Following the conclusion of the
Greek War of Independence, the
Megali Idea (Great Idea) ideology came to dominate Greek foreign policy. The ultimate goal of the Megali Idea was the incorporation of all areas traditionally populated by Greeks into an independent Greek state. The disastrous Greek defeat in the short
Greco-Turkish War of 1897 exposed major flaws in the
Greek Army's organization, training and logistics. Upon his appointment in December 1905,
Georgios Theotokis became the first postwar Greek prime minister to focus his attention on strengthening the army. He established the National Defense Fund which financed the purchase of large quantities of ammunition. In addition a new
table of organization was introduced for the country's
navy and army, the latter being augmented by numerous artillery batteries. Theotokis' resignation in January 1909 and the perceived neglect of the armed forces by his successor resulted in the
Goudi coup seven months later. Rather than taking power for themselves, the putschists invited
Cretan politician
Eleftherios Venizelos to rule the country. Venizelos followed in Theotokis' footsteps by rearming and retraining the military, enacting extensive fortification and infrastructure works, purchasing new weapons, and recalling the
reservists for training. The climax of this effort was the invitation in 1911 of a
British naval mission and a
French military mission. The British mission was headed by Rear Admiral
Lionel Grant Tufnell, who placed an emphasis on gunnery practice and fleet maneuvers, while his assistants introduced a new fuse for the
Whitehead torpedo. The French mission under Brigadier General
Joseph Paul Eydoux focused its attention on improving discipline and training senior officers in large
formation operations. The
Hellenic Military Academy was modeled after the
École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr shifting its focus from artillery and engineer training towards that of infantry and cavalry. After being informed of a
Serbo-
Bulgarian alliance,
Venizelos ordered his ambassador in
Sofia to prepare a Greco-Bulgarian defense agreement by 14 April 1912. This was due to fears that should Greece fail to participate in a future war against the
Turks it would be unable to capture the Greek majority areas of
Macedonia. The treaty was signed on 15 July 1912, with the two countries agreeing to assist each other in case of a defensive war and to safeguard the rights of Christian populations in Ottoman-held Macedonia, thus joining the loose
Balkan League alliance with Serbia,
Montenegro and
Bulgaria. Fearing a new war in the
Balkans, the Turks mobilized their armed forces on 14 September and began transferring units to
Thrace; the Balkan League responded in kind. On 30 September, the League presented the Ottomans with a list of demands regarding the rights of its Christian population. The Ottoman Empire rebuffed the demands, recalled its ambassadors in Sofia, Belgrade and Athens and expelled the League's negotiators on 4 October. The Balkan League officially declared
war against
Ottoman Turkey, while Montenegro had already began military operations on 25 September. ==Prelude==