitious concentrations of German troops in Bulgaria, which never existed." [10]
Aftermath
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/59/Yenice_Meeting.jpg/320px-Yenice_Meeting.jpg)
In April 1943, a British military delegation of General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson requested access for 25 RAF fighter squadrons to Turkish airports. In the latter stages of the operation, the British planned on sending two full armoured divisions to Turkey. The Turks, however, were very fearful of the strong German military presence in Bulgaria and drowned the British military delegation with red tape. While giving Maitland Wilson every courtesy, the Turks started 'tortuous and interminable negotiations'. Wilson urged Turkish commanders to teach their men mechanical skills but noted that meant that prospective tank crews 'had to be taught the workings of the internal combustion engine from page one of the book'. When the construction of Turkish airfields went ahead of schedule, İnönü was warned that work was proceeding too rapidly.[11] The British frustration about the Turkish stalling tactics led to a serious deterioration of diplomatic relations between the two countries in the summer of 1943.
However, the disastrous British
See also
- Second Cairo Conference
- List of World War II conferences
Further reading
- Alanbrooke, Field Marshal Lord (2001). Danchev, Alex; Todman, Daniel (eds.). War Diaries 1939–1945. Phoenix Press. ISBN 1-84212-526-5.
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0-521-52329-5.
- ^ a b Sonraları bu görüşme Adana Mülakatı diye anılır oldu. Fakat hakikatte iki devlet adamının telâkisi Adana'da değil, Yenice istasyonunda ve vagon içinde olmuştu. Yenice, Tarsus'a bağlı küçük bir Nüseyri köyüdür ve Adanaya yirmi üç kilometre mesafededir. Konya istikametinden gelen trenler burada, Adana ve Mersin cihetine gitmek üzere, ikiye ayrılır. İstasyon, yüksek okaliptus ağaçlarının gölgelendirdiği şirin bir yerdir..., Hilmi Uran, Hâtıralarım, Ayyıldız Matbaası, 1959, p. 388. (in Turkish)
- ^ Hürriyet newspaper online (17.1.2003) (in Turkish)
- ISBN 978-0-7146-5071-5.
- ^ 30–31 Ocak 1943'te Adana'da, Yenice istasyonu'nda duran Cumhurbaşkanlığı özel treni içinde, Cumhurbaşkanı İnönü'nün başkanhgindaki Türk Heyeti ile Churchill ve yanındaki generallerle diplomatlardan oluşan İngiliz heyeti görüştüler., Erdal İnönü, Anılar ve Düşünceler, İdea, 1998, p. 153. (in Turkish)
- ^ "1943 İnönü Churchill Yenice meeting" (in Turkish). Mehmet Ali Sulutaş. 29 January 2011. Retrieved 14 October 2016.
- ^ "1943 İnönü Churchill Yenice meeting" (in Turkish). Mehmet Ali Sulutaş. 29 January 2011. Retrieved 14 October 2016.
- ^ a b İçel sanat Kulübü page (in Turkish)
- ^ İzzet Öztoprak, "İkinci Dünya Savaşı Döneminde Adana Görüşmelerinin Siyasi Yönü", ATATÜRK ARAŞTIRMA MERKEZİ DERGİSİ, Sayı 46, Cilt: XVI, Mart 2000 (in Turkish)
- ^ Alanbrooke 2001, pp. 372–377.
- ^ Selim Deringil, Turkish Foreign Policy During the Second World War: An 'Active' Neutrality, pp. 148–49.