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Turkey, Will Kurds help Erdoğan reach his ambitions?

December 25, 2014 By administrator

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By ORHAN KEMAL CENGİZ

Prominent intellectual Mehmet Altan ran quite a thought-provoking article with the title “Fascism in the west, autonomy in the east?” on April 30 on the T24 web portal.

The central theme of his piece was the following: The Kurds will no longer be a part of the struggle for democracy in Turkey because they have a different agenda now. They will give Recep Tayyip Erdoğan the presidency he has long desired, in exchange for the regional autonomy of Kurdish regions.

Erdoğan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) has not and most probably will not have enough seats in Parliament to make constitutional changes on its own. However, if Kurdish deputies support his ambitions, Erdoğan may be able to change the Constitution, not only to the presidential system but also to create quite an authoritarian regime in this country.

After publishing his article, Altan received quite a strong reaction from some circles close to the AKP. They, like they do all the time, accused Altan of intending to destroy the Kurdish peace process, and they said Altan’s hatred of the AKP made him so blind that he has even started to wish for the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) to take up arms once again.

Actually, there was nothing in Altan’s article inciting the PKK to violence or anything like that. Personal attacks targeting Altan are textbook examples of a new trend of how you can be branded if you voice any suspicions about the peace process and its possible gains.

I remembered all of this because the deputy chair of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), Enis Berberoğlu, put quite interesting questions to a pro-Kurdish political party, the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).

Because of the 10 percent national election threshold, HDP members used to run as independent candidates in national elections. However, for the upcoming elections, the HDP has declared its intention to run as a political party rather than as individual candidates in the elections. There is a small problem here: Almost all surveys show that the HDP has quite a high risk of failure of passing this threshold, with their votes presently around 8-9 percent.

Berberoğlu, referring to all these facts, asks why they would assume this risk and if there is hidden bargaining between them and the AKP. These are important questions. Because if the HDP cannot pass the national threshold, almost all of the votes given to them will go to the political party that receives the majority of the votes, and undoubtedly that will be the AKP. If this happens, the AKP will have the majority, allowing it to change the Constitution on its own.

So, can there be such a hidden bargain between Abdullah Öcalan — the leader of the PKK who is serving a prison sentence on İmralı Island — and the AKP as part of the peace deal?

Well, if that is the case, not only will we witness a trick against the national will of Kurds and Turks but we will also hear the sound of the footsteps of fascism, as was pointed out by Altan.

This kind of hidden agreement would definitely be an immoral deal because it would obviously be tricking people into something they might not be happy about. In that case, the Kurds will be voting for the AKP while they think they are giving their votes to the HDP. AKP voters will also be deceived because they will be voting for their party without knowing major undertakings of their political party.

And the result would definitely spell a disaster for democracy in Turkey because, in this case, Erdoğan will be able to overrun an already weakened Turkish democracy.

Well, I defiantly never wish to see the PKK take up arms again, but I do not believe such a peace process will ever bring peace to any corner of this country. I hope there is no such hidden agreement, or it will be ceased.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, Erdogan, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

Turkey’s Two Thugs, by Claire Berlinski

December 23, 2014 By administrator

Ordogan and golen at warErdoğan and Gülen are both dangerous—but only one of them lives in the Poconos, pennsylvania.

Until recently, I lived in Turkey. It seemed to me then unfathomable that most Americans did not recognize the name Fethullah Gülen. Even those vaguely aware of him did not find it perplexing that a Turkish preacher, billionaire, and head of a multinational media and business empire—a man of immense power in Turkey and sinister repute—had set up shop in Pennsylvania and become a big player in the American charter school scene. Now that I’ve been out of Turkey a while, I’ve realized how normal it is that Americans are indifferent to Gülen. America is full of rich, powerful, and sinister weirdoes. What’s one more?

It’s normal, too, that Americans view news from Turkey as less important than other stories in the headlines. After all, Turks aren’t doing anything quite so attention-grabbing as hacking Sony, destabilizing the postwar European order, or rampaging through the Middle East as they behead, rape, crucify, and enslave everything in their path. Thus, the reader who has noticed the news from Turkey might believe the story goes something like this: President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the authoritarian thug running Turkey, has been rounding up journalists who bravely exposed his corruption.

