The teams were headed by İsmet İnönü and Winston Churchill. The other members of the Turkish side were Prime Minister
Şükrü Saracoğlu, Foreign Minister
Numan Menemencioğlu, Field Marshal
Fevzi Çakmak and a group of advisers. The British team had Sir
Harold Alexander, Sir
Henry Maitland Wilson, Sir
Alan Brooke, Sir
Wilfrid Lindsell, Sir
Alexander Cadogan (foreign ministry), Air Marshal
Peter Drummond and Commodore
John Dundas. During the meeting, the British tried to persuade the Turkish side to join the Allies, but İnönü showed extreme reluctance to join the war. Churchill made lavish promises of military help (codenamed Operation Hardihood). A list of military equipment was drawn up, the Adana Lists, which Churchill later said would provide Turkey with war material "to the full capacity of Turkish railways". In turn, Churchill requested access to Turkish air bases for the
Royal Air Force so that the British could bomb the oil fields of
Ploieşti, Romania, the principal source of oil for Germany and the Italian positions in the Dodecanese. To put pressure on the Turks to give up their neutrality, Churchill made clear that if Turkey refused to join the Allies, he would not try to stop the Soviets from moving to control the
Dardanelles. 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." == Aftermath ==