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The Turkissh Mess

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The Turkissh Mess

Postby kimon07 » Fri Jul 13, 2012 7:33 am

It looks that Turkey has entangled itself real bad on all fronts due to its schizophrenic foreign policy combined with its neo-Ottoman megalomania.

The last paragraph of Burak Berdil’s article says it all (see below).

The question is: What will Turkey do to untangle itself from this mess? Will she change to a more prudent/realistic/International Law abiding foreign policy or will panic drive her to a suicidal leap over some cliff?


Dancing on a shark’s fin

A couple of light years ago Turkey was proudly spearheading efforts to build what this column said would become “The Middle Eastern Steel and Coal Community,” with (almost) founding members Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan. Today, Jordan is the weakest and silent link in Turkey’s new pastime, deposing neighboring dictators; Turkey has declared Syria a “hostile country;” while Iraq has declared Turkey a “hostile country.” It’s as if time runs at a much faster pace in this part of the world.

In the meantime, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s biggest fans in the Middle East until recently, the (Lebanese) Hezbollah and the Palestinian liberation groups, have threatened to fight should the Turks intended to interfere in Syria.

Fortunately, everyone sighed with relief when the top Turkish military commander, Gen. Necdet Özel, said Turkey did not intend to declare war on Syria. Gen. Özel is a lucky commander, for his remarks, if they had been made a couple of years previously, could have been perceived as a military intervention in politics and, therefore, he could have been taken to court for plotting to overthrow an elected government.

Despite every visible failure, the illusions of grandeur in Ankara are still as visible as these failures. All that may bring about an additional workload to personnel at the Foreign Ministry as the number of news articles the staff must now hide from Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s attention is sharply increasing.
Most recently, Reuters started to play with fire. In an analysis on Turkey’s foreign policy, Reuters argued that “Turkey’s bark seems worse than its bite.” The wire service also wrote that: “Ask the Syrians, who shot down a Turkish reconnaissance jet on June 22 and got away with it. ... Ask the Israelis, who killed nine pro-Palestine Turkish activists on the Gaza-bound Mavi Marmara aid ship and got away with it.” The danger for Turkey, Reuters commented, is that [Turkey’s] truculence ... begins to look toothless.”

The potential sixth member of the Middle Eastern Union, Iran, no longer views Ankara as a Middle Eastern Brussels. Instead, for the Persians, the paint on the Trojan Horse has faded and now reveals the Crescent and Star. News reports say tourist arrivals in Turkey from Iran fell by 37 percent in the first four months of 2012 compared to the corresponding period of last year, and Tehran has not denied that it prompted Iranian travel agencies to avoid Turkey.

Mr. Davutoğlu may still think that it is a pure coincidence that only six days after Syrians (Syrians?) shot down the Turkish RF-4E, the Russian government’s food and quarantine authorities announced that they had detected 33 cases of infestation in Turkish fruit and vegetable exports to Russia. Mr. Davutoğlu better take the Russian threat of a trade embargo seriously since Russia is Turkey’s third biggest export market and fruits and vegetables account for one-fifth of all exports to that country.

If you add to this picture the fact that “football diplomacy with Armenia” now resembles a deserted stadium; that a casus belli against Greece remains hanging in the Aegean skies; that EU accession negotiations look like negotiations between two deaf and mute men; that the violent Kurdish conflict is now older than any Turk over 27 years of age but is still killing and that the joint Cypriot-Israeli efforts to explore for hydrocarbons in the eastern Mediterranean risks a second Turkish casus belli, you can see how successfully Turkey has isolated Israel and pushed the Jewish state into complete solitude. July/13/2012

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/dancin ... sCatID=398
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby kimon07 » Fri Jul 13, 2012 6:15 pm

Turkish "democratic reforms"

YUSUF KANLI
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Tragicomedy of errors

Turkey was shocked… Doors were opened and convicted murderers of the Bahçelievler massacre were set free eleven years before they had completed their sentence, because they could benefit from the “judicial reform” legislated by the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government.

The AKP has been adamantly rejecting claims that an undeclared amnesty is in force in the country. Indeed it is right, for the “leftists” and the “non-AKP” or Kurdish convicts or suspects there is no such amnesty.

Deputies, intellectuals, professors, retired or suspended officers, former top commanders who are suspects in the AKP’s series of judicial thrillers, (the so-called Sledgehammer, Ergenekon, OdaTV or the KCK cases), there is no amnesty.

Those suspects – keep in mind that they are still only suspects – cannot be given house arrest or any sort of “controlled release,” but with a court order two notorious fascist murderers can be released and the execution of their penalties can be delayed. Justice a la AKP!