That American readers now understand that Erdoğan is a corrupt authoritarian is an improvement. (They may vaguely recall that not long ago, he was viewed by the large parts of the Western intelligentsia—and by the very same news organs reporting the latest developments—as a liberal-minded reformer.) But this is actually a story about two thugs. The details may be hard to follow, but the devil is in the details. The journalists recently arrested by Erdoğan are loyal to Gülen, who has made himself quite cozy in the United States. The phrase commonly used to describe this state of affairs—“self-imposed exile”—should not leave the reader nodding pleasantly. It should leave him wondering, “What does that mean? Why have we offered him exile?”

In failing to stress the double-thugged nature of this situation, American officials have unwisely conveyed to the world that we prefer Gülen to Erdoğan. So does the commentary oozing from think tanks, journalists, soi-disant experts, and European luminaries. We’d be better-advised at least to pretend to be against all corrupt authoritarians. We might even be wise to suggest, if only by means of a hint, that yes, we do understand that this has been a long decade of Turkish crackdowns, many inspired and executed by Gülen’s thugs. We might even indicate—in some subtle way—that while authoritarian crackdowns are not to our taste, there is at least some dark and cosmic justice in the world when the authors of crackdowns get a smackdown of their own.

It is certainly possible that we give the impression that we prefer Gülen to Erdoğan because we do indeed prefer him. But readers should be reminded (or informed, if they were not aware) that Gülen is the one in the United States, where he is accruing power daily, and Erdoğan is at least separated from us by an ocean. It would seem Gülen now has enough power that when his boys get locked up, the West squeaks, whereas we didn’t so much as raise an eyebrow when anyone else’s boys were rounded up, and haven’t much bothered to do so at any similar moment in the past decade. We may prefer Gülen because he is smarter and vastly more subtle than Erdoğan. But if only for this reason, he may well be the more dangerous of the two. It seems all-too-plausible that many Americans don’t even realize he’s here, much less that he is a thug.

I hope that our policy makers, at least, are fully aware that Gülen is no noble figure. Perhaps they are of the belief that he’s a thug, but at least he’s our thug. Gülen seems to think that we may be the thugs, but that we are his thugs. He is behaving accordingly, directing campaign contributions to politicians in the districts where his schools operate. We consistently fail to acknowledge his outsize role in the transformation of Turkey from modest authoritarian state to megalomaniacal authoritarian madhouse. That we also tolerate his presence on our soil prompts many Turks to draw what seems a reasonable conclusion: The U.S. doesn’t give a damn about Turkish democracy. Or Turkish journalists. We just prefer Gülen to Erdoğan.

I hope this isn’t the case, but it’s consistent with the evidence. Also consistent is another disturbing hypothesis: We still have no idea who Gülen is, and truly believe Erdoğan—head of our NATO ally—is locking up modest martyrs whose only crime was to expose his corruption. The corruption is real, the lockup is real, and, yes, Turkey is our NATO ally. But Erdoğan hasn’t been rounding up journalists of no special distinction (or none, at least, beyond their principled stance against corruption). He has been rounding up Gülen-allied journalists, who are not so much epic heroes in the battle against Turkish corruption and for Turkish press freedom as they are operatives for the Turkish president’s existential rival.

Turkey does have epic heroes. One of them is named Ahmet Şık. The people now being locked up only very recently had him locked up, because he wrote a book suggesting that Gülen’s thugs were precisely the kinds of people who might practice corruption and lock up journalists. Şık is a better man than I, so to speak, for he found it in his heart to respond to the latest news with these words: “The former owners of the period of fascism we experienced a few years ago today are experiencing fascism. To oppose fascism is a virtue.” My first reaction was different: “Lock them up and throw away the key.” It took me several minutes to remember that I am an American and thus opposed to fascism, too. As all right-thinking people should be.

There are many victims of human rights outrages in Turkey. And yes, it is proper for us to insist that the Our Boy’s Thugs receive due process. They will not get it, but it is right to insist. But if vainly insist we must, the fate of these 35 football fans is a less ambiguous cause. And the fate of these Syrian kids a greater priority.

