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Yerevan, Rojava, Drones

August 29, 2016 By administrator

garen yegparianBY GAREN YEGPARIAN

The long-awaited Invasion of Syria by Turkey has commenced. What has Turkey to gain?

1. It stops Kurdish advances westward;
2. It regains some credibility with the U.S. by “fighting” ISIS/Daesh;
3. It reinforces and consolidates its relationships and connections with Syrian opposition groups;
4. It allows Turkey to attack PYD (Kurdish forces), which is already happening with Turkish artillery hitting Kurdish positions inside Syria;
5. It provides a miniscule smidgen of credibility for Turkey in Iran’s and Russia’s eyes, that despite Turkey’s commitment to toppling Syria’s President Assad, their ally, it is also giving lip service to “fighting” the region’s and Syria’s current greatest nemesis (ISIS/Daesh);
6. It creates a physical, actual, Turkish military presence inside Syria’s borders, feeding into Erdoğan’s ever-present Ottoman fantasies and Turkish expansionism;
7. It may even be a way to start rebuilding the Turkish military after the significant blows and weakening it experienced thanks to Erdoğan’s post-coup purges (some 40% of the upper echelons) of the military leadership who are allegedly Gulenists.

Why does this matter to Armenians? Anything that can strengthen Turkey is inimical to the Diaspora’s and homeland’s interests, pure and simple, until such time as Turkey fesses up to the Genocide, makes reparations, and terminates its occupation of Wilsonian Armenia. Plus, with the Kessab and Haleb/Aleppo Armenian communities so close, coupled with the damage already caused to our compatriots by the Turkish-supported Syrian opposition, there is a very real risk of further and even more serious harm if Turkish supported forces are strengthened.

What can we do? Aside from the obvious public relations and governmental advocacy work, perhaps it’s time to take military, albeit covert, action.

You might recall reading, since 2011, that in recent months the Republics of Armenia and Karabakh have UAVs – unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, built “in house” and not purchased from other countries. You might also recall that Artzakh has had some success in downing Azerbaijan’s purchased drones. These two areas of experience/expertise – the building and combatting of drones – could be valuable to Kurdish forces. I suggest that some of these drones be shipped to the Syrian-Kurdish area known as Rojava, along with Armenian advisers to fly them and combat opposing drones, to fight ISIS/Daesh.

What have Armenians to gain from this?
1. Our experts/technicians will gain valuable experience which can be used on the Azeri front and to improve the technology in the drones;
2. It is an opportunity to build up a technology/industry in which the RoA has had success;
3. Armenians would be making a contribution to fighting ISIS/Daesh, thus benefitting not just the region, but also the Armenian communities there. Remember, how the church in Der Zor was desecrated and destroyed by those murderous forces?
4. It quietly conveys to Turkey that harming Armenian interests will not be ignored;
5. It would build trust and cooperation between Armenians and Kurds;
6. It is an unusual, out-of-the-box thinking, potentially highly effective step that makes Armenians stronger actors in the region. This is the region where our deported ancestors were walked to death. The place names in the news now read like a tour of Genocide era death zones. Reasserting our presence there is not only a measure of restorative justice, but also another tiny step on our long journey back home…

What do you think? Do you have any other clever ideas that can further empower us in and near the Armenian highlands? Please throw them out for discussion.

***

Endless CDP Summer: How the Democrats Are Losing Armenians

It seems that the California Democratic Party (CDP) is out to create a new summertime tradition.

Unfortunately, it is not a positive tradition. But it IS highly undemocratic.

It’s called voter disenfranchisement. That’s a term Democrats like to hurl at Republicans as a way to give the GOP a black eye among minority voters. But when the minority is Armenian, that’s a different story. Democrats do whatever they want with no repercussions.

What am I referring to?

Earlier this month, the CDP went through its process to determine which of the two Democratic candidates in the runoff election of the 43rd Assembly district would be officially endorsed by the party. The people making this decision are delegates, some elected, some appointed by elected governmental officeholders (Congress, Assembly, statewide, etc.). Both candidates had worked on getting as many of their supporters as possible into the delegate positions.

