July 2016 Military Coup in Turkey

angelburst29 said:
angelburst29 said:
Turkey is about to finish the construction of its first African military base in Somalia's capital of Mogadishu, media reported Saturday.

Turkey Set to Open First African Military Base in Somalia
https://sputniknews.com/world/20161001/1045905247/turkey-african-military-base.ht

The Intercept's report on the US new drone base in the city of Agadez, Niger has raised questions about Washington's growing military presence in Africa. According to experts, "knowledge of the extent and aims of US military activities in Africa remains murky."

Unspoken Story of US' Growing Military Presence in Africa
https://sputniknews.com/politics/20160930/1045876176/us-military-presence-africa-drones.html


As Daesh is pushed out of the Middle East, fleeing members are reportedly taking refuge in Africa. While affiliates such as Boko Haram already operate in certain countries, the violent extremist group seeks to establish its own presence in north African countries including Libya, Egypt and Tunisia.

A Continent of Terror: Daesh Sets Up Shop in Africa
https://sputniknews.com/africa/20161006/1046045046/continent-terror-daesh-africa.html

According to the Daily Beast, Daesh, once portrayed as a fearsome cadre of hyper-violent fundamentalist warriors, is now in retreat. The question remains, then, in what lucky country will the survivors regroup?

The news outlet quotes an essay by a Daesh supporter, translated by the Quilliam Foundation, claiming that Libya is "the key," and a "strategic gateway" to nearby countries including Egypt, Tunisia, Sudan, Mali, Algeria and Niger.

Recent rocket attacks on the Libyan city of Benghazi and the ongoing US bombing of Daesh positions in Sirte lend credence to this notion. Should Daesh manage to capture parts of Libya, Egypt, Algeria and Tunisia, the group would have a base from which to launch attacks on southern Europe. A 2011 US campaign threw Libya into chaos, which has created fertile soil in that country for recruiting terrorists and mercenaries. Another steady source of jihadists is Tunisia. According to Al Arabya, some 1000 to 3000 Tunisians may be fighting, and dying, under the black flag of Daesh.

A group of female suicide bombers was reported to have been arrested in Morocco, which borders Algeria. To the south, Mali reportedly houses the remains of Colonel Gaddafi's supporters, who turned into partisans armed with Gaddafi's weapons after the failed 2011 campaign.

According to the Daily Beast, Africa, a continent long-misunderstood and exploited by the West, is in danger of becoming a very big problem for the rest of the world. Between China's growing economic presence on the continent, European interest in African uranium, phosphorus and various other mineral resources, and Saudi Arabia spreading influence through its Wahhabi preachers, the continent presents significant potential as the location of another proxy war, similar to that currently ongoing in Syria, which the outlet calls "a horrific parody of the Cold War," but on a much deadlier scale.

Can emerging economies in northern Africa cope with an increasing jihadist threat? Can the powerful economies and militaries of the Northern Hemisphere counter a religious fundamentalist culture whose members are not afraid to die for their cause?

It appears that Russia, wisely, is unlikely to participate in the Lybian mess, and, as such, there will likely be no Cold War-style proxy war, and, so, no modern well-equipped army to inhibit a jihadist advance. Europe, however, could face terrorist actions on an unprecedented scale, with constant waves of attacks from various points beyond the Mediterranean Sea.

Destroying a force capable of inflicting damage on a continental scale would require a military coalition of a size not seen since World War II. Considering the past fifty years of US warmongering, anyone in the country seeking to make a quick profit might find the idea of battling extremists attractive. Stockholders and others who seek positive returns on their military-industrial investments should be careful what they ask for.

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angelburst29 said:
Turkey Set to Open First African Military Base in Somalia
https://sputniknews.com/world/20161001/1045905247/turkey-african-military-base.ht

Unspoken Story of US' Growing Military Presence in Africa
https://sputniknews.com/politics/20160930/1045876176/us-military-presence-africa-drones.html

A Continent of Terror: Daesh Sets Up Shop in Africa
https://sputniknews.com/africa/20161006/1046045046/continent-terror-daesh-africa.htm

Looks like Africa is being set up for the next big proxy War? Terrorists from Syria and Iraq being relocated?

