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‘Islamic State is lesser evil for Turkey than Assad or Kurds’

October 10, 2014 By administrator

Kobani-ErdoganTurkish President Tayyip Erdogan is more concerned with the Kurdish problem in his own country and changing the Assad regime in Syria than with Islamic State militants, New Delhi based strategic studies professor Brahma Chellaney told RT.

RT: What’s it going to take for Ankara to do something to appease the Kurdish protesters, before the riots spin out of control?

Brahma Chellaney: Turkey is facing a bottom challenge largely because of the President Erdogan’s role in the rise of Islamic State. President Erdogan has played a crucial role in the efforts of the US and others to topple President Assad. He was the one who invited the CIA to come and actually train the Syrian rebels. Now he’s facing the blowback, and that blowback is going to be quite severe. In fact it’s going to get Turkey down the same road that Pakistan has traveled. So we are going to see the “Pakistanization” of Turkey in the coming years, and the Kurdish issue is one dimension in the larger picture.

RT: Some pro-Kurdish protesters have resorted to violence. How’s this going down with their supporters at home and abroad?

BC: The Kurds have long been repressed in Turkey. They’re not a small minority but a large minority, they dominate southeastern Turkey, the areas bordering with Syria. So they can be a major headache for the Turkish government, especially if the Kurdish insurgency were to revive in Turkey. The Turkish government, I think, handled these protests very prudently. If it tries to use too much force against these Kurdish protesters, the backlash could be quite severe and could trigger a revived Kurdish insurgency.

RT: Would a Turkish ground offensive against Islamic State be able to achieve a quick victory or is Ankara’s army more likely to get bogged down?

BC: Let’s be clear on one thing, for President Erdogan, the Islamic State is a lesser evil than President Assad and the Kurds. So he is even not sending his ground forces to battle the Islamic State. After all, his policies have contributed to the rise of Islamic State. He will not put his army against the Islamic State. That is the reason why Turkish tanks are just watching silently as IS terrorists continue to attack this town of Kobani from all sides.

RT: Turkey has reiterated its strong stance against the Syrian government, while Damascus says Ankara is acting as an aggressor. Is regime change in Syria still at the top of the agenda for Turkey?

BC: In fact, President Erdogan is telling Washington that if the US wants the Turkish military to intervene in Syria, it has to be on the specific promise by Washington that regime change in Damascus is part of the larger American game plan. And the Americans at the moment are reluctant to give that promise, and that is the reason why President Erdogan is not pressing his forces into action, even in Kobani, which is the city under siege by the Islamic militants.

RT: Islamic State forces are fighting hard to take Kobani. Why’s the city so vital to them?

BC: It’s strategic because it’s located on the access route which connects Turkey right across northern Syria to Iraq, but I think even more than the strategic importance of Kobani, is its symbolic value. This is the only city in northern Syria where some pictures of what is happening are available to the outside world, because it’s located right on the border with Turkey and therefore, international journalists can actually report some action from Turkish territory. But in other places in northern Syria where fighting is still raging, where the Islamic State terrorists are on the attack, we have no international pictures for our audiences. And because Kobani is an ongoing story that the media is covering from Kurdish territory, it has acquired great importance symbolically.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, International Crisis Group stating the obvious in Karabakh report, ISIS, kobani, Syria

As per Erdogan, massacring and plundering Armenians is “halal” – Firat

October 9, 2014 By administrator

Erdogan-kill-armenianFirat news agency reporter Ferda Cetin wrote a critical article with respect to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s recent statements made regarding the Islamic State terrorist faction in Syria.

Among other statements, Cetin also reflected on Erdogan’s statement that it is “haram” (sinful, according to Islamic law) for a Muslim to take away the property, life, and honor of another Muslim.