Just as with other elections, a “vote-by-mail” option is available to the delegates. They can sign a ballot indicating their preferred candidate rather than showing up on the day of the election. Glendale’s thrice elected City Clerk Ardy Kasskahian had more delegate votes than Laura Friedman, in each round of party-endorsement voting leading up to this final showdown before the November election but… were it only that simple.

Friedman’s campaign consultant, Parke Skelton found a way to “invalidate” some of Kassakhian’s votes by crying and accusing Kassakhian supporters of “illegal” activities. The party went along with this even though there were no provisions in the State Party bylaws to support the Skelton/Friedman allegations.

Skelton is very good at what he does. What he does often descends in dirty tricks. In this case, he noticed that the dates on some of Kassakhian’s supporters’ ballots were earlier than the date of their formal appointment as delegates. Sure, this is technically, formalistically, ritualistically, speaking, an issue, though not one that invalidates a vote baesd on the party’s rules. But in reality, what difference does it make? Were those people going to vote differently? Were they not going to be appointed as delegates? Spare me… And, to top it all off, Skelton ended up screwing over one of his Northern California clients who had done the same thing as Kassakhian. Win some, lose some. Disenfrachise anyone and particularly the district’s Armenian community. That’s what the Democratic Party did and condoned by going along with Skelton’s accusations.

That was this summer. Last summer – 2015, you might remember, an election was held for the 43rd Assembly District’s 14 elected delegates to replace a January 2015 election voided by, you guessed it, the CDP. It was the result of nothing but an effort supported by the current Assemblymember, Mike Gatto, to unseat a slate of delegates who won. The slate was called Democrats United. It included members and activists from all of the local grassroots democratic clubs, among them many Armenians. In fact, it included more Armenians than the slate that Friedman and Gatto had been pushing under a misleading banner of being “progressive.” The election was invalidated and held again under the careful, watchful, eye of the Democratic Party only to have similar results. In fact, the second election proved to be an even bigger defeat for the Gatto-Friedman camp than the first one. Mark Twain once said that “It’s better to remain silent and be thought of as a fool, than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.” But the line between perceptions and reality is often blurred by those who seek a certain outcome and to try to manipulate the process.

These are the kinds of shenanigans that lend credence to those who want to discredit the Democratic Party’s claims to be broadly representative and inclusive. This seems to hit the Armenian community of the region with uncommon frequency. If you were at the receiving end of such exclusionary actions, how would you feel? What would you think of the party? Who would you vote for if you thought the party didn’t want you?

The authorities of the CDP should really take stock and reconsider their invalidation of the delegates’ ballots. In one case (2015) they decided to hold a revote, draining significant time and resources, at the whining and behest of a grown adult Assembly member and his ultra-loyalists. In the other (2016) instance, where a revote would have been quick, easy, and the appropriate action to take, they decided to invalidate the results and postpone a review of their own decision to November 16. That’s more than a week after the November 8 election. At that point, whatever they conclude, it will be inconsequential because it will have absolutely no impact on the election.

Politics is a brutal game requiring sincere and intense participation. Jump in and defend everyone’s right to be counted. More importantly, remember the 43rd! This is the district where the Armenian community’s votes have been marginalized, brutalized, vilified, and taken for granted. Every vote should count – regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, or creed. To not count them or give them the opportunity to be counted reeks of the tactics that party bosses used to use to disenfranchise other minorities in this county not too long ago.

Contact the party and let them know how you feel! The endless summer of discontent must come to an end. It’s time to stand up and be counted.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Invasion, Syria, Turkish

US says clashes between Turkish forces and opposition in Syria ‘unacceptable’

August 29, 2016 By administrator

turkish-invasionThe United States criticized clashes between Turkish forces and some opposition groups in northern Syria on Aug. 29 as “unacceptable” and called on all armed actors in the fighting to stand down and focus on the fight against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

“We want to make clear that we find these clashes – in areas where ISIL is not located – unacceptable and a source of deep concern,” Brett McGurk, the special presidential envoy for the coalition to counter ISIL, said on his official Twitter account, citing a defense department statement.

“We call on all armed actors to stand down… the U.S. is actively engaged to facilitate such deconfliction and unity of focus on ISIL, which remains a lethal and common threat.”

