The Battle of Salamis was a naval battle between the Persian Empire navy compising contingents from Phoenicia, Asian-Greek cities and Egypt, and a coalition fleet from 28 southern Greek city-states led by Sparta in 480 BCE. It was fought in the strait between the island of Salamis and Athens.
A combined southern Greece fleet led by Sparts against a Persian fleet drawn from Phoenician, Asian Greek cities and Egypt.
Iran
The Ionians revolted in 499 BCE. Eretria and Athens sent military forces to help them because they were Ionians, and some of the cities had been their colonies, so the felt an obligation to help. Sparta and other southern Greek cities were mainly Dorians and felt no such obligation, however the Athens-Eretria intrusion convinced the Persians that all the Greek cities had to be brought under control, and in 480 BCE the Persians invaded mainland Greece. The Spartans led the successful resistance to this two year invasion, however the Spartans could see that the Greek city-states in Asia Minor would be under perpetual threat from the Persians and produced a plan to evacuate them and resettle them in mainland Greece, so avoiding ongoing conflict. The Athenians had a different idea and formed the Delian League to protect these Asian cities, and warfare went on for another 30 years. The Spartans, always looking for peaceful settlement of problems, walked away from this ongoing war, particularly as they had problems at home with their own rebellious serf population. As a footnote, the Spartan approach was eventually adopted over two millennia later after World War 1 was over. The Greeks fought a war in western Turkey to hold territory there with a mainly Greek population. They lost and evacuated the Greek people back to the mainland. The Spartans had had it right 2,400 years earlier.
It's pretty much Turkey. (Anatolia is in the middle of Black sea & Mediterranean Sea)
The Persian attempt to appoint a Persian governor of mainland Greece to stop Greek interference in the Greek city-states within the Persian Empire in Asia Minor.
Over the 50 years of the war, it varied from a couple of dozen city-states led by Sparta to nearly 200 Asian Greek city-states led by Athens.
Usually they hated each other... but in times when invaders attacked Greece, they became allies and fought the invaders. Athens and Sparta would have HUGE wars between themselves when outsiders weren't attacking. They were bitter enemies as well as strong allies.
Vietnam
A border... Sparta is in Greece. Troy is on the Asian side of the Aegean Sea, in modern Turkey. The most reasonable answer to this question is that they were separated by many miles and the Aegean Sea.
They did not want Athens to be the victor, which would have meant continuing dominance of the eastern Mediterranean and support of Asian Greek cities against Persian rule and stability.
There were no countries in the sense we call countries now. Persian Empire, including large contingents from Phoenicia, the Asian-Greek cities and Egypt. versus About 200 independent Greek city-states, the largest contingents were from Sparta, Athens, Corinth, Sicyon, Orchomenus, Megara.
SEATO allied the United States and seven other nations against Asian communism.
The Battle of Salamis was a naval battle between the Persian Empire navy compising contingents from Phoenicia, Asian-Greek cities and Egypt, and a coalition fleet from 28 southern Greek city-states led by Sparta in 480 BCE. It was fought in the strait between the island of Salamis and Athens.
With the Persian threat still there, Sparta wanted to bring the Asian Greeks back to the mainland. Athens instead took the fight to the persians and organised a 200-city league for self protection. Cities gave either ships or money. Most took the easy way and gave money. Athens maintained a large fleet with this money, and when peacewas agreek with Persia thirty years later, kept the money collections going, by force where necessary, and so established an empire. years
Philippines.
Hate crimes against Asian-Americans is not especially common. Of course, hate crimes are pretty rare anyway.