“Erdogan says that a Muslim should not do [these things] to another Muslim. That is, according to Erdogan, killing Armenians, Assyrians, plundering their property is ‘halal’ [i.e., permissible, according to Islamic law],” the Firat reporter specifically wrote.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Erdogan, killing armenian

Biden’s Apology to Erdogan Reinforces the US Policy of Succumbing to Turkey

October 6, 2014 By administrator

BY ARA KHACHATOURIAN

Biden_harvardOn Monday morning, news of ISIS militants’ advance on Kobane near the Turkey-Syria border flooded the media, with some citing eyewitness accounts that ISIS has planted its flag atop the hilly area, with the local Kurdish population fighting for its life and against the ISIS militants.

So where was the United States’ trusted ally Turkey in its pledge to help the so-called international effort led by the US to topple the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, which now goes by the name of Islamic State?

We can say one thing: The Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was, most likely, gloating because a day before he had received an apology from Vice-President Biden, who told the truth by revealing Turkey’s—and Erodgan’s—role in the advancement of ISIS in the region.

While speaking to a group of students at Harvard, Biden discussed the US strategy/policy in the region and expressed that Erdogan had admitted Turkey’s errors in allowing militants to freely roam its border. This comment angered Erdogan, who demanded an apology from Biden and threatened that “he [Biden] will be history for me if he has indeed used such expressions.”

It seems that Biden’s friendship with Erdogan, also known as the US completely succumbing and kowtowing to Turkey, far outweighs the truth that Turkey, in fact, has played a large role in aiding ISIS and allowing its spread of deadly violence in Iraq and Turkey.

This fact was highlighted by former US Ambassador to Turkey Francis Riccardione who told the London-based The Telegraph last month that Turkey has directly supported al Qaeda’s Syrian wing in defiance of the US and has worked with other hard-line al Qaeda affiliates, effectively opening its borders to Syria and allowing free access to those rebels.

“The Turks frankly worked with groups for a period, including al Nusra, whom we finally designated as we’re not willing to work with,” Riccardione was quoted in The Telegraph explaining the US response to Turkey.

Turkey’s role in advancing the ISIS cause has also been widely reported and highlighted by the media in the US, including a front-page report last month by The New York Times.

“Turkey has been criticized at home and abroad for an open border policy in the early days of the Syrian uprising. Critics say that policy was crucial to the rise of ISIS,” reported the New York Times on September 16.

“Turkish fighters recruited by ISIS say they identify more with the extreme form of Islamist governance practiced by ISIS,” added the New York Times report.

President Obama has vowed to destroy ISIS and has appealed to countries in the region to join the coalition. Turkey has refused US access to its own airbase in Incirlik, the second time Turkey has blocked US efforts in the region, and now, true to Turkish form and despite Biden’s apology, Ankara wants guarantees from the US that the current mission in the region would conclude with Syrian President Bashar Assad’s demise before fully committing Turkey’s support for the mission.

The Obama Administrations complete and utter submission to Turkey has been well-documented, but Biden’s apology takes the cake since he was simply stating what everyone already knew: Turkey is responsible for the rise of ISIS and the current crisis in the Middle East.

Also on Monday, The Times (of London) reported that Turkey may have freed more than 100 ISIS jihadists in return for 49 Turkish hostages the militant group was holding since June after taking over the Iraqi city of Mosul. These newly-released ISIS militants are now free to bear arms and wreak more havoc in the region, all thanks to Turkey’s policy in the region, which run counter to US interests.

What Biden’s apology has done is to embolden Turkey to, on one hand, place more preconditions to the US for its involvement in the campaign and, on the other, to continue its support for ISIS and other extremist militants in the region. More importantly, however, Biden’s apology has weakened US foreign policy, its standing in the international community and strengthened the resolve of ISIS to continue its reign of terror in the region.

Bravo Vice-President Biden for your cowardice.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: apology, biden, Erdogan

Turkey’s Erdogan speaks on relations with Armenia

October 2, 2014 By administrator

ungree-erdoganTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan stated that Turkey favors peace in relations with Armenia.

Speaking at the official opening of the new legislative year of the Turkish parliament, Erdogan also reflected on the Karabakh issue and relations with Armenia, reported NTV television of Turkey.