Turkey and its Syrian rebel allies seized territory controlled by Kurdish-aligned forces on Aug. 29, the fifth day of a cross-border campaign.

Turkish officials say their goal in Syria is to drive out ISIL but also to ensure the People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia, the military wing of the Democratic Union Party (PYD) in Syria, which Ankara says directly linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), do not expand the territory they already control along Turkey’s border.

The YPG fighters are backed by the United States in the fight against ISIL in Syria.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Invasion, Syria, u.s. turkey

Reports: Turkey invasion of Syria in progress: Army spotted near Aleppo

May 31, 2016 By administrator

ggr-925Turkey has reportedly launched a ground invasion of Syria over the memorial day weekend. Their army units are currently being spotted in vicinity of Aleppo.

Reports first broke Friday on the Al Mayadeen TV Channel that Turkish soldiers had set a checkpoint near the city of Afrin, a predominately Kurdish city located 60 km Northwest of Aleppo province. Prior to the troop movement, Turkish artillery had barraged areas of the Syrian Aleppo province including Menagh Military Airbase (50km from Aleppo), a captured ISIS airbase occupied by Kurdish People’s Protection Units near the city of Azaz. Pravda reported the strikes hit civilian homes.

On Monday, Ahmet Arac, a member of the Democratic Majlis of Syria and of the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PDS) confirmed to Sputnik the validity of previous reports Erdogan’s forces had crossed the Turkish-Syrian border Friday.

“Yesterday the Turkish Army carried out rocket attacks on the positions of Democratic Forces of Syria,” Arac said. “Two days ago, the Turkish military entered the village of Hamam in Afrin area. We are ready to repel any attack. Meanwhile, FSA units are suffering serious defeat in clashes with Daesh. They have already lost control of 12 villages. If Daesh comes to Azaz, ‘Democratic Syrian Forces’ will repel the jihadists, and not allow them to enter the city.” Arac warned.

On Tuesday FARS News Agency, Tehran’s unofficial mouthpiece, reported that several units of the Turkish Army had crossed the border with Aleppo province in Northern Syria and have deployed forces in vicinity of Azaz and Marea. FNA quoted Sputnik’s Monday source, Ahmet Arac, as saying that “hundreds of the Turkish soldiers crossed the Syrian border at Bab al-Salameh border-crossing and deployed their forces in al-Shahba’a region near Marea and Azaz.”

“The Turkish Armed Forces are preparing an offensive in the Azaz and Marea regions that have been the scenes of tough battles between the ISIL terrorists and its rival group of the Free Syrian Army,” Arac said.

Arac also said the Turkish Army had carried out rocket attacks Sunday on the positions of Democratic Forces of Syria and that on Saturday Turkish military forces had once again crossed into Syria, were heading toward the Northern province of Aleppo, and had set up a checkpoint in the region.

The FNA article also stated that a large number of Turkish soldiers, accompanied by several armored vehicles, entered the territory of Syria from Jandires region, 700 meter away from the Northwestern lands of Aleppo, and set up a military checkpoint to monitor civilians’ movements in the border region.

ERDOGAN’S LINK TO ISIS

If true, these latest moves by Erdogan’s regime constitute an outright invasion of Syrian sovereignty. Syrian President Bashar Assad has previously condemned Turkey as a complicit arm of ISIS, and has said that the insurgent forces are receiving physical aid from the government of both Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

In an interview with Sputnik on March 31st Assad said:

“..Turkey, as well as Saudi Arabia, have crossed all possible red lines, possibly from the first weeks of the Syrian war. Today, the war against Erdogan and against Saudi Arabia is a war against terrorists. The Turkish army, which is not even Turkish, is Erdogan’s army that is fighting today in Syria. Everything that Ankara and Riyadh have done from the very beginning can be considered aggression. Aggression in a political sense or in a military sense – providing terrorists with arms – or direct aggression with the use of artillery, and other military violations. Erdogan is directly supporting the terrorists as he allows them to move into Turkish territory, to carry out maneuvers with tanks. This concerns not only individuals, he finances them [terrorists] through Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and through Turkey itself, of course. Turkey trades oil that has been stolen by IS (Islamic State, Daesh), at the same time carrying out artillery attacks against the Syrian army – when it moves close – in order to help the terrorists. They are terrorists and when we attack these terrorists in Syria, this leads to Erdogan’s direct defeat..”