Turkey has requested that we extradite Gülen. What should we do about that? Americans must be baffled, given what they’ve been told. Common sense might say, “Of course we would extradite a corrupt authoritarian to our trusted NATO ally.” If that fails to happen, it might suggest that one—or many—of our inbuilt assumptions is wrong. We may believe that we control Gülen. But what if it’s the reverse? It would come as a nasty surprise to some, but not to anyone who has watched him at work in Turkey. If asked for my advice, I would say: “Be on the safe side. Extradite him promptly.” After all, if Turkey is indeed our close friend and trusted NATO ally, sending him back would be a gesture of trust and friendship. It would be proof as well that while we may not be reputed for subtlety, we are more than capable of it when called for. It would be classier, too, than some of the cruder practices we have recently used in our efforts to defuse ticking time bombs.

Then again, we could keep him. But be aware that the people who told you Erdoğan was a liberal democrat would seem to have exhibited rather bad judgment. And the people who warned you otherwise are telling you now that Gülen is a thug. So keep that in mind. Handle with care.

Claire Berlinski, a City Journal contributing editor, is an American journalist who lives in Paris. 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, Gulen, Poconos, thugs, Turkey, USA

Turkey Police press charges against man with NYT’s Erdoğan caricature

December 21, 2014 By administrator

200025_newsdetailPolice have pressed charges against a man in Turkey after he held a sign containing a New York Times caricature featuring President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan cutting döner kebab — a Turkish dish — which was pictured as a Turkish flag that read “democracy,” in a demonstration on Friday.

Ali Bayram Hanedar was outside of the Samsun Courthouse among a crowd protesting the Dec. 14 media crackdown that resulted in detention of journalists, including Zaman daily Editor-in-Chief Ekrem Dumanlı. Hanedar was holding aloft a banner with a caricature recently published by The New York Times, which shows Erdoğan trimming “Turkey’s democracy,” depicted as a döner kebab, with a blade in his hand.

According to a news report by the Bugün daily, after the demonstration Hanedar was stopped by a policeman, who asked his identity and said there would be charges pressed against him. The policeman explained that the protester’s banner would be examined to see if its display fits the crime of “insulting the Turkish flag.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: caricature, Erdogan, New York Times, police, Protest, Turkey, turkish flag

Turkey Erdogan and purification of free thought

December 20, 2014 By administrator

Erdogan with SortA train Turkish journalists arrested, allegedly in full compliance with the law? Who doubts? In the same obnoxious ideas circulating in the corridors of the Turkish courts include our friend Erol Özkoray worried for statements in his book Gezi phenomenon that could earn him 18 months in prison. In an interview with France Culture, the writer is concerned about the future of Turkey under Erdogan.

Saturday, December 20, 2014,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Journalist, Twitter, YouTube

Argentine-Armenian Journalist Publishes Book on Gülen Movement

December 16, 2014 By administrator

Fethullah-LibroBUENOS AIRES (Agencia Prensa Armenia)—”Erdogan and Gülen are the extremes of the same policy. The struggle for power in Turkey is deepening further and the Turkish society is trapped in this dispute,” said the chief editor of Argentina’s Prensa Armenia news agency Pablo Kendikian regarding the latest arrests of journalists in Turkey linked to the Hizmet movement.

Pablo Kendikian has recently published a book, “Fethullah Gülen,” which explains the history of the Gülen movement and its global reach.

“The attempt to silence the press is condemnable, but we must also remember that not long ago the Gülen Movement promoted these actions and persecuted those who did not share the values and lifestyle that Gülen and Erdogan wanted for Turkey,” added Kendikian.