“We [, Turkey,] exhibit a completely principal, objective, peace-advocating, and constructive position in the Cyprus issue, elimination of the occupation of Azerbaijani lands, [and] relations with Armenia and the events [that occurred] in 1915,” the Turkish president stated.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenia, Erdogan, relation

Erdoğan’s guards, NY police scuffle during anti-Erdoğan protest

September 26, 2014 By administrator

A group of Turkish citizens staged a protest against President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in New York where he came to attend the United Nations General 193251_newsdetailAssembly, leading to a confrontation between Erdoğan’s guards and New York City police.

According to the private Cihan news agency, Erdoğan was met by protests in front of the hotel where he went to attend a dinner. Protesters chanted slogans saying “Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is a thief,” “You exploit religion, make big haul,” “This is only the beginning, continue the fight!” Some protesters wore T-shirts that read “There is a thief [around us]!”

A quarrel broke out between demonstrators waving Turkish flags and shouting anti-Erdoğan slogans and Erdoğan’s guards during the protest. President Erdoğan’s nephew and bodyguard Ali Erdoğan reportedly attacked the protesters, and then a scuffle broke out between police officers and Erdoğan’s guards. The New York City police reportedly attempted to take a guard into custody.

President Erdoğan entered the hotel through a back door due to the protest. While the anti-Erdoğan protest was taking place in New York, some Erdoğan supporters also chanted slogans in favor of him. Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, Economy Minister Nihat Zeybekçi, former European Union Affairs Minister Egemen Bağış and current EU Minister Volkan Bozkır, who were accompanying Erdoğan, were also heckled. Erdoğan left the hotel by a back door due to the ongoing protest and headed to the airport to return to Turkey.

Erdoğan arrived in New York on Sept. 21 to attend the UN General Assembly. He had a number of meetings with foreign leaders and delivered a fiery speech in the UN General Assembly, slamming the UN for its lack of action against the Syrian civil war and Gaza offensive. During his trip he announced for the first time that Turkey’s role in the US-led anti-Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) could include military support.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: bodyguards, Erdogan, new york, protests

Opinion: Erdogan has made up his mind at last

September 24, 2014 By administrator

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Baha Güngör is head of DW’s Turkish service

Turkey’s head of state finally gave up his undecided course towards IS. Military action is Erdogan’s attempt to cut his losses, but it won’t help Turkey reclaim its role as a regional power, says DW’s Baha Güngör.

The Turkish government is not to be envied: On the one hand, a self-proclaimed religious group, which is in actual fact the most brutal group of the present time, has been terrorizing large areas in two neighboring states in close proximity to Turkey’s borders. Hundreds of thousands of people from both Iraq and Syria have seen no other option than to seek refuge in Turkey – to save their lives. At the same time, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has in the past not hesitated to use force against opponents at home, has been trying to treat the “Islamic State” (IS) with kid gloves, for fear of antagonizing them.

Forty-nine Turkish citizens who were taken hostage by the IS terrorist militia at Turkey’s consulate general in Mosul have been released. The price Turkey paid is yet unknown. It does seem odd that the jihadists would kill Western hostages in a horrifyingly brutal way on the one hand, while refraining from using violence against Turkish hostages on the other. Could it have been the reward for Turkey’s support – of an as yet unknown scale – of religiously fanatic parts of the Syrian opposition in the fight against the regime in Damascus?

The fact is that it’s now become much easier for Erdogan to publicly approve of the airstrikes by his Western allies under US leadership. In several interviews, he even promised logistics support – while refraining from promising direct involvement. Turkey is hesitant not least because it’s a member of NATO. The country’s general staff reacted instantly to media reports claiming that US planes about to attack IS strongholds were coming from Turkey. Army representatives said no armed US jets and no armed drones would receive permission to enter Turkish airspace, and that that was particularly true for the US military base of Incirlik on the Mediterranean Sea.

Erdogan has to show his true colors

But if Erdogan has indeed left his indecisive course, he now has to show his true colors and get ready for direct military support. The reason is simple: No other Western country is dealing with a graver refugee problem than Turkey. The number of refugees from Iraq and now from Syria is approaching 2 million. Turkish citizens have been intensifying protests against the refugee crisis. Changing the situation without using brute force against the “Islamic State” seems impossible.