US Vice President Joe Biden stated that by October 2017, the Daesh terrorists will have been pushed out of Raqqa and Mosul.

Daesh Will Be Out of Strongholds in Iraq, Syria Within One Year - Biden
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20161007/1046117426/us-biden-daesh.html

The Islamic State (also known as Daesh) terrorist group will be driven from its stronghold cities of Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq by this time next year, US Vice President Joe Biden told supporters of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton at a rally on Friday.

“We are on our way to eliminating ISIS,” Biden said. “The reason you’re seeing these one-off [terrorist] attacks is because they’re losing their caliphate.”

By October 2017, the terrorists will have been pushed out of Raqqa and Mosul, the vice president stated.

“They will be gone. I promise you they will be gone,” Biden said. The remarks, to an audience of college students in Pennsylvania, where Biden was born, are the first time in the 201 6 election campaign that the vice president has ventured into foreign policy on Clinton’s behalf. On Sunday, Clinton is scheduled to have her second debate with Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.
 
Niger, Africa— DARPA, or the secretive Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which works under the umbrella of the U.S. Department of Defense, has created some spooky technology in its time — from tiny drones called ‘Gremlins,’ to ‘implantable, wireless neuroprosthetics’ that are lodged in a soldier’s brain to offer a reprieve from PTSD and other brain injuries resultant of the DoD’s war path. DARPA’s latest investment stands to take advantage of ample real estate in one of the world’s most impoverished nations.

Guess What You’re Funding Now? A $100 Million Drone Base in Africa
_http://undergroundreporter.org/funding-drone-base-africa/

DARPA has a publicly disclosed budget of at least $3 billion spent across 250 programs, as well as black budget programs with unknown financial figures. Now the government plans to spend $100 million building “one of the most important U.S. military construction efforts in Africa,” according to once-secret files obtained by the Intercept through the Freedom of Information Act.

The base will be constructed in the center of Niger, one of the only countries that is allowing MQ-9 Reapers — the newer, larger, and potentially more lethal model of drone than its Predator predecessor.

DARPA’s drone technologies have been expediently advancing, with some that can speed around a warehouse at 45 miles per hour, and others that have nanotechnology implanted within them to create weapons that target everything from submarines, to underground bases, and airborne missiles. Long-distance, and high-altitude drones have also been developed, including some that can stay in the air for weeks at a time.

The original request to build a base in Agadez, Niger, was green-lighted by President Obama for $38 million, under the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015; but that has already jumped to $50 million, with operating expenses projected to cost American taxpayers $12.8 million per year once the base is built.

The emphasis on the Niger base is to run drone missions, though the Pentagon is hush-hush about its full intentions for the project.

A 2015 planning document attests, “The top MILCON [military construction] project for USAFRICOM is located in Agadez, Niger to construct a C-17 and MQ-9 capable airfield. RPA presence in NW Africa supports operations against seven [Department of State]-designated foreign terrorist organizations. Moving operations to Agadez aligns persistent ISR to current and emerging threats over Niger and Chad, supports French regionalization and extends range to cover Libya and Nigeria.”

The Agadez base would contribute to the U.S.’s presence the world over, with more than 662 overseas bases in 38 foreign countries, and military personnel in roughly 148 countries.

The U.S. established diplomatic relations with Niger in 1960, following its independence from the United Kingdom. It has since become a hub of U.S. military projects; however, Germany now plans to build their own base in Niger, in order to “fight Islamic militants” in neighboring Mali.

The German army will lead a multinational battalion of troops in the Baltics soon, as part of a NATO effort to put militarized pressure on the alliance’s eastern edge near the Russian border.


It is highly likely that DARPA’s “surveillance” drones are meant for the same region.