“We cannot ignore that Gülen was part of the construction of the repressive and the parallel state that Erdogan fed when they were allies. Today the Gülen Movement shown itself as the victim, but the former actions together led a real ‘witch hunt’ against those who opposed the Islamization of the Turkish state,” said Kendikian referring to the Ergenekon scandal in the last years and the arrests of Ahmet Sik and Nedim Sener, both for writing about the Gülen Movement.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Gulen Movement, Turkey

Turkish witch hunt, Erdogan Islamist “Tahsiyeciler” versus the Gulen Islamist movement

December 16, 2014 By administrator

By Mustafa Akyol,

Zaman editor-in-chief Erem Dumanli, escorted by plainclothes police officers, is cheered on by his colleagues as he leaves the headquarters of Zaman daily newspaper in IstanbulOn Dec. 14, Turkey woke up to breaking news: Turkish police detained 25 people, including top media figures and police officers, simultaneously raiding addresses in 13 cities across the country. The detainees included Ekrem Dumanli, the editor-in-chief of Zaman, Turkey’s top-selling newspaper, and Hidayet Karaca, the director of STV, a news channel. What they all had in common was their affiliation with the Fethullah Gulen movement — an Islamic community that once was the best ally of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, but which turned into his worst enemy after the corruption investigations of December 2013. Report Al-Monitor’s

What made these arrests even more controversial was that they were foretold by the mysterious “Fuat Avni,” a faceless Twitter account that claims to be a hidden deep throat within the top echelons of the Erdogan government. With some 629,000 followers (@fuatavnifuat), this account wrote on Dec. 11, or three days before the arrests, that “the Tyrant” (i.e., Erdogan) has ordered a new crackdown on opposition media and some 150 journalists would be arrested soon. Since then, supportive crowds have been flocking to the building of the daily Zaman, which “Fuat Avni” identified as the main target of the upcoming raid. On Sunday, the warnings turned true, when the police indeed came to Zaman to detain Ekrem Dumanli, in the midst of a large crowd cheering for press freedom.

Yet, at least so far, the “crackdown on opposition media” has been less widespread than what Fuat Avni had predicted. As the press reported, the detainee list includes some 31 names, at the top of which is Fethullah Gulen himself. (But his arrest was impossible, since he has lived in Pennsylvania, in the United States since 1999.) Others are either certain policemen alleged to be members of the movement, or certain journalists and film producers. And they are all blamed of leading or taking part in an “operation” against an Islamist group called “Tahsiyeciler,” which the Gulen movement allegedly sees as a threat or rival to itself.

The “Tahsiyeciler,” or, literally, “those who make footnotes,” are a small Turkish Islamist community that claims to follow the teachings of Islamic scholar Said Nursi (1878-1960). “Yet they are more radical in ideology than most Nursi followers,” an expert on this tradition told me, “in that they denounce democracy and advocate an Islamist state.” Yet, the same expert added that the group has never been violent. However, both the leader of the group, Mehmet Dogan, and 10 of his followers were arrested in 2010 in a widespread detention of alleged al-Qaeda members all across Turkey, which was then reported in the international media, including The New York Times.

Dogan spent some 17 months in prison, but was later released due to a controversy about the evidence: On the hand grenades that were allegedly found in his home, fingerprints were found that belonged to the very police who raided the place. The police explained this as a result of not wearing gloves, but the suspects insisted that it was the police themselves who put the hand grenades there, just to be able to label the suspects as terrorists.

In August, some members of the Tahsiyeciler, who believed that they were victims of a conspiracy, went to a prosecutor to complain about the “parallel structure” — or the alleged Gulen movement network and the judiciary, about which Erdogan has been calling for complaints. The prosecutor who ordered the Dec. 14 arrests based his accusations on this complaint. The detained policemen are blamed for conspiring against Tahsiyeciler by putting weapons in their homes just to “find” them.

But what about the journalists? That is where things get tricky. The journalists are accused by the prosecutor of arranging the “propaganda side” of the scheme against Tahsiyeciler. Some of them are even accused of writing the script for a TV series on STV, titled “Tek Türkiye” (“One Turkey”), in which the Tahsiyeciler group is depicted as a terror group controlled by an evil cabal that tries to destabilize Turkey. The prosecutor argues that Gulen followers within the media and security forces worked hand in hand, in a hierarchy, to cook up a conspiracy.

Notably, this was the very logic used by both the pro-Gulen media and the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government when they were allies (2007-11), to defend the imprisonment of many secularist journalists accused of acting on the orders of a would-be junta in the military. That is why many are correct today in reminding the spokesmen of the Gulen movement that what they protest today is exactly what they did just a few years ago: to jump from one alleged crime to a larger conspiracy theory, to demonize and punish a large group of people, whose only “crime” may be just to share an ideology or community.