Ankara’s misguided foreign policy is now taking its toll. During the revolutions in Arab countries, Turkey stood out with its disoriented policy. When civil war broke out in Syria, Erdogan quickly sided with the opponents of Bashar al-Assad, expecting the dictator’s imminent overthrow. Now Erdogan has to watch as the West openly considers involving Damascus and Baghdad in the fight against IS terrorists. In addition, Turkey also has to grudgingly accept the fact that the West is delivering weapons to Kurds in neighboring states so they can protect themselves against IS militia.

No, the Turkish government is not to be envied at all. It has maneuvered itself into a maze with mistakes made in the foreign policy realm. It needs its Western allies to find the way out, and it has to accept their decisions.

More indecisiveness in dealing with neighbors as well as with terrorists could see Turkey end up facing a bill it would never be able to pay. The country has long lost its role as a regional power in the Middle East – and will not get it back anytime soon.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, ISIL

Video Erdogan, Davutoglu Syria, Mosul, false-Flag operations, explained Episode 1

September 20, 2014 By administrator

Edogan-Nato-Islamic-200gagrule.net Released quick video expose Erdogan, Davutoglu Syria, Mosul, false-Flag operations, and the staged so called hostages,

Filed Under: Articles, Videos Tagged With: Davutoglu Syria, Erdogan, false flag, Mosul, VIDEO)

NY Times urges Turkish authorities to ensure safety of its reporter

September 19, 2014 By administrator

The New York Times responded to attacks on its Turkey reporter after it published a report focusing on the alleged recruitment of Turks by the Islamic State of Iraq and the 192688_newsdetailLevant (ISIL) in an Ankara neighborhood, calling on Turkish authorities to ensure her safety. report TodayZAMAN

Ceylan Yeğinsu came under attack by the pro-government media and on social media platforms after President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan lashed out at a report she wrote for The New York Times that was published on Sept. 15. Erdoğan particularly was angered by the photo that was published along with the story, picturing him and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu leaving a mosque in the same Ankara neighborhood, Hacı Bayram. “This is shameless, ignoble and base,” Erdoğan said in a speech on Wednesday.

Later that same day, The New York Times removed the photo and issued a correction, saying the photo was published in error and clarifying that neither the mosque in the photo nor the president’s visit were related to the recruiting of ISIL fighters described in the article.

The New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet said that even though the correction had been issued, the reporter came under an “unacceptable” attack.

“Despite this published correction, some Turkish authorities and media outlets have mounted a coordinated campaign to intimidate and to impugn the motives of the reporter who wrote the story,” Baquet said in the statement released late on Thursday. “She has been sent thousands of messages that threaten her safety. It is unacceptable for one of our journalists to be targeted in this way.”

“We expect the Turkish authorities to work to ensure the safety of our journalists working legally in the country and we would ask these authorities to use well-established procedures for reaching either myself or other top editors of The New York Times should further communication regarding this matter be necessary,” he also said.

Yeğinsu has been targeted in pro-government newspapers and websites, which have published defamatory articles that feature her photo.

“Ceylan wrote that story,” read a front-page story in the Takvim daily on Thursday. Two other pro-government media outlets, Star newspaper and A Haber television, also ran stories on their websites “exposing” The New York Times reporter as a Turk. “A Turk turned out to be behind the New York Times’ perception operation,” read the headline of a story on the website of Star newspaper, again with a photo of Yeğinsu.

Takvim continued to target Yeğinsu on Friday, running another front-page story featuring her photo and titled: “Hear this, Ceylan.” The story offered a compilation of accounts from people it said were residents of Hacı Bayram, criticizing Yeğinsu for her report and dismissing the ISIL recruitment operation described in it.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, ISIL, ISIS, islamic state, New York Times, reporter

Erdoğan: Turkey would welcome Muslim Brotherhood figures leaving Qatar

September 16, 2014 By administrator

REUTERS / ISTANBUL

Turkey would welcome senior figures from Egypt’s outlawed Muslim Brotherhood after they were asked to leave Qatar under pressure from other Gulf 192441_newsdetailArab states, Turkish media quoted President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan as saying late on Monday.

