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Terrorist State of Turkey Erdogan is Terrified Over Prospects of Russian Dialogue With Kurds

December 24, 2015 By administrator

1032272354Ankara is closely following the intensification of Russian-Kurdish contacts, fearing that Moscow will use its contacts with Syrian and Turkish Kurds to undermine Turkish influence in the region, according to Lebanese newspaper Ad-Diyar.

“Russia knows exactly how to push its geopolitical opponents’ buttons,” the newspaper suggests, noting that Turkey’s decision to shoot down a Russian Su-24 bomber over Syria last month only intensified the geopolitical competition between Moscow and Ankara, with “Moscow punishing Ankara politically and economically, and now, by exercising its influence in an area which is particularly sensitive for Turkey – the Kurdish question.”

On Wednesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held talks with Selahattin Demirtas, the co-chairman of the Turkish pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP), the country’s third-largest parliamentary group, and second-largest opposition party.

The opposition leader criticized the ruling Justice and Development Party government’s actions, adding that “a solution that won’t harm our two nations should be found.” For his part, Lavrov reiterated that Russia’s conflict was with the Turkish government, not the Turkish people. 

According to Ad-Diyar, Russia understands that by strengthening its relations with the Kurds, in Syria, Iraq and Turkey itself, it can put significant pressure on Erdogan, both domestically and in the region. 

Recalling the Kurds’ intention to seek autonomy in northern Syria, the paper noted that “to this end, Russia insisted last week on the need to give the Democratic Union Party, the Syrian Kurdish party associated with the [banned] Turkish Kurdistan Workers’ Party, a seat at the negotiating table alongside other Syrian opposition groups.” 

Ultimately, the prospects for Kurdish autonomy, accordingly, could result in northern Syria “becoming a fertile stronghold for PKK activity,” with the group gaining the capability of launching strikes into Turkey from northern Syria, something which “would be disastrous for Ankara.”

As far as Demirtas and his visit to Moscow is concerned, Ad-Diyar suggested that the meeting with the Russian foreign minister was aimed at demonstrating Turkish Kurds’ independence, and their ability to gain Moscow’s political support. “Demirtas wants to show Erdogan that the Kurds are a political force which cannot be pushed aside at election-time, or crushed in the streets.”

Moreover, the visit, the paper noted, came at a sensitive time, with the smoldering conflict between Ankara and the PKK igniting into all-out military conflict this past summer, with Turkish security forces launching large-scale military operations involving nearly 10,000 personnel, and Erdogan promising to “annihilate” PKK members in their homes. Iraqi and Syrian Kurds, meanwhile, have accused Ankara of repeatedly bombing them in recent months, amidst their campaigns to defend against assaults from Daesh (ISIL/ISIS).

“The Russians,” Ad-Diyar concludes, “are adept at identifying their opponents’ perceived weak points, and then exerting pressure on them. In the case of Turkey, Moscow has found a weak point, in the form of the Kurds…and can find inspiration in a quote by veteran Turkish journalist Cengiz Gandar, who recently wrote in Turkey’s Radikal newspaper that “if you invite a bear to dance, it is not you who decides when the dance is over –it’s the bear.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: erdogan terrified, Kurd, Russia

Los Angeles: Armenians, Kurds protest against human rights situation in Turkey

December 24, 2015 By administrator

202912Dozens of local activists and community members gathered at the Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles to protest the recent assassination of human rights activist and lawyer Tahir Elçi, the Armenian Weekly reports.

Elçi was the president of the Diyarbakir Bar Association and one of the most prominent Kurdish lawyers and human rights defenders in Turkey. He was shot dead with a single bullet to the back of his head on November 28. Elçi died moments after delivering a speech calling for an end to the ongoing military siege of Kurdish cities in southeastern Turkey.

Protesters demanded accountability from the Turkish government, namely, the AK Party and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Members of various communities affected by Turkey’s atmosphere of racism, intimidation, and fear came together in solidarity to honor Elçi and other victims of Turkish oppression. Kurdish, Armenian, and various Middle Eastern community members were in attendance along with human rights organizations and community coalitions.

The protest, organized by the Rojava Solidarity Committee of Los Angeles and the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF), called for a fair and independent investigation of the murders of Elçi, Hrant Dink, and Sevag Balikci, and all other minority hate crimes in Turkey, as well as an end to government-sanctioned massacres of minorities, including lifting the siege on Kurdish cities, stopping the bombing of guerrilla camps, and stopping support of terror groups in Syria.