The crucial question is whether the temporarily detained journalists will be ordered arrested by judges for a trial in custody, which could put them in jail for a long time. That is what happened during the “coup cases” of 2007-11, when dozens of journalists were imprisoned for months and even years. In that case, Turkey would be just repeating the same nightmare, only with different actors in different positions. Some pro-Gulen journalists who were once cheering for the arrest of “coup collaborators” would find themselves as the new “coup collaborators” in jail.

Meanwhile, the AKP government and Erdogan seem to recognize that what they are doing is a witch hunt — but a necessary one. (In fact, Erdogan openly declared in June that he would not shy from a “witch hunt” against the Gulen movement.) But they give the assurance that this is “the final battle” before a truly wonderful democracy — or, say, the witch hunt to end all witch hunts. Many others fear, however, that this might just be the beginning of a darker, more authoritarian era, where the hunt for “the traitors” to the nation may never end.

Mustafa Akyol is a columnist for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse, a columnist for the Turkish Hurriyet Daily News, and a monthly contributing opinion writer for The International New York Times. His articles have also appeared in Foreign Affairs, Newsweek, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal and The Guardian.  On Twitter: @AkyolinEnglish

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Gulen Movement, Turkish, witch hunt

Turkey out of East Anatolia

December 8, 2014 By administrator

By Dr Jan Best de Vries:

The-Medes-ancestors-of-the-Kurds-e1418073879250Since Mr. Erdogan and his ministers, living in a state that is currently a NATO member, repeatedly accuse NATO members Germany and The Netherlands of being aggressive and racist against people of Turkish descent in these countries (1), one should realize for a moment that, from an historical point of view, the Turks arguably do not belong in Anatolia at all, in that, as barbarian nomads, they intruded there from the Siberian steppes some centuries ago. Since the beginning of the 20th century at least, Turkey has itself showed itself to be aggressive and racist against minorities within Anatolia, and the Armenians and Kurds, both sharing a common Indo-European language, have even experienced genocide from the Turks.

One should also realize that the present Turkish government is responsible for the creation of barbaric ISIS in Istanbul, Ankara, Raqqa and Mosul these days. Many peoples from before the Turks arrived in Anatolia are extinct now, but not all. One people surviving the onslaught of the Turks in Anatolia, whose ancestral territory is East Anatolia, are the Kurds, whose ancestors were the Medes who lived in Kurdistan, like the Persians in Iran, from 1700 BCE. These peoples have, like the present peoples in Germany and The Netherlands, not only a common Indo-European background, but they also speak Indo-European languages (Sorani and Farsi respectively, cognate to most languages spoken in Europe these days).

At the moment American, Canadian, German and Dutch private soldiers fight together with the citizens of Rojava against ISIS, the closest ally of the Islamist state Turkey that you can imagine. Why do they do so? Because, as in their own countries, in Rojava reigns secularism, democracy, gender equality and humanism. ISIS fighters in The Netherlands, Germany, Syria and Iraq do represent just the long arm of Turkey, the latter state demonstrating itself once more as an enemy of human civilization. Mr. Erdogan’s Turkey does not belong in NATO in the first place and Turkey should at least withdraw from East Anatolia, the ancient homeland of Armenians and Kurds. The patience of the populations in Germany and The Netherlands with the Islamist fanatic Mr. Erdogan is almost over and when so, at last, the Turkish embassies in these countries would better be closed….

(1) For example, on the Dutch TV-program Nieuwsuur (News hour) on NPO 2, Sunday 7 December, 22.00- 22.35 h.

Dr. Jan Best de Vries is an archaeologist and historian, decipherer of the so-called Byblos Script from Aleppo and Alalakh (‘How to Decipher the Byblos Script’, Aspekt Publishers 2014, ISBN978-946-153-420-0)  

Source: kurdistantribune.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anatolia, Armenian, Erdogan, Kurd, Turkey

Women are not equal to men, Turkish president declares

November 24, 2014 By administrator

The Associated Press
Published Monday, November 24, 2014 9:19AM EST

erdogan-womanANKARA, Turkey — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan set off a new controversy on Monday, declaring that women are not equal to men and accusing feminists of not understanding the special status that Islam attributes to mothers.

