The one-sided declaration on the part of the Cretan Assembly in 1908 regarding the Union
with Greece and the imposition on Turko-cretan deputies to take an oath of loyalty to the Greek
King disturbed the subtle balances that the Greek government wanted to preserve. In 1912 the Cretan
representatives claimed participation in the Greek Parliament. Their claim was not granted
in May, but they were enthusiastically received in the parliament of October of that same year,
with the outbreak of the First Balkan War. In the same period (1911-12) the Italo-Turkish war was waged, which led to the capture of the Dodecanese islands by the Italians and caused one more complication in the
area of Eastern Mediterranean. The Balkan states remained neutral but they suffered certain of the
oppressive measures imposed by the Young Turks on the Christian populations of the
Empire.
At the same time, in the beginning of the 1910s, conciliatory discussions between the Balkan states (with a view to presenting a united front to the Ottoman Empire and dividing up
its European territories) were under way. This was inaugurated by the Serbo-Bulgarian
Treaty on 29 February/13 March 1912, which, apart from the obligation for mutual military aid
in case of an attack by a third country, also provided for the distribution of the territories
of northern and central Macedonia, largely between the two countries in the event of a war with Turkey.
The Greek government could not remain idle in the face of these developments. She concluded
a treaty with Bulgaria on 16/29 May 1912, that provided for an alliance of the two countries
against Turkey; it did not however include any agreement concerning the distribution
of European territories in the event of a victory. In this way the conditions that would lead to the
outbreak of the First Balkan War were shaped.
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