They also demanded that the U.S. government stop its support of the Turkish government, banning all arms sales to the AKP government, and suspending Turkey from NATO.

Chalk-outlines of human figures, symbolizing the bodies of Elçi and Dink, were drawn outside the Turkish Consulate’s front steps, turning the protest into the scene of a crime.

Photo. Reuters
Related links:

The Armenian Weekly. Armenians, Kurds Hold Protest Action in LA

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, Kurd, LA, Protest

Istanbul police fire tear gas on protesters rallying over crackdown in Kurdish areas

December 20, 2015 By administrator

5676c616c46188b76c8b461eTurkish police have fired tear gas on several hundred protesters in Taksim Square in Istanbul, Reuters reports.

The protesters gathered to demonstrate against security operations and curfews in the southeast, where more than 100 have been killed this week.

The offensive in the largely Kurdish region began last week in an effort to “cleanse” the area of Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) “militants.”

In Istanbul, riot police chased protesters and pushed shoppers and tourists out of the way. Shops closed their shutters and at least two protesters have been detained.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: İstanbul, Kurd, Protest

TURKEY More than 100 dead in five days in a huge anti Kurdish PKK military operation

December 20, 2015 By administrator

arton120068-480x314One hundred and two suspected rebels of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) were killed during a major military offensive underway for five days in the southeast of Turkey Kurdish majority, according to a new assessment on Sunday by a source local security. At least two soldiers and five civilians were killed in the clashes, did we further clarified same source. The military launched Wednesday in conjunction with the special forces of the police a major operation with the objective of dislodging the militants of the rebel movement in urban centers.

A total of 10,000 men supported by tanks were mobilized to this offensive of unprecedented scale that focuses on two towns near the Syrian and Iraqi border, Cizre and Silopi (Sirnak province). The two towns are both under curfew. An earlier toll provided by the army Saturday killed 70 militants.

The armed forces chief, General Hulusi Akar it, paid a visit to his troops Saturday in the region and was informed of the progress of the operation. After more than two years of cease-fire, deadly fighting resumed last summer between Turkish security forces and the PKK, shattering the peace talks in 2012 to end a ongoing conflict since 1984.

The PKK militants, especially young people, have benefited from a two-year lull to settle in cities, digging trenches and erecting barricades to prevent entry of security forces. A strategy that has crippled these towns, forcing tens of thousands to flee the fighting.

With the victory of his party in the parliamentary elections of November 1, the Islamic-conservative President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reaffirmed its commitment to “eradicate” the PKK. These operations have sparked outrage many political opponents and part of civil society.

Diyarbakir (Turkey), December 20, 2015 (AFP) –

Sunday, December 20, 2015,
Ara © armenews.com

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

Turkey Headed Toward Civil War “30 million Kurd uprising against Turkish occupation”

December 19, 2015 By administrator

1032032962Dozens of Kurdish fighters and several Turkish soldiers have lost their lives in bloody clashes in Turkey’s southeast this week, and the shadow of civil war is increasingly seen day by day.

Increasingly, signs that ongoing clashes between Turkish security forces and Kurdish fighters may soon turn into a full-scale civil war, with much of the Kurdish population involved, have caused deep concern.

Ankara’s hardline politicians and Turkish nationalists across the country are pouring oil onto the flames with violent rhetoric.

“The operations carried out by the Turkish Armed Forces, gendarmerie and police will continue in the region in a steadfast manner until public security is established,” a recent statement by Turkey’s General Staff reads.

Over a hundred fighters from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) have been killed in action in the south-east province of Sirnak this week, according to Turkish media. In a full-scale military operation launched on Tuesday, two government soldiers were killed while 23 others, including members of the police, were injured.

This course of events is what many have been warning against.

“When we see these moves, we will know that Pandora’s Box has been opened and we can expect that both sides are heading to a level of violence that could become a civil war,” Metin Gurcan, a Turkish analyst, wrote for Al Monitor earlier this week.