A week after the US confirmed that it is building a military base in Niger, Germany has announced plans for a base of its own in the impoverished West African nation.

In US’ Footsteps, Germany Plans Military Base in Niger
https://sputniknews.com/world/20161006/1046075265/germany-plans-base-niger.html

Bernd von Munchow-Pohl, the German Ambassador to Niger, made the announcement in a speech in Niamey, the country’s capital, on October 5, AFP reports.

"With the establishment of a German military airbase in Niamey in support of the MINUSMA mission in Mali, which Niger has supported since the beginning, a new chapter in our cooperation has begun," von Munchow-Pohl said. MINUSMA is the acronym for the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali.

Von Munchow-Pohl stated that Germany is "ready to engage more in the Sahel region [and] assume even more responsibility," the ambassador said, calling Niger "a central partner" for Germany and "a key country in the fight against terrorism and illegal migration." The German ambassador also announced that German Chancellor Angela Merkel would visit Niger in the coming days.

In late September, the US confirmed that it is building a new base in Agadez, in the center of the country, to the tune of either $50 million, as the Pentagon says, or $100 million, which the Intercept reported on September 30, citing documents it received through an FOIA request.

The US already stations armed Reaper drones at an air base in Niamey, from which it supports France’s anti-terrorism Operation Barkhane, focusing on Sahel-region countries Mali, Chad, Burkina Faso, Niger and Mauritania.

The German cabinet voted in May to expand its army’s presence in Africa. Under the aegis of the EU, several hundred German soldiers have been involved in military training programs in Mali and have been part of patrol missions in Somalia since 2008. Niger is the least-developed country in the world, according to UN Human Development data.
 
According to media reports, six Turkish soldiers were killed in a car bomb explosion near a gendarmerie post in the Semdinli district of the Hakkari province in southeast Turkey.

Car Bomb Explosion in Southeastern Turkey Kills 6 Servicemen
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20161009/1046149741/car-bomb-explosion-turkey.html

Six Turkish soldiers were killed in a car bomb explosion near a gendarmerie post in the Semdinli district of the Hakkari province in southeast Turkey, local media reported on Sunday.

Another seven soldiers were injured in the explosion, according to the NTV broadcaster.

Turkish security forces have repeatedly carried out operations against members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) outlawed by Ankara in the Hakkari province.


According to governor Cuneyit Orhan Toprak, car bomb explosion allegedly carried out by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) left nine servicemen and eight civilians dead in the Semdinli district of the Hakkari province in southeast Turkey.

Car Bomb Rips Through Turkish Army Station, Killing 17
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20161009/1046152175/turkey-bomb-blast.html

Car bomb explosion allegedly carried out by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) left nine servicemen and eight civilians dead in the Semdinli district of the Hakkari province in southeast Turkey, governor Cuneyit Orhan Toprak said Sunday.

"Terrorist attack in Semdinli resulted in death of 17 people, including nine servicemen with 27 others wounded," Toprak told NTV broadcaster.

Earlier in the day, local media reported that six Turkish soldiers were killed and another seven wounded as result of the explosion.


Russian President Vladimir Putin is scheduled to visit Turkey for the first time since the relations between two nations soured following the downing of a Russian bomber over Syria by a Turkish fighter jet.

Putin’s ‘Strategic’ Visit to Turkey to Help Moscow, Ankara Bring Peace to Syria
https://sputniknews.com/politics/20161009/1046153419/putin-strategic-visit-turkey.html

On October 10 Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to meet with Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and to deliver a speech at the World Energy Congress, which is being held in Istanbul.

The two leaders will discuss the current events in the Middle East and in Syria, as well as bilateral relations between Turkey and Russia and joint energy projects, including the potential revival of the suspended Turkish Stream natural gas pipeline.

Ahmet Berat Çonkar, Turkish MP and member of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) told Sputnik that Putin’s visit to Turkey after the two countries managed to overcome the crisis in bilateral relations is a momentous event of great strategic importance.