But if true, what exactly does Turkey look to accomplish by this land incursion and directly supporting ISIS? Andrei Manoilo, Doctor of Political Sciences and a Professor at Moscow State University told Pravda that:

“I think that Turkey is going to unblock a part of the Syrian-Turkish border, because the Russian and Syrian forces, as well as Kurdish units, intend to take the Syrian-Turkish border entirely under their control to cut the channels of illegal arms supplies from Turkey to the terrorist group in Aleppo. Storming a large city is always extremely difficult. Terrorists from Jabhat en-Nusra and ISIL still hold a half of the city. If they are deprived of supplies, if their channels are cut, then the group in Aleppo is doomed to destruction. Turkey does not like such a prospect, so they intend to change the situation – they need to push the Syrian troops away from the border.”

Previously, TRUNEWS has reported on the insidious relationship between Turkey and ISIS, as well as the oil trade which has fueled the barbarous terrorist organization.

Source: http://www.trunews.com/turkey-invades-syria-army-spotted-near-aleppo/#eFcrcVAOWgoOGYLK.99

Source: https://www.superstation95.com/index.php/world/1401

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Invasion, Syria, Turkey

US Destroy Turkish consulate in Mosul To cover-up & destroy Evedance of Turkish Invasion of Mosul “ISIL-HQ”

April 4, 2016 By administrator

n_97265_1ISIL use Turkish consulate as headquarter to communicate directly with Ankara

Aircraft from a U.S.-led coalition have destroyed the Turkish consulate compound in Mosul, which has been occupied by fighters of the Islamist State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) since June 2014, the Turkish Foreign Ministry has said.

“The compound of our Mosul Consulate-General, which has been under DAESH [ISIL] occupation since 2014 and where, according to intelligence, high-level DAESH terrorists were occupying, was targeted and destroyed by war aircraft belonging to members of the International Coalition for the Fight against DAESH at 3 a.m. on April 4,” the Foreign Ministry said in a written statement issue early on April 4.

Around three months ago, U.S. officials contacted Ankara and informed that they had intelligence affirming that ISIL had turned the consulate general building virtually into “a headquarters,” and asked for permission to hit the building.

ISIL militants stormed Turkey’s consulate general in Mosul on June 11, 2014, taking hostage then-Consul General Öztürk Yılmaz, now a member of the parliament for the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), along with 48 other people. After being held for 101 days, the hostages were finally freed on Sept. 20, 2014, likely as a result of a swap deal that was not denied by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

April/04/2016

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Invasion, Mosul, Turkey, US

Turkish, Saudi invasion and annexation part of Syria not if but when

February 16, 2016 By administrator

Turkey and Saudi invadors

Turkey and Saudi invadors

Rumors have long circulated that Turkey is planning to send ground troops to Syria. Although Ankara has repeatedly denied these claims, the ruling AKP party in fact wants to annex northern part of the war-torn Arab country, Professor Michel Chossudovsky told Radio Sputnik.

“Forthcoming planned invasion of Syria” by Turkish and Saudi ground forces, according to the geopolitical analyst, was discussed at the NATO headquarters on the same day a ceasefire agreement was reached at the Munich security conference. Director of the Centre for Research on Globalization added that Turkish and Saudi representatives were present at Friday’s meeting, which was chaired by US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter.

“Turkish forces are already [in Syria],” Chossudovsky noted, referring to the unconfirmed reports that Ankara allowed approximately 100 “Turkish soldiers or mercenaries” to cross into Syria in order to support rebels fighting against President Bashar al-Assad.

The new development in this context, according to the analyst, is “the fact that Saudi Arabia at the request of the United States would be involved in ground operations under the pretext of going after [Daesh] fighters, which happen to be supported, recruited and funded by Saudi Arabia.”

