Very, very unlikely. The modern Greek state could be bigger (northern Epirus, Crete, eastern Thrace), but a "pan-Greek state" would require Greece annexing zones with far too few Greeks and far too many hostile Muslims in them. Hence, the will of the population of Anatolia to resist would have to be utterly broken. This would require resources unavailable to Greece, necesitating Great Power action. If "Tsargrad" is going on, the Russians would fancy it for themselves, and other options are scarce.
Eleftherios Venezelios?
Translating the Greek into English is a pest!!
Also, do not forget that before the population exchanges agreed on lausanne in 1921, there were about 1,000,000 greeks on the anatolian coast.
Maybe Ataturk could die in the influenza epidemic of 1919 and Tukey is thrown in chaos.
Or maybe a more strict partition-the-loser policy is imposed at versailles
I think CCCP is not a significant card here, since the traditional link to greece (ortodox church) is not exactly in friendly terms with the bolshevicks.
Also, do not forget that before the population exchanges agreed on lausanne in 1921, there were about 1,000,000 greeks on the anatolian coast.
Maybe Ataturk could die in the influenza epidemic of 1919 and Tukey is thrown in chaos.
Or maybe a more strict partition-the-loser policy is imposed at versailles
I think CCCP is not a significant card here, since the traditional link to greece (ortodox church) is not exactly in friendly terms with the bolshevicks.