"Right now there’s a process of making alliances and making decisions regarding the balance of power going on in our region. The humanitarian situation in Syria has become intolerable, and we must put an end to the bloodshed and destruction. As a representative of the Turkish side, I believe that we and Russia should overcome the difference of opinions regarding this issue. By conducting its (military) operation, Turkey has shown that it greatly values Russia’s stance on the fight against Daesh. Turkey displays its unwavering determination to battle radical terrorist groups that pose the biggest concern to Russia. And I hope that Russia, being aware of that fact, will treat Turkey’s approach to the Syrian issue with greater understanding, and will adhere to a balanced policy which supports the process of political transition," Çonkar said.

He added that hopefully everything will occur according to his predictions, as Russia and Turkey must simply overcome the current crisis.

All in all, Çonkar remarked, despite a certain difference in opinions about how the Syrian conflict should be resolved, Russia and Turkey can still cooperate on this issue, while the mistakes committed by the US in the Middle East are plain for all to see.

"I believe that the growing strategic rapprochement between Russia and Turkey will also have a certain positive influence on the US approach to the Syrian issue. We are regional players, nations that spent millennia building close relations in this area and know the region from the inside out. The United States, however, is a new player in the region, and has already committed mistakes that made many problems here even more difficult to solve. We can see it everywhere in the region – in Iraq, Syria, Libya and in Yemen. We can see that the US failed to contribute to resolving the problem. In that regard, by adhering to a joint strategy for resolving the Syrian crisis, Turkey and Russia may nudge the US to help preserve stability in the region," Çonkar explained.

"If such major regional powers as Turkey, Iran and Russia display their unwavering stance on this issue, I believe that the West and the US would have to adhere to it. If we will assume the directing role, if we can stop the bloodshed, then we’ll score a major victory for our nations and for the entire region; not to mention that from a global perspective, it’ll help prevent new conflicts from sprouting in the region," Çonkar concluded.
 
angelburst29 said:
US Vice President Joe Biden stated that by October 2017, the Daesh terrorists will have been pushed out of Raqqa and Mosul.

Daesh Will Be Out of Strongholds in Iraq, Syria Within One Year - Biden
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20161007/1046117426/us-biden-daesh.html

The Islamic State (also known as Daesh) terrorist group will be driven from its stronghold cities of Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq by this time next year, US Vice President Joe Biden told supporters of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton at a rally on Friday.

Guess, Erdogan got his marching orders from VP Biden and the main reason behind "Turkish Parliament Extends Mandate Allowing Use of Army Abroad for 13 Months" - and why Erdogan is blocking liberation of Ragga in Syria and Mosul in Iraq?


The leader and co-head of the Syrian – Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD), Salih Muslim, said Turkey is blocking the anti ISIS operation in Mosul, Iraq. The PYD leader’s statement on Friday coincided with the northern Iraqi Kurdish Democratic Party’s call to arrange a post-ISIS settlement between the federal government of Iraq and the semi-autonomous Kurdish northern Iraq.

Turkey is Supporting ISIS-Daesh In Mosul And Raqqa
http://www.globalresearch.ca/turkey-is-supporting-isis-daesh-in-mosul-and-raqqa/5550036

PYD co-head Salih Muslim stressed that Turkey first blocked the liberation of Raqqa by invading Jarablus in Syria and that Turkey now is blocking the liberation of Mosul in Iraq by deploying Turkish troops into the Bashiqa district near the city of Mosul.

Earlier this month the Turkish parliament, unilaterally and without authorization from the Iraqi or Syrian government, prolonged the authorization of the deployment of Turkish forces to Syria and Iraq for another year.

Salih Muslim accused Turkey of cooperating with ISIS, saying that The main goal of the Turkish move in Syria and Iraq is to support Daesh” (a.k.a. ISIS, ISIL, or Islamic State).