Saudi officials made headlines earlier this month by confirming that Riyadh was ready to send conventional ground forces or special operations troops to Syria should the US-led coalition opt for this scenario. The operation, if launched, will ostensibly be aimed against Daesh, but many say that the oil kingdom in fact wants to prop Islamic radicals up.

Riyadh “is acting on the behalf of the United States. In effect, this means that US-supported forces would be inside Syria if this process goes ahead,” Chossudovsky observed. For its part, Turkey “is not a 100-percent proxy of the United States. It has its own agenda. … It wants to annex part of Syrian territory.”

The geopolitical analyst also mentioned that the operation is coordinated “at the level of NATO and the Pentagon.” If so, then “what we are dealing with is not an invasion by Turkey and Saudi Arabia; it is an invasion which is sponsored by the United States,” Chossudovsky asserted.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 400 Saudi militants fight in Syria: Report, Invasion, saudi, Syria, Turkish

ISIS Godfather Davutoglu says: Syria invasion plan? Turkey will defend its ‘Aleppo brothers,

February 10, 2016 By administrator

Davutoglu imageTurkish PM Ahmet Davutoglu pledged to return a “historical debt” to Turkey’s “Aleppo brothers” who helped defend the country in the early 20th century, just days after Russia warned of Ankara’s intentions to invade Syria as the rebels there falter.

“We will return our historic debt. At one time, our brothers from Aleppo defended our cities of Sanliurfa, Gaziantep, Kahramanmaras, now we will defend the heroic Aleppo. All of Turkey stands behind its defenders,” Davutoglu said at the meeting of the Party of Justice and Development parliamentary faction, which he heads.

Davutoglu was apparently referring to World War One and subsequent events in the Turkish War of Independence, seemingly glorifying the defense and retaking of Turkish cities from the Allied forces. Yet, he failed to mention that the Turks had been drawn into the war by Ottoman imperial ambitions. Turkey had entered the conflict by shelling the Russian port of Odessa from the sea. It then suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of Russian troops in the war’s southern theater, before the Ottoman Empire was occupied and divided by the Allies. At the time, the three cities Davutoglu named saw thousands of Armenians and other minorities slaughtered by Turkish nationalists as part of the Armenian Genocide, which Ankara denies to this day.

Alarmingly, the statement comes less than a week after Russia’s Defense Ministry warned that Turkey was preparing a military invasion of Syria and is trying to conceal illegal activity on its Syrian border.

“We have significant evidence to suspect Turkey is in the midst of intense preparations for a military invasion into Syria’s sovereign territory,” Defense Ministry spokesman Major General Igor Konashenkov told reporters in Moscow.

Konashenkov also stated that Turkey had canceled an agreed upon Russian observation flight that had been scheduled over its territory because of its illicit activities. “So if someone in Ankara thinks that the cancelation of the flight by the Russian observers will enable hiding something, then they’re unprofessional.”

Moreover, Konashenkov pointed out that Turkey has already been supplying terrorists in the Syrian cities of Idlib and Aleppo with manpower and weaponry.

The spokesman showed the media a photo of the Reyhanli checkpoint, saying that “through this very border crossing – mainly at nighttime – the militants, who seized the city of Aleppo and Idlib in northwestern Syria, are being supplied with arms and fighters from Turkish territory.”

The alarming new developments come as jihadi forces fighting President Bashar Assad’s army in northern Syria are suffering losses and retreating to the Turkish border.

Moscow had provided the international community earlier with video evidence that Turkish artillery had fired on populated Syrian areas in the north of Latakia Province. 

READ MORE: Turkey shuts off YouTube after ‘Syria invasion plan’ leak

Meanwhile, Turkey has denied any plans to invade Syria. “Turkey doesn’t have any plans or intentions to begin a military campaign or ground operations on Syrian territory,” Reuters cited a senior Turkish government official as saying.