Before the “anti-PKK” operation, as the Turks call their military actions in Cizre, Silopi, and other spots, both PKK and the government forces had been telling civilians to leave the area or go into hiding. Now, peace in this part of the Middle East looks a lot like war.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: civil war, Kurd, Turkey

Turkey: HDP co-chair questions gov’t over ‘cleansing’ in curfew towns

December 19, 2015 By administrator

AA Photo

AA Photo

Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) co-chair Selahattin Demirtaş has questioned comments made by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) government asserting military operations would continue until the towns under curfew in Turkey’s southeast were fully “cleansed” of militants, during a joint press conference with the co-leaders of the HDP, the Democratic Society Congress (DTK) and the Democratic Regions Party (DBP).

“You [the AKP] conduct military operations in Cizre with the attendance of six generals, 36 colonels and 10,000 soldiers against 20 PKK members,” Demirtaş said, referring to the ongoing operations against  Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militants in southeastern Şırnak’s Cizre district.
“Is this your understanding of a cleansing operation?” he questioned, adding the situation only displayed the extent of the government’s helplessness.

Defining the locals in Cizre as “advocates of an honorable, respectful cause,” Demirtaş argued the heart of the matter was people’s willingness to leave freely and humanely.

Demirtaş also announced the DTK would hold an extraordinary congress on Feb. 26 and 27, 2016, where it will reach important decisions on autonomy.

“We will hold discussions strengthening the foundations of self-governance and autonomy, and we will take important decisions on furthering our goals in the political arena. We will realize all the decisions we take,” he told reporters.

December/18/2015

Source: hurriyetdailynews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: cleansing, Kurd, Turkey

How ISIS Oil Flows Through Turkey And Israel On Its Way To Europe

December 18, 2015 By administrator

Kurdish Smugglers and Turkish elite transport Daesh’s oil

Kurdish Smugglers and Turkish elite transport Daesh’s oil

Representatives of Daesh insist that they aren’t deliberately selling oil to Israel, but the “black gold” ends up there nonetheless, while millions continue to line the terrorist group’s pockets.

By Kit O’Connell,

RAQQA, Syria — It’s widely recognized that Daesh (the Arabic acronym for the terrorist group often called IS, ISIS or ISIL in the West) depends on oil sales to fuel its armies. Until recently, it’s been less clear who is buying Daesh’s oil, and how it ends up in their hands.

However, recent reports suggest that the oil flows to Europe and Asia through a complex process that implicates allies of the United States like Turkey and Israel. The U.S. is also facing increasing criticism for its failure to target the terrorist group’s oil infrastructure in a serious way until recently.

Cam Simpson and Matthew Philips, writing in November for Bloomberg Businessweek, called recent U.S. attacks on oil trucks an attempt by the Obama administration to “quietly” fix a “colossal miscalculation.” Government experts now argue that the U.S. dramatically underestimated Daesh’s oil profits:

“The Obama administration ‘misunderstood the [oil] problem at first, and then they wildly overestimated the impact of what they did,’ says Benjamin Bahney, an international policy analyst at the Rand Corp., a U.S. Department of Defense-funded think tank, where he helped lead a 2010 study on [Daesh’s] finances and back-office operations based on captured ledgers.”

U.S. intelligence officials now believe Daesh is making at least $500 million from oil sales each year, $400 million more than previous official estimates. “You have to go after the oil, and you have to do it in a serious way, and we’ve just begun to do that now,” Bahney told Bloomberg.

Officials also cited potential civilian casualties to explain their reluctance to go after truckers transporting oil from Daesh-controlled territories. That reluctance apparently ended on Nov. 16, when the U.S. destroyed 116 oil trucks after airplanes “first dropped leaflets warning drivers to scatter.”

Reluctance to harm civilians hasn’t prevented the U.S. from creating high civilian death tolls on other fronts of the “global war on terror.” In August, Airwars, a coalition of independent journalists, estimated that at least 459 civilians had been killed in U.S. airstrikes on Daesh, and those numbers are continuing to rise, with the group’s most conservative estimate of civilian casualties now standing at least 682. Additionally, U.S. drone strikes have proven especially ineffective, hitting more civilians than members of al-Qaida, according to a September report from the United Nations.

Recent developments suggest that U.S. allies directly benefit from the flow of cheap terrorist oil and, given the United States’ role in the creation of Daesh, this could suggest that the reluctance to target Daesh’s oil profits prior to the Paris attacks may be motivated by self-interest.

 

How ISIS Oil Reaches Israel

On Nov. 26, Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, a London-based media outlet focusing on the Arabic world, published a detailed investigation tracing Daesh’s oil from the massive oilfields in Iraq and Syria to refineries in Israel, where it’s ultimately exported to Europe.