Forces of the armed wings of the PYD, the YPG and the all female YPJ, reportedly won’t head for Raqqa until the road to the besieged enclave of Efrin in northwestern Syria is open. The PYD maintains that neither Turkey, Islamist militants nor the Syrian government is currently interested in YPG / YPJ forces fighting ISIS in Efrin.

The PYD co-leaders statement comes against a complex backdrop involving various Kurdish parties and militants in the greater region as well as their respective allies. The PYD is being supported by the United States. The PYD is, however, also an ally of the Russian and Iranian – backed Turkish Kurdistan Worker’s Party – PKK, which is outlawed in Turkey, the USA and the EU.

Neither the PYD nor the PKK are closely allied to the northern Iraqi Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) which is backed by the USA, nor of the Kurdistan Democratic Party in Iran (KDP-I) which is a close ally of the Iraqi KDP. PYD leader Salih Muslim’s statement about Turkey’s obstructions of the liberation of Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa coincided with demands by the KDP to reach a post-ISIS agreement between the federal government of Iraq and the Kurdish northern Iraq before the launch of the liberation of Mosul.

KDP leader and northern Iraqi Kurdish “president” Masoud Barzani, in August, said that Kurdish independence was the only remaining option. Clashes between the KDP-I and the elite Iranian Revolutionary Guard in Iran have also increased significantly over the past months. The situation in Mosul, for its part, potentially pits not only Turkish troops and ISIS against each other, it also pits the KPP’s Peshmerga fighters against federal Iraqi troops and, maybe more importantly, Iranian-backed Iraqi militia.
 
Putin to make first official visit to Turkey

http://tass.com/politics/905210?_ga=1.231384346.428721801.1475907383

This is the first visit by the Russian leader to Turkey since November 2015

Russian President Vladimir Putin will on Monday visit Istanbul, where he will take part in the 23rd World Energy Congress, as well as meet with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, the Kremlin reported.

This is the first visit by the Russian leader to Turkey since the process of normalization of relations with that country started. Last time Putin visited the Turkish Republic in November last year, when he attended the G20 summit in Antalya.

The key aspect at the talks between Putin and Erdogan on the sidelines of the energy forum will be discussion of urgent issues of the Russian-Turkish relations, the regional and international agenda, the Kremlin said. Bilateral documents are to be signed following the talks.
 
Putin and Erdogan meet behind closed doors

http://tass.com/politics/905431?_ga=1.269107828.428721801.1475907383

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, presidential aide Yuri Ushakov and Energy Minister Alexander Novak are taking part in the talks

Russian President Vladimir Putin is meeting Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the sidelines of the World Energy Congress behind the closed doors. The talks are taking place in a narrow format at Istanbul’s Yildiz Palace allocated for use by the Turkish president.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, presidential aide Yuri Ushakov and Energy Minister Alexander Novak are taking part in the talks from the Russian side. The Turkish team includes Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu; Berat Albayrak, the minister of energy and natural resources; and Ibrahim Kalym, the deputy secretary-general of the presidential administration.

An extended Russian-Turkish meeting will be joined by Russian Army Chief of Staff Valery Gerasimov; the heads of Rosneft oil company; Gazprom and the Rosatom State Corporation for Atomic Energy - Igor Sechin, Alexey Miller and Alexey Likhachev; Minister of Economic Development Alexey Ulyukayev; Kremlin’s Press Secretary and Presidential Administration’s Deputy Chief Dmitry Peskov and Russian Ambassador to Turkey Andrey Karlov.

The Turkish delegation will be joined by Chief of General Staff Hulusi Akar; Minister of Economy Nihat Zeybekci; Hakan Fidan, the Head of Turkey's National Intelligence Organization; Ismail Demir, secretary in charge of defense industry at the Turkish Defense Ministry; etc.

Earlier, Putin’s Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov clarified that the two leaders would discuss how to bring the Russian-Turkish relations back to normal in all spheres. The Syrian crisis will dominate the international agenda, Peskov emphasized.