This is not the first time alleged plans by Turkey to invade Syria have been reported. In 2014, Turkey shut off access to YouTube after an explosive leak of audiotapes revealed that its ministers had been discussing how to stage a provocation that could justify a military intervention in Syria.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Davutoglu, Invasion, Syria, Turkey

Turkey Creating ISIS false Flag operation in Iraq to justify troop invasion of Iraq

January 8, 2016 By administrator

Illustration, gagrulnet

Illustration, gagrulenet

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan defended on Friday Turkish troop deployment in a base in northern Iraq after Turkish officials said soldiers there repelled an attack by Islamic State (IS) militants, Today’s Zaman reported.
Eighteen IS militants were killed in the attack on the Bashiqa camp in the Nineveh province, about 140 kilometers (90 miles) from the Turkish border, where Turkish soldiers are training Iraqi Kurdish forces, Erdogan told reporters in Istanbul. There were no casualties among the Turkish troops, he said.

Erdogan said the incident vindicated a Turkish decision to deploy troops to the camp and reiterated that the Turkish deployment had been in coordination with the Iraqi government, despite recent Iraqi protests against the Turkish military presence.

Erdogan said the Iraqi position has changed after Turkey’s relations with Russia deteriorated following the downing of a Russian jet by Turkish F-16s near the border with Syria in late November and criticized the Russian military involvement in Syria.

“Russia says it is in Syria because it was invited by the Syrian government. The Syrian government is not a legitimate government,” he said. “Why did you send forces to Georgia then? Because you were invited? Did you send forces to Ukraine because you were invited there?”
Erdogan also rejected that Russian forces are fighting ISIL in Syria. “Turkmens say Russia bombs their villages. Russia is not fighting against IS,” he said.
Turkey deployed a force protection unit of around 150 troops last month, citing heightened security risks near Bashiqa, where its troops are training the Iraqi militia to fight IS, and stirring a diplomatic row.
Iraq has objected to the deployment and Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi accused Ankara last week of failing to respect an agreement to withdraw the troops. Iraq’s foreign minister warned Baghdad could resort to military action if forced.
Iraqi security forces have had only a limited presence in the Nineveh province, where the camp is located, since collapsing in June 2014 in the face of a lightning advance by IS.
Ankara has acknowledged there was a “miscommunication” with Baghdad over the deployment.
It later withdrew some troops to another base inside the nearby autonomous Kurdistan region and said it would continue to pull out of the Nineveh province, where Bashiqa is located, but President Erdogn has ruled out a full withdrawal.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Invasion, Mosul, Turkey

Iraqi Resistance force attack Turkish Iraqi invasion soldiers 5 injured in second attack at Bashiqa camp

December 28, 2015 By administrator

n_93097_1Five Turkish soldiers sustained injuries on Dec. 27 in the second attack this month on Bashiqa training camp in northern Iraq, Turkish sources have said.

Turkey deployed around 150 troops to the Bashiqa area earlier this month with the stated aim of training an Iraqi militia.

The Turkish soldiers’ presence in Iraq recently turned into a row between the two neighboring countries.

The additional deployment of Turkish troops to the Bashiqa camp kicked off an angry exchange between the two capitals.

Turkey said on Dec. 14 that some of its troops had begun leaving as part of reorganization, but Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s spokesman said it was not enough.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Invasion, Iraq, Turkey

Land Grab: ‘Disintegration of Iraq Major Objective of Turkish Invasion’

December 19, 2015 By administrator

© AFP 2015/ MUSTAFA OZER

© AFP 2015/ MUSTAFA OZER

Turkey’s invasion into northern Iraq could well be part of a plan to split Iraq into three separate states, undertaken with the approval of the US, while the recent Daesh attack on the Turkish troops plays right into the hands of Ankara, according to Russian political analyst and Middle East expert Semyon Bagdasarov.

The rocket attack at a base in northern Iraq where Turkish troops are currently stationed was solely to the benefit of the Turkish leadership, Semyon Bagdasarov, who is also the Director of the Center for the Middle East and Central Asian Studies, told Radio Sputnik.

On Wednesday, Daesh militants fired rockets at a base in northern Iraq, as they launched a wave of attacks against Kurdish forces.

The Turkish Armed Forces said its soldiers returned fire, with four of them sustaining minor injuries.

The expert says that it could well have been a planned act by Ankara.

“In fact, it is all about [the city of] Mosul — who takes Mosul and kicks Daesh out. The Turks want control over it. Well, in the worst case, jointly with Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga forces. To be more exact, with the Iraqi Kurdistan Democratic Party, led and controlled by Masoud Barzani, with whom the Turks, altogether, have a good relationship.”

