Trader consensus prices a 94.3% probability of no Greece-Turkey military engagement by June 30, driven by longstanding NATO alliance constraints and a history of brinkmanship without direct clashes despite recent flare-ups. Turkey's March 12 National Defense Ministry statement accused Greece of violating demilitarized Aegean islands amid regional crises, prompting Greek deployments to Cyprus following Iran-linked drone strikes on UK bases there (March 3), yet both sides have avoided escalation. February high-level talks in Ankara saw Presidents Erdogan and Mitsotakis pledge dialogue on maritime borders and migration, reinforcing de-escalation channels. Spillover from the Iran conflict has heightened deployments around divided Cyprus, but mutual focus on external threats and economic ties sustains containment, with naval incidents or Cyprus flare-ups as rare upset risks.
Polymarketデータを参照したAI生成の実験的な要約 · 更新日はい
$459,617 Vol.
$459,617 Vol.
はい
$459,617 Vol.
$459,617 Vol.
A "military engagement" is defined as any incident involving the use of force such as missile strikes, artillery fire, exchange of gunfire, or other forms of direct military engagement between Greek and Turkish military forces. Non-violent actions, such as warning shots or missile launches that land in territorial waters or pass through airspace, will not qualify for a "Yes" resolution. Intentional ship ramming that results in significant damage to (e.g., a hole in the hull) or the sinking of a military ship by another will count toward a "Yes" resolution; however, minor damage (scrapes, dents) will not.
Missiles or drone strikes that are intercepted will not qualify, regardless of whether they land on adversarial territory or cause damage. Similarly, surface-to-air missile strikes impacting adversarial territory will not qualify for a "Yes" resolution (although surface-to-air missiles fired at an adversarial military aircraft would qualify).
The resolution source for this market will be a consensus of credible reporting.
マーケット開始日: Dec 22, 2025, 3:03 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A "military engagement" is defined as any incident involving the use of force such as missile strikes, artillery fire, exchange of gunfire, or other forms of direct military engagement between Greek and Turkish military forces. Non-violent actions, such as warning shots or missile launches that land in territorial waters or pass through airspace, will not qualify for a "Yes" resolution. Intentional ship ramming that results in significant damage to (e.g., a hole in the hull) or the sinking of a military ship by another will count toward a "Yes" resolution; however, minor damage (scrapes, dents) will not.
Missiles or drone strikes that are intercepted will not qualify, regardless of whether they land on adversarial territory or cause damage. Similarly, surface-to-air missile strikes impacting adversarial territory will not qualify for a "Yes" resolution (although surface-to-air missiles fired at an adversarial military aircraft would qualify).
The resolution source for this market will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus prices a 94.3% probability of no Greece-Turkey military engagement by June 30, driven by longstanding NATO alliance constraints and a history of brinkmanship without direct clashes despite recent flare-ups. Turkey's March 12 National Defense Ministry statement accused Greece of violating demilitarized Aegean islands amid regional crises, prompting Greek deployments to Cyprus following Iran-linked drone strikes on UK bases there (March 3), yet both sides have avoided escalation. February high-level talks in Ankara saw Presidents Erdogan and Mitsotakis pledge dialogue on maritime borders and migration, reinforcing de-escalation channels. Spillover from the Iran conflict has heightened deployments around divided Cyprus, but mutual focus on external threats and economic ties sustains containment, with naval incidents or Cyprus flare-ups as rare upset risks.
Polymarketデータを参照したAI生成の実験的な要約 · 更新日
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