The enormous scale of Daesh’s oil production infrastructure in the Middle East is further evidence of the importance of energy exports to the group. The oil is first extracted from captured oil fields:

“IS oil production in Syria is focused on the Conoco and al-Taim oil fields, west and northwest of Deir Ezzor, while in Iraq the group uses al-Najma and al-Qayara fields near Mosul. A number of smaller fields in both Iraq and Syria are used by the group for local energy needs.

According to estimates based on the number of oil tankers that leave Iraq, in addition to al-Araby’s sources in the Turkish town of Sirnak on the border with Iraq, through which smuggled oil transits, IS is producing an average of 30,000 barrels a day from the Iraqi and Syrian oil fields it controls.”

Unfortunately, like many reports on the topic, many of Al-Araby’s sources remain anonymous for their own safety. A member of the Iraqi intelligence services informed the reporters about the complex path the oil takes, traveling in dozens of tankers at a time into Zahko, a city controlled by Iraqi Kurds near the border with Turkey:

“After [Daesh] oil lorries arrive in Zakho – normally 70 to 100 of them at a time – they are met by oil smuggling mafias, a mix of Syrian and Iraqi Kurds, in addition to some Turks and Iranians,” the colonel continued.”

The gangs compete in sometimes deadly bidding wars to purchase and smuggle the oil onto the next stage, and “[t]he highest bidder pays between 10 and 25 percent of the oil’s value in cash — US dollars — and the remainder is paid later, according to the colonel.”

These “oil mafias” then bring the product to rudimentary refineries for simple processing from crude into oil, “because Turkish authorities do not allow crude oil to cross the border if it is not licensed by the Iraqi government,” the colonel explained.

Al-Araby’s sources reported that from Turkey the oil flows through three ports — Mersin, Dortyol and Ceyhan — into Israel. And from Israel, the oil seeps into Europe:

“According to a European official at an international oil company who met with al-Araby in a Gulf capital, Israel refines the oil only ‘once or twice’ because it does not have advanced refineries. It exports the oil to Mediterranean countries – where the oil “gains a semi-legitimate status” – for $30 to $35 a barrel.”

Reports also suggests that Daesh’s oil is not just passing through Turkish soil on its way to Israel, but also being aided in its journey by the country’s elite. A July investigation by AWD News accused Bilal Erdoğan, son of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, of owning one of the maritime companies responsible for shipping this contraband oil:

“Bilal Erdoğan who owns several maritime companies, had allegedly signed contracts with European operating companies to carry Iraqi stolen oil to different Asian countries. Turkish government unwittingly supports ISIS by buying Iraqi plundered oil which is being produced from the Iraqi sized oil wells. Bilal Erdoğan’s maritime companies own special wharfs in Beirut and Ceyhan ports transporting [Daesh]’s smuggled crude oil in Japan-bound oil tankers.”

However, an anonymous writer on ZeroHedge, an economic news website, noted on Nov. 30 that while Bilal Erdoğan does seem to be moving Kurdish oil in his tankers, “we’ve yet to come across conclusive evidence of Bilal’s connection to [Daesh].”

In a Nov. 19 investigation, international security scholar and journalist Nafeez Ahmed, documented the mounting evidence of direct ties between Turkey and Daesh, noting that a Turkish daily reported that Daesh fighters had 100,000 fake Turkish passports, a number the U.S. Army’s Foreign Studies Military Office reported was likely exaggerated even as it corroborated reports of the flow of fake passports. Digging further, Ahmed cites a number of other credible reports, from a November Newsweek report that Daesh “sees Turkey as an ally,” to accusations of oil sales in Turkey from June 2014 by a member of Turkey’s opposition party, and leaked Turkish-language documents that show Saudi royalty shipped weapons to Daesh through Turkey.

An August report from Financial Times supports Al-Araby’s assertion that massive quantities of oil flow through the hands of Kurdish sellers into Israel. According to David Sheppard, John Reed and Anjli Raval, “Israel turns to Kurds for three-quarters of its oil supplies. They allege that Israel purchased about $1 billion in oil from the sellers between May and August of 2015.

In his analysis of the flow of oil, Shadowproof’s Dan Wright noted that Daesh seems “embarrassed” by the reports of oil sales to Israel. Al-Araby reported that “someone close to [Daesh]” reported via Skype:

‘To be fair, the organisation sells oil from caliphate territories but does not aim to sell it to Israel or any other country,’ he said. ‘It produces and sells it via mediators, then companies, who decide whom to sell it to.’”