Addressing a meeting in Istanbul on women and justice, Erdogan said men and women are created differently, that women cannot be expected to undertake the same work as men, and that mothers enjoy a high position that only they can reach.

“You cannot put women and men on an equal footing,” Erdogan said. “It is against nature. They were created differently. Their nature is different. Their constitution is different.”

Erdogan added: “Motherhood is the highest position … You cannot explain this to feminists. They don’t accept motherhood. They have no such concern.”

Lawyer and women’s rights activist Hulya Gulbahar said Erdogan’s comments were in violation of Turkey’s constitution, Turkish laws and international conventions on gender equality and didn’t help efforts to stem high incidences of violence against women in Turkey.

“Such comments by state officials which disregard equality between men and women play an important role in the rise of violence against women,” Gulbahar said. “Such comments aim to make women’s presence in public life — from politics to arts, from science to sports — debatable.”

Erdogan, a devout Muslim, often courts controversy with divisive public comments. He has previously angered women’s groups by stating that women should bear at least three children and by attempting to outlaw abortion and adultery.

He raised eyebrows this month by declaring that Muslims had discovered the Americas before Christopher Columbus.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: equal, Erdogan, not, woman

“ISIS” Godfather in Baghdad, Turkish dictator In Algeria “launching neo-ottoman Empire project”

November 21, 2014 By administrator

Davutoglu-Kurdish-flagFrom North Africa to Middle East neo-ottoman empire campaign project launched simultaneously in Algeria and baghdad with Turkish ruling elite Davutoglu in Baghdad, Erdoğan in Algeria with the same message.
The godfather of the  islamic state Ahmet Davutoglu “Any kind of assault on Iraqi security is an assault on Turkey as well,” he said at a joint news conference following a meeting with his Iraqi counterpart, Haidar Abadi!!!. Davutoglu’s False-Flag Operation on Mosul now is complete “success” baghdad and Erbil have capitulated.

In the same time the dictator Erdoğan Speaking in Algeria on Wednesday, Erdoğan said, “Israel’s barbaric attack on al-Aqsa Mosque is tantamount to an attack on Turkey and Algeria because al-Aqsa Mosque belongs to all of us.????

“The destabilizing role of Turkey in the region” “a regional united front” needs to be created against the policy of Turkey.
“Cyprus, Armenia, Bulgaria, Greece, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Kurd, Georgia, Egypt should intensify bilateral relations, combine their efforts in international organizations and take advantage of the Diasporas, creating a united front against the policy of Turkey.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Algeria, Baghdad, Davutoglu, empire, Erdogan, neo-ottoman

Turkey doomed to fall under Erdogan: Ex-president Gul

November 21, 2014 By administrator

386920_Turkey-PresidentFormer Turkish President Abdullah Gul has slammed the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, warning that Ankara is doomed to collapse if it continues its foreign policy on Iraq and Syria. report Presstv

Gul criticized the new Turkish president’s policies vis-à-vis the chaotic situation in neighboring Syria, saying, “I am sure that one day (God forbidden) the chickens of Erdogan’s past follies in Syria will come home to roost.”

The former Turkish leader further acknowledged that Ankara’s spying agencies played a key role in facilitating the transport of Takfiri militants fighting against the government of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad since the crisis erupted in the Arab state in 2011.

Erdogan’s strategic blunders in neighboring Syria and Iraq are behind the emergence of the ISIL Takfiri terrorists, who have been committing atrocities in the areas they have under control in both countries, according to Gul.

He slammed the US-led “idiots’ club” coalition currently carrying out airstrikes against ISIL militant hideouts in Iraq and Syria.

Gul added that some Saudi-backed terrorist organizations operating against Syria such as the al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Nusra Front had been working with Western spy agencies, including the CIA.

He added that mutual cooperation existed “between Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MİT)” and the ISIL extremist terrorists.

The ISIL terrorists entered Iraq in June. The violence is seen as a spillover of militancy from Syria, where Takfiri groups fighting the Damascus government are enjoying support of the US and its allies including Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Gul, slammed

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