The previous meeting between Putin and Erdogan had taken place on September 3 shortly before the G20 summit in China’s Hangzhou. Prior to that, the two countries’ leaders met in St. Petersburg on August 9.


Erdogan calls for joint efforts to bring peace to Syria, Iraq

http://tass.com/world/905419?_ga=1.269107828.428721801.1475907383

The Turkish president calls to ensure that humanitarian aid is delivered without hindrance to Syria

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has urged the countries participating in the World Energy Congress in Istanbul to unite their efforts to bring peace to Syria and Iraq.

"I call upon the respected participants, let us unite our efforts to bring peace and security to Syria and Iraq," Erdogan said addressing the Congress.

He also spoke in favor of uniting efforts to ensure that humanitarian aid is delivered without hindrance to Syria.

"Let us exert efforts to stop the hostilities in Syria and grant the unhindered humanitarian aid deliveries to all those in need," the Turkish president added.

He pointed out that the motto of the Congress was a "call for peace", saying: "Let us unite and employ our capabilities in the best possible way so that peace can be restored.".


Turkey may build another nuclear power plant — Erdogan

http://tass.com/economy/905381?_ga=1.56715695.428721801.1475907383

Turkey already has agreements with Russia and Japan on construction of two nuclear power plants

Turkey is examining the possibility of constructing another nuclear power plant, in addition to Akkuyu NPP, and NPP in Sinop province, Turkish Presidnet Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday at the World Energy Congress 2016.

"We have signed intergovernmental agreement with Russia on the construction of Akkuyu NPP, and with Japan we have an agreement on the construction of the Sinop NPP. There is a third nuclear power plant construction project, the project is undergoing revision," he said.

Russian state corporation Rosatom told TASS that the company is not in talks on the project.

The intergovernmental Russian-Turkish agreement on construction of the Akkuyu nuclear power plant was signed on May 12, 2010. This project includes construction of four power units (VVER-1200) with a capacity of 1.2 GW each in accordance with the Russian project "NPP-2006".

Due to tensions in Russian-Turkish relations, the future of Akkuyu NPP project was under question.

In June, Russian Nuclear Agency Rosstom said that the first concreting at Akkuyu NPP was planned in 2018. The first block is expected to be put into operation in 2023.

On August 9, Energy Minister Alexander Novak said that Russia and Turkey have agreed on the necessary decisions to implement the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant project.

The President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at a press conference after the talks with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, Turkey intended to grant the status of a "strategic investment" to the Akkuyu NPP project.

According to him, this way the project will take its place among a number of other similar projects in the country and will profit from all the necessary benefits that are given with this status.


Turkish Stream gas pipeline: Moscow & Ankara sign agreement in Istanbul

https://www.rt.com/business/362279-gazprom-turkish-stream-pipeline/

An intergovernmental agreement on the Turkish Stream pipeline has been signed in Istanbul in the presence of both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who held talks earlier.

Before the agreement was signed, Gazprom CEO Alexey Miller said that the Turkish Stream project agreement envisioned the construction of two pipeline branches, each with a capacity of 15.75 billion cubic meters (bcm).

The first branch will supply gas directly to Turkey, while the second is to be used to deliver gas to European countries through Turkey, he explained.

The intergovernmental agreement would also define the deadline by which the two maritime threads are to be built. It’s December 2019,” Miller said.

During his speech at the 23rd World Energy Congress earlier on Monday, Putin said that he and President Erdogan had thoroughly discussed the joint Turkish Stream pipeline ahead of the visit, saying they “intend to implement” the project.

The pipeline would allow Russian natural gas to be delivered directly to Turkey via the Russian Black Sea coast and on to Greece.

The project, with an estimated total cost of €11.4 billion (US$12.7 billion), was announced in December 2014 during Putin’s visit to Turkey as an alternative to the canceled South Stream route through Bulgaria.