Even without the potential ties to Daesh, Kurdish oil trading has proven controversial. The Iraqi government is struggling to put an end to the trade that they claim circumvents deals that were made to limit sales, while Kurdish officials claim the sales are necessary to maintain their financial independence. Iraq’s leaders are also threatening lawsuits against maritime shipping companies that accept Kurdish oil.

 

Russia weighs in on Erdogan oil smuggling

When Turkey shot down a Russian jet on Nov. 24, Russia responded by claiming the jet had been involved in an anti-terror mission targeting Daesh’s oil transportation infrastructure near the Turkey-Syria border:

“According to a press release from Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, [Sergei] Lavrov pointed out that, ‘by shooting down a Russian plane on a counter-terrorist mission of the Russian Aerospace Force in Syria, and one that did not violate Turkey’s airspace, the Turkish government has in effect sided with [Daesh].”

… The Russian Minister reminded his counterpart about Turkey’s involvement in the [Daesh’s] illegal trade in oil, which is transported via the area where the Russian plane was shot down, and about the terrorist infrastructure, arms and munitions depots and control centers that are also located there,”

Further complicating the tense international incident, WikiLeaks noted that a pseudonymous whistleblower on Twitter known as Fuat Avni claimed in October that Turkish President Erdogan was considering shooting down a Russian jet plane in order to leverage the resulting international tensions to boost his popularity both before and after recent elections.

RT reported that on Dec. 2, Russia’s Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov offered what he claimed was “proof concerning the illegal oil trade by [Daesh] and Ankara’s ties to it”:

“‘According to our data, the political leadership of the country [Turkey], including President Erdogan and his family, is involved in this criminal business,’ Antonov told the journalists in Moscow.”

Watch “Erdogan & his family involved in ISIS oil trade – Russian MoD” from RT:

https://youtu.be/oVZHhfodn_I

 

On Dec. 1, Newsweek reported Erdogan offered to resign if Russia could prove ties between his government and Daesh. But in his presentation of evidence, Lavrov said he doubted the promise:

“The Turkish leadership, particularly Erdogan, won’t resign and won’t acknowledge anything even if their faces will be smeared with the stolen oil.”

On Dec. 5, RT reported on the United States’ reluctance to acknowledge the involvement of Turkey, its ally in the region, in smuggling Daesh’s oil into Europe:

“‘[O]ur colleagues from the State Department and the Pentagon have confirmed that the photo-proof, which we presented at a briefing [on December 2], of the origin and destination of the stolen oil, coming from the areas controlled by the terrorists, is authentic,’ Major General Igor Konashenkov, a [Russian] Defense Ministry spokesman, told a media briefing on Saturday.

‘However, the U.S. claim that they ‘don’t see the border crossings with tanker trucks crossing the border,’ raises a smile, if only, because the photos are still images,’ he added.”

Konashenkov suggested the U.S. had too much to lose from accusing one of its own allies in the fight against Daesh of financially supporting the terrorist group:

“So when US officials claim that they do not see oil smuggled by terrorists to Turkey, this is already not dodging the issue, but smacks of a direct patronage.”

In November, John Pilger, an award-winning foreign affairs journalist, wrote an incisive analysis of Daesh for WikiLeaks, where he argued that Daesh can only be defeated through support for the traditional enemies of the United States, and a confrontation with some of our closest regional allies:

“The only effective opponents of [Daesh] are accredited demons of the west — Syria, Iran, Hezbollah. The obstacle is Turkey, an ‘ally’ and a member of Nato, which has conspired with the CIA, MI6 and the Gulf medievalists to channel support to the Syrian ‘rebels,’ including those now calling themselves [Daesh].

Supporting Turkey in its long-held ambition for regional dominance by overthrowing the Assad government beckons a major conventional war and the horrific dismemberment of the most ethnically diverse state in the Middle East.”

Source: http://www.mintpressnews.com/211910-2/211910/

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIS Oil Flows, Israel, Kurd, Turkey

Barzani siding with Turkey is turning Kurds fight among themselves in Iraq

December 17, 2015 By administrator

Barzani kurd a partWhile Erdogan busy slaughtering Kurd in Turkey he also turning the Kurds in Iraq against each other

Mrs. Talabany, has warned Mr. Barzani not to support Turkey in any shape or way and she is against any agreement with the Turkish government. She is advocating that the Kurds must turn to Baghdad and not Turkey when trying to solve all internal problems.