Read more:
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/tragic ... sCatID=425
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby humanist » Fri Jul 13, 2012 9:16 pm

Their mess they gotta clean it up.... am loving seeing Turkey slowly surely and peacefully cdome to it's knees
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby kimon07 » Wed Jul 18, 2012 7:04 am

Brothers (not-so-much) in arms

By Burak Bekdil

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu must have been too busy isolating (now) Russia and China (after Israel) to notice that his favorite brothers in the Middle East, the Palestinians, recently sounded an alarm when they found out that they were incapable of paying June salaries to 160,000 employees on time.

The shortfall was considered the biggest crisis in Palestinian history, and the authorities said they heavily relied on the availability of Arab and international aid. It is bizarre that Ankara did not pay any attention to the Palestinian cry. Which other nation in recent history has been the loudest supporter of the “Palestinian cause?” Where are the Turkish brothers of our Palestinian brothers? Some facts and figures I recently came across might shed light on the situation.

In the aftermath of the Mavi Marmara tragedy, Mr. Davutoğlu said this was “Turkey’s 9/11,” that more Turkish-led flotillas would be on their way to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza, that Turkish military planes and ships would protect these “aid vessels” and that Israel would eventually be entirely isolated.

That challenge was followed by numerous other promises for every manner of possible Turkish aid for our Palestinian brothers, including a revelation that Minister Davutoğlu was dreaming about “praying at the al-Aqsa Mosque in the Palestinian capital Jerusalem.” Naturally, all that made Mr. Davutoğlu and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan heroes in the Palestinian lands – for some time.

Two years later, the Palestinians may be feeling differently….


continue reading:

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/brothe ... sCatID=398
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby kimon07 » Sun Jul 22, 2012 9:13 pm

Syrians revolt, fly own flag at refugee camp in Turkey

GAZİANTEP - Doğan News Agency

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/syrian ... sCatID=359


Syrian refugees started a riot in a Gaziantep refugee camp today, taking down the Turkish flag and replacing it with their own, Doğan news agency reported.

Syrian refugees at the site began protesting about the 1,500 Turkmen refugees that had been added to the camp, precipitating a verbal argument with security officials. The row soon escalated into a riot as hundreds of Syrians took Turkish police officers hostage and seized their guns. The Turkish flag at the entrance was taken down and refugees replaced it with their own.

Syrian refugees also heavily damaged the central building nearby while destroying computers and crime-scene vehicles on the scene. Local authorities immediately asked for back up.

Special forces soon arrived and entered the camp, dispersing the rioters. Turkish citizens also tried to intervene but were prevented from doing so by security officials.

Turkish citizens quickly took down the Syrian opposition flag, replacing it with the original Turkish one.
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby kimon07 » Mon Jul 23, 2012 10:05 pm

Sivas massacre victims died of gunshots, not fire, daily claims
23 July 2012 / TODAY'S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL

sivas.jpg


Victims of a 1993 hotel fire in the central province of Sivas, allegedly set by an angry mob including religious fundamentalists, lost their lives due to gunshot wounds rather than fire, the Yeni Akit daily reported on Monday. The daily carried photographs of the victims' bodies taken at the morgue on the day of the incident.
On July 2, 1993, 33 people attending a conference about Alevi poet Pir Sultan Abdal died at the Madımak Hotel in Sivas after being caught in a building set alight by an angry mob protesting the attendance of writer Aziz Nesin, a self-proclaimed atheist, at the festival. Thirty-three artists and intellectuals, along with two hotel workers and two members of the protesting mob, lost their lives in the incident, which is popularly known as the “Sivas Massacre.”
The Yeni Akit daily also published photographs of some of the victims on its front page. In the photos, which were taken on the day of the incident at the morgue of Sivas Numune Hospital, it is possible to make out bullet wounds on the bodies of the victims, but no visible burns. The photos were taken by the Sivas Chief Public Prosecutor's Office during an initial examination, said Yeni Akit.

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-287418-.html
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby kimon07 » Mon Jul 23, 2012 10:08 pm

The PKK republic in the making

This week a significant development took place in Syria. President Bashar al-Assad’s forces withdrew from the Kurdish territory in Syria and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), with the help of the pro-PKK Democratic Union Party (PYD), took control of the territory.