But after the downing of a Russian jet by the Turkish Air Force in November 2015, Russia suspended the project. It was revived only after Turkey publicly apologized for the incident this August.
 
Moscow and Ankara Will Cooperate to End Bloodshed in Syria

https://sputniknews.com/politics/201610111046204691-russia-turkey-cooperation-syria/

Russian President Vladimir Putin together with his Turkish colleague Recep Tayyip Erdogan held a meeting Monday in Istanbul at which special attention was paid to the situation in Syria. Both leaders called for the urgent end of violence in the region.

The leaders have agreed to intensify the military and intelligence contacts and develop further military-technical cooperation.

"Both Russia and Turkey stand for the earliest cessation of bloodshed in Syria. In Russia we think that the switch to a political settlement must happen as soon as possible. We suppose that everybody, who wants peace, should support this proposal," Putin said.

Putin and Erdogan expressed their willingness to cooperate in delivery of humanitarian aid to Aleppo.

"We thoroughly discussed the Syrian issue. We talked about the [Turkish] Euphrates Shield operation and evaluated ways we can cooperate in this direction. We specifically talked about what strategy we may choose in order to help, from a humanitarian point of view, the inhabitants who are in a dire situation, especially in Aleppo," Erdogan said.

"The issue is ensuring security for the deliveries of this cargo," the Russian President added.

Some other topics that were covered during the talks include special cooperation of Russia and Turkey in the humanitarian sphere. The Turkish government proposed holding the years of culture and tourism of Russia in Turkey and reciprocally a year of Turkey in Russia.

One of the large-scale projects is the implementation of a large international energy hub in Turkey, as one of the ways of normalizing the relations. The project just moved one step closer with signing of the agreement by the two leaders regarding the Turkish Stream pipeline.


Lawmaker says results of Moscow-Ankara talks 'exceed expectations'

http://tass.com/politics/905536?_ga=1.60457384.428721801.1475907383

The level of coordination between the two countries is very high, the lawmaker has noted

The results of Monday’s Russian-Turkish talks in Istanbul have surpassed all expectations, especially in the spheres of military-technical cooperation and economy, Vyacheslav Nikonov told TASS on Tuesday.

"The emergence of the issue of military-technical cooperation itself is symptomatic. This is a signal that Turkey is sending to the United States, showing that they are ready to switch their military-technical ties to Russia. This is a very serious signal," Nikonov said. He reminded that over the last 60 years, Turkey was one of the key military-political allies of US and NATO.

"The statement that Turkey may develop its military-technical cooperation with Russia is one of the sensations of these talks," the lawmaker noted.

Nikonov also praised the agreement reached by Moscow and Ankara on the Turkish Stream gas pipeline. "Dates, volumes, possible prices and even discounts were outlined. This means that the level of coordination (of the agreement) is very high," he said.

The lawmaker also described as very important the discussion that Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan had on Syria. "It is important that Moscow and Ankara strategically agreed to destroy terrorism in Syria. This is a big step forward," Nikonov said. He stressed that be believes both Moscow and Ankara are ready to act jointly in the fight against the Islamic State (terrorist organization banned in Russia) since Ankara would not want for IS to spread its activities.

On Monday, October 10, an intergovernmental agreement on the Turkish Stream gas pipeline was signed after talks between the two presidents. Apart from that, the sides agreed on a gas discount under this project and discussed further works on the construction of Turkey’s Akkuyu nuclear power plant. Along with economic issues, the two presidents focused on the Syrian crisis and spoke in favor of the soonest end to bloodshed.


Israeli minister to visit Turkey for the first time in six years

https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/israeli-minister-visit-turkey-first-time-six-years/

The Israeli Energy Minister, Yuval Steinitz, is expected to attend the World Energy Congress meeting in Istanbul this Thursday, marking his first visit of any Israeli minister in 6 years.

"This is the first visit at ministerial level in the past six years, and it is the result of the rapprochement agreed upon by the