Gorran party, and other Islamic parties, are pushing to form a new military wing to counter the KDP influence and to “protect” themselves from any harm, or physical threat, that will come from the KDP. Isn’t all that great!? So much hate and disagreement among those so called “leaders” that are vying for position, influence and power to satisfy their power needs.

War in making like 1990s when the KDP and the PUK fought a deadly battle that lasted for years. He seemed very pessimistic and worried that indeed the day of conflict between these parties will be ignited once more.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Iraq, Kurd

Terrorist State of Turkey’s troops ‘raiding civilian houses’ in Kurdish city of Silopi

December 17, 2015 By administrator

Turkey attacj kurdish townsThe Turkish Army has reportedly sent military vehicles, including tanks, into civilian areas in its predominantly-Kurdish southeast. Local activists have posted frightening photos on social media.

The People’s Democracy Party (HDP) published a series of photos of what is said to be a fresh raid by the Turkish Army. According to HDP, soldiers in the Yenisehir district of Silopi “broke into a building and pointed guns at people.”

Ankara has been busy conducting military operations in the southeast since summer. Tensions have been mounting for months as security forces have been battling Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militants after a ceasefire collapsed in July. The PKK has been fighting for an autonomous Kurdish region inside Turkey for over three decades.

Earlier this week, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu promised that anti-PKK operations would continue in Silopi and Cizre in order to, as he put it, prevent the militants from “spreading the fire” from Syria and Iraq into Turkey.

“The terrorists will be wiped out from these districts. Neighborhood by neighborhood, house by house, street by street,” he pledged.

Audio- Faysal Sariyildiz: Hikûmet û Leşker Hevre Êrîşî Cizirê û Silopî Dikin @FaysalSaryldz https://t.co/nW35oCtHYi pic.twitter.com/miWfJMfvAh

— Mutlu Civiroglu (@mutludc) December 17, 2015

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurd, Silopi, Turkey

Ex-CIA Officer Giraldi: Turkey ‘at War Against Assad’ to Resolve Kurdish Issue

December 13, 2015 By administrator

1031591770It is important to understand that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is not at war with Daesh (ISIL). He is waging war against the Syrian government over the Kurdish problem, said Philip Giraldi, a former CIA officer and Executive Director of the Council for the National Interest.

If the Kurds established their own state they would seize 30 percent of Turkey’s territory, Giraldi said in an interview with Gazeta.Ru. This is Erdogan’s nightmare. His policy in Syria should be considered from this perspective.

The analyst noted that the downing of a Russian bomber by a Turkish jet in Syria was an act of provocation orchestrated by Turkish senior officials.

“But he couldn’t predict that NATO would not defend him and Russia would take decisive responsive measures. Now Erdogan is trying to take a step back. He’s saying he wanted that the incident wouldn’t happen. But it took place because Erdogan wanted it,” he underscored.

Giraldi further explained the reason why the US has turned a blind eye to the fact that Ankara pursues its own interests in Syria, including supporting terrorists.

“As for Turkey, there is a dilemma for Washington. The US policy in Syria is impossible without Turkey. The US needs the base in Turkey to carry out airstrikes in Syria,” he said.

Giraldi pointed out that Washington has done nothing so far to improve the situation.

“In his turn, Russian President Vladimir Putin acts properly. He is sure that the key to resolve the conflict is to support stable governments in the region – Syria and Iraq,” he said.

The expert also confirmed the recent allegations that Erdogan’s family, especially his son, Bilal Erdogan, is involved in illegal oil trading with Daesh.

“The allegations are true. There is no secret. Everybody saw that tank trucks and money paid for oil. By the way, Turkey did the same with Iran when it was under sanctions. It bought Iranian oil. All operations were controlled by Erdogan’s son,” Giraldi said.

The US did nothing to stop the oil smuggling by Erdogan’s family as it did not want to raise tensions with Ankara, he explained.

Read more: http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20151213/1031673870/turkey-cia-officer-interview.html#ixzz3uECgrBZw

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Al-Qaeda Claims Iraq Kurd Attack, Ex-CIA officer, Kurd, Syria, Turkey

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