May 13, 2013

Bashar's Syria is not Ergenekon

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The Turkish Deep State or Ergenekon has a record of Gladio type false flags in Turkey to further the cause of NATO/USA militarism. The Turkish military is trained and equipped by NATO. 

Turkey is the destination for ALL left-over equipment from NATO/USA. After the Gulf war of 1991, it was Turkey who was rewarded $14 billion of its debts cancelled, and handed the $60 billion worth of American army hardware, and spares left behind by the USA military in the Gulf; Pakistan picked up left over Iraqi equipment in Kuwait.

Turkey contains Deonme Jews.





Turkey is the primary facilitator of other nations who terrorize Syria with bombs, murder, rape, ethnic cleansing and destabilization.

Syria has but a few days ago just been attacked by Israel, without any response in retaliation from the country.

Why would the helpless, struggling Syrians widen the war into Turkey now? 

Is it not true that last year Turkish jets baited Syrian airspace near Latakiya, in and out, in and out, and the Russian military base there decided to shoot down the intruding Turkish jets.

Did not Assad show contrition and apology towards Turkey for that sad episode, unlike Erdogan whose eyes over the years have become more glazed and redder at the prospect of 'al-CIA-duh" occupying Damascus?

How dare Ankara makes such wild unfounded accusations.

2 liter bottle of water.

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Turkish FM: World Must Act Against Syria

Govt-Fueled Anger Over Bombing Leads to Attacks on Ethnic Syrians

by Jason Ditz, at antiwar.com

Turkish officials reacted to yesterday’s border car bombings in Reyhanli by blaming the Syrian government, fueling hostile rhetoric and even violent reactions against ethnic Syrian refugees in Turkey.
 
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, visiting Berlin today, demanded the international community “act together against this regime” in reaction to bombing, which he blamed on “Marxist terrorists” in league with Syria’s President Bashar Assad.

The allegations of blame have fueled anger among locals in the area, with reports of attacks against ethnic Syrians living in the area, traditionally a bustling trade district before the Syrian Civil War.

A hotel in the town frequented by Syrian rebels was empty, as they fled to safer ground, and random Syrian civilians or people with cars sporting Syrian license plates were subject to attack by roaming gangs of teens.