A senior Brotherhood official based in London said on Saturday that Qatar had asked seven senior figures from the movement to leave the country after its neighbours pressed it to stop backing the Islamists.

Senior Brotherhood figures would be welcome to come to Turkey if they wished to do so, Turkish television stations quoted Erdoğan as telling reporters on his plane back from an official visit to Qatar on Monday.

Qatar and Turkey were the only regional countries to back the Brotherhood after Egypt’s army toppled Islamist President Muhammad Morsi last year following mass protests against him.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and other Gulf Arab states, in contrast, have showered Egypt’s new rulers with billions of dollars. They see the Muslim Brotherhood as an existential threat to their monarchies.

Egypt has declared the Brotherhood a terrorist movement. The Brotherhood says it is a peaceful group.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Egypt, Erdogan, muslim brotherhood, qata

ISIS Draws a Steady Stream of Recruits From Turkey

September 16, 2014 By administrator

By CEYLAN YEGINSU SEPT. 15, 2014  nytimes

16TURKEY-master675President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, hand raised, and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, to his right, in August, leaving the Haci Bayram Veli Mosque in Ankara, the capital, where the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria is known to recruit new members. Credit Adem Altan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

ANKARA, Turkey — Having spent most of his youth as a drug addict in one of the poorest neighborhoods of Turkey’s capital, Can did not think he had much to lose when he was smuggled into Syria with 10 of his childhood friends to join the world’s most extreme jihadist group.

After 15 days at a training camp in the Syrian city of Raqqa, the de facto headquarters of the group, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, the 27-year-old Can was assigned to a fighting unit. He said he shot two men and participated in a public execution. It was only after he buried a man alive that he was told he had become a full ISIS fighter.

“When you fight over there, it’s like being in a trance,” said Can, who asked to be referred to only by his middle name for fear of reprisal. “Everyone shouts, ‘God is the greatest,’ which gives you divine strength to kill the enemy without being fazed by blood or splattered guts,” he said.

As many as 1,000 Turks have joined ISIS, according to Turkish news media reports and government officials here. Recruits cite the group’s ideological appeal to disaffected youths as well as the money it pays fighters from its flush coffers. The C.I.A. estimated last week that the group had from 20,000 to 31,500 fighters in Iraq and Syria.

The United States has put heavy pressure on Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, to better police Turkey’s 560-mile-long border with Syria. Washington wants Turkey to stanch the flow of foreign fighters and to stop ISIS from exporting the oil it produces on territory it holds in Syria and Iraq.

So far, Mr. Erdogan has resisted pleas to take aggressive steps against the group, citing the fate of 49 Turkish hostages ISIS has held since militants took over Iraq’s second-largest city, Mosul, in June. Turkey declined to sign a communiqué last Thursday that committed a number of regional states to take “appropriate” new measures to counter ISIS, frustrating American officials.

For years, Turkey has striven to set an example of Islamic democracy in the Middle East through its “zero problems with neighbors” prescription, the guiding principle of Ahmet Davutoglu, who recently became Turkey’s prime minister after serving for years as foreign minister. But miscalculations have left the country isolated and vulnerable in a region now plagued by war.

Turkey has been criticized at home and abroad for an open border policy in the early days of the Syrian uprising. Critics say that policy was crucial to the rise of ISIS. Turkey had bet that rebel forces would quickly topple the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, but as the war evolved, the extremists have benefited from the chaos.

Turkish fighters recruited by ISIS say they identify more with the extreme form of Islamic governance practiced by ISIS than with the rule of the Turkish governing party, which has its roots in a more moderate form of Islam.

Hacibayram, a ramshackle neighborhood in the heart of Ankara’s tourist district, has morphed into an ISIS recruitment hub over the past year. Locals say up to 100 residents have gone to fight for the group in Syria.

“It began when a stranger with a long, coarse beard started showing up in the neighborhood,” recalled Arif Akbas, the neighborhood’s elected headman of 30 years, who oversees local affairs. “The next thing we knew, all the drug addicts started going to the mosque.”

One of the first men to join ISIS from the neighborhood was Ozguzhan Gozlemcioglu, known to his ISIS counterparts as Muhammad Salef. In three years, he has risen to the status of a regional commander in Raqqa, and locals say he frequently travels in and out of Ankara, each time making sure to take back new recruits with him.

Mehmet Arabaci, a Hacibayram resident who assists with distributing government aid to the poor, said younger members of the local community found online pictures of Mr. Gozlemcioglu with weapons on the field and immediately took interest. Children have started to spend more time online since the municipality knocked down the only school in the area last year as part of an aggressive urban renewal project.

“There are now seven mosques in the vicinity, but not one school,” Mr. Arabaci said. “The lives of children here are so vacant that they find any excuse to be sucked into action.”

Playing in the rubble of a demolished building on a recent hot day here, two young boys staged a fight with toy guns.

Continue reading the main story

Foreign Fighters in Syria and Iraq

According to Peter Neumann, a professor at King’s College London, at least 12,000 foreign militants are fighting in Syria and Iraq — many of them with ISIS. Where the fighters originate from:

When a young Syrian girl walked past them, they pounced on her, knocking her to the floor and pushing their toy rifles against her head. “I’m going to kill you, whore,” one of the boys shouted before launching into sound effects that imitated a machine gun.

The other boy quickly lost interest and walked away. “Toys are so boring,” he said. “I have real guns upstairs.”

The boy’s father, who owns a nearby market, said he fully supported ISIS’s vision for Islamic governance and hoped to send the boy and his other sons to Raqqa when they are older.

“The diluted form of Islam practiced in Turkey is an insult to the religion,” he said giving only his initials, T.C., to protect his identity. “In the Islamic State you lead a life of discipline as dictated by God, and then you are rewarded. Children there have parks and swimming pools. Here, my children play in the dirt.”

But when Can returned from Raqqa after three months with two of the original 10 friends he had left with, he was full of regret.

“ISIS is brutal,” he said. “They interpret the Quran for their own gains. God never ordered Muslims to kill Muslims.”

Still, he said many were drawn to the group for financial reasons, as it appealed to disadvantaged youth in less prosperous parts of Turkey. “When you fight, they offer $150 a day. Then everything else is free,” he said. “Even the shopkeepers give you free products out of fear.”

ISIS recruitment in Hacibayram caught the news media’s attention in June when a local 14-year-old recruit came back to the neighborhood after he was wounded in a shelling attack in Raqqa. The boy’s father, Yusuf, said that the government had made no formal inquiry into the episode and that members of the local community had started to condemn what they saw as inaction by the authorities.

“There are clearly recruitment centers being set up in Ankara and elsewhere in Turkey, but the government doesn’t seem to care,” said Aaron Stein, a fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a London-based think tank. “It seems their hatred for Bashar al-Assad and their overly nuanced view of what radical Islam is has led to a very short- and narrow-sighted policy that has serious implications.”

The Interior Ministry and National Police Department did not respond to requests for comment.

On a recent afternoon in Ankara, Mr. Erdogan and Mr. Davutoglu came to pray at the historic Haci Bayram Veli Mosque, just over 100 yards away from an underground mosque used by a radical Salafi sect known to oversee ISIS recruits.

When news of their visit reached the neighborhood, several residents scurried down the steep hill hoping to catch an opportunity to raise the issue.

At the same time, a 10-year-old boy lingered in his family’s shop, laughing at the crowd rushing to get a glimpse of the two leaders. He had just listened to a long lecture from his father celebrating ISIS’ recent beheading of James Foley, an American journalist. “He was an agent and deserved to die,” the man told his son, half-smirking through his thick beard.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, ISIS, recruits

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