“So, incredible as it may seem, this strike plays into the hands of the Turkish leaders, who will now justify the country’s presence there and the increase of its military contingent,” said Bagdasarov.

His words have already been supported by the statement of the Turkish foreign ministry that Wednesday’s fighting demonstrated it had been right to send additional forces to protect its personnel.

“This attack showed how legitimate our concerns were about the security of Bashiqa camp,” it said.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu also said that Wednesday attack on its Iraq base by Daesh militants “justified the recent military deployment”.

Bagdasarov therefore said that it was, in fact, “an occupation of a territory of a different state” which Iraq is unable to withstand.

“In this case there could be only one appropriate countermeasure  — military. However the fact is that there is almost no Iraqi army present in this region, it is mostly the Turks and Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga. And the reality is that Iraq is unable to resist the Turkish aggression. The Iraqi army is very weak on the ground. But the conflict is ripening and it is only the matter of time when there will be a clash between the Iraqis and the Turks.”

It is impossible that the Turkish military invasion of Iraq could have occurred without US approval.

“I think that the decision to bring the Turkish military into the Iraqi territory has been agreed upon with the US. And America’s current inaction speaks volumes. Then right after it there emerged information that US, Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan decided to meet first in Ankara and then in Erbil to discuss the future of Iraq. Without Baghdad, without the central government. And it is easy to figure out what future for Iraq they foresee.”

“And several months ago one of America’s generals announced in a soldierly way that a unified Iraq ceased to exist. So we should regard three separate states: Iraqi Kurdistan, Shia state in Baghdad and Sunni Mosul.”

“So I think it is all about the implementation of this very project with the help of Turkey, moreover that it is now a member of the Saudi-led coalition on the fight against terrorism. All the above is going to be implemented on the Iraqi territory and, I am afraid, on the Syrian as well.”

Three goals of the Saudi-led coalition

The expert explained that the coalition proclaims its aim as the fight against Daesh. It is forming a special forces out of the servicemen of its member states. The second aim is the so-called protection of civilians.

“Such a wording often conceals the desire to topple President Assad, accusing him of alleged fight against peaceful civilians,” he said.

The third aim is the ideological counter-strategy against Daesh.

“The Turks will carry it out from the Iraqi territory they will seize under their control. And I think, most likely from part of the Syrian territory.”

“There, many understand that the new borders are being shaped out. And it is very important who will own what. Thus we are witnessing some stepping-up with everyone claiming that they are fighting against Daesh.”

Source: sputniknews.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Invasion, Iraq, land-grab, Turkey

Iraq calls for UN Security Council resolution condemning Turkish invasion

December 19, 2015 By administrator

Iraqi FMIraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim Jaafari told the UN Security Council that Turkey had invaded Iraqi territory without permission, and asked for a Council resolution condemning the invasion and ordering the withdrawal of Turkish troops, Sputniknews.com reports.
Earlier this month, Turkey deployed about 150 troops and 25 tanks to a base in the Iraqi Nineveh province, without Baghdad’s approval. Baghdad regards the deployment as illegal.

“Iraq is requesting the Security Council to assume its international legal responsibilities under the UN Charter, and to adopt a clear and explicit resolution includes the following, first, condemnation of the Turkish occupation and illegal incursion against the will of a founding member state of the UN, in breaching the rules and provisions of the UN Charter and the norms of international law. Second, demanding Turkey to withdraw its troops immediately,” Jaafari told the UN Security Council of Friday.
Last week, the Iraqi Foreign Ministry said it had officially filed a complaint with the UN Security Council, calling on the United Nations to ensure an immediate withdrawal of the Turkish forces from its country’s territory.

Jaafari told the Council on Friday that Iraq retains its right of self-defense and is ready to take all necessary measures to end Turkey’s “hostile act” if it is carried out again.

The Turkish authorities reported after the Nineveh incident that their troops had entered Iraq to ensure the security of the Turkish soldiers deployed earlier at the base to train local militias, fighting against terrorist groups.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: call, Invasion, Iraq, Turkey, UN Security Council

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