Now it wouldn’t be a mistake to think that the territory which the PKK controls in Syria will be declared as a “democratic autonomous” region and run by a system that PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan proposed back in 2009. In fact, pro-PKK news outlets reported that the administrative affairs of two cities, Afrin and Kobani, were left to the “City Council,” an administrative body in Öcalan’s “democratic autonomy” proposal to run city affairs. All the indicators show that a PKK republic is in the making.
http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist-28 ... aking.html


LALE KEMAL
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Turkey’s difficult times as Syrian conflict intensifies

As fighting raged in Syria’s capital of Damascus as well as in Aleppo, Syrian rebels were said to have taken control of three crossing points on the border with Turkey. Adding fuel to Turkish concerns are reports that Syrian Kurds have begun running several towns near the Turkish border and are fighting in the city of Qamishli against Syrian troops to gain control. According to unconfirmed reports, Syrian rebels have given an ultimatum to the Kurds to leave the cities where they are reported to have taken control.
Will the Syrian Kurds establish an autonomous region or a separate state in Syria, which carries the risk of an eventual division among Sunnis, Alawites and Kurds? And how will Turkey, which has been fighting an almost three-decade-long fight against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), seeking an autonomous Kurdish region in Turkey’s southeastern provinces, react to the changing nature of events in Syria?
As part of measures to deter the spillover of the conflict into Turkey and against Assad’s possible use of the PKK, said to be given sanctuary in the Qamishli region close to the Turkish border by the Syrian regime to provoke this terrorist organization against Turkey, the Turkish military dispatched a train convoy carrying several batteries of ground-to-air missiles to the border region over the weekend.
http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist-28 ... ifies.html
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby kimon07 » Thu Jul 26, 2012 9:14 am

Its spreading:

Turkey to take action against PKK in Syria
ANKARA - Hürriyet Daily News
Worried by a PKK takeover of Syrian towns along Turkey’s border, Ankara vows action and vigilance as it keeps an eye on the militants

Turkey has announced that it will take additional measures against the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Syria, after news broke that the PKK’s offshoot in there has seized control of a number of villages along the Syria-Turkey border. Top civilian and military officials held a security summit yesterday to discuss developments inside Syria and along the border.

“The activities of the separatist terrorist organization in our country and in neighboring countries have been discussed. Additional measures to be taken in every field concerning our national security were also discussed at the meeting, which reviewed work being carried out in the fight against terrorism,” read a short statement released after the nearly two-hour long meeting. It did not give further information about what measures would be taken.

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkey ... sCatID=338



MURAT YETKİN

Changes in Turkey’s borders?

The fact that some Syrian border posts are no longer controlled by troops loyal to Bashar al-Assad but by Syrian Kurdish rebel groups, and that Kurdish flags have been raised in some Syrian border towns with Kurdish populations, has seriously disturbed the Turkish government.

One group in particular has attracted Turkey’s attention, the well-organized Democratic Union Party (PYD), which according to spokespersons “shares the same ideology” with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). The PKK has been waging an armed campaign against Turkey for the last three decades, claiming more than forty thousand lives to date.

Concern about the rise of the PYD caused Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan to convene an emergency meeting in Ankara with his top security and foreign policy team members.

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/change ... sCatID=409
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby Hermes » Thu Jul 26, 2012 7:52 pm

Taking shape: “Western Kurdistan Autonomous Region”

Concerns are surfacing in Turkey about the growing influence in northern Syria of a Kurdish group linked to Kurdish separatists fighting Ankara, something Turkey fears may further complicate efforts to solve its intractable Kurdish problem. Syria's Kurdish areas have been largely spared the worst of the violence in the 16-month-old revolt against President Bashar al-Assad, and Syrian Kurds see a chance to attain the freedoms enjoyed by their ethnic kin in neighboring northern Iraq.

Pictures of Kurdish flags flying over buildings and being waved by Kurds in northern Syria have attracted wide coverage in Turkish media and prompted commentators to mull the possibility that Kurds could carve out an independent state there....


http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/ ... 2W20120724
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Re: The Turkissh Mess

Postby kimon07 » Thu Jul 26, 2012 8:49 pm

Erdoğan says PKK threat from Syria may prompt Turkish military retaliation

25 July 2012 / TODAYSZAMAN.COM,
The Turkish prime minister has warned that Turkey won't hesitate to retaliate militarily to any threat emanating from Syria's north as he stated that Syria's embattled President Bashar al-Assad is abandoning territories close to the Turkish border to Kurdish groups said to be linked to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said in an interview with TV 24 on Wednesday that a PKK-linked Kurdish presence could give Turkey cause to intervene militarily in Syria, as it has done repeatedly in northern Iraq since that region slipped from Baghdad's grip following the 1991 Gulf War.
“The terrorist PKK organization's cooperation with the [Democratic Union Party] PYD is something we cannot look favorably upon,” Erdoğan said in the interview. “If a formation that's going to be a problem, if there is a terror operation, [if] an irritant emerges, then intervening would be our most natural right.”
http://www.todayszaman.com/news-287680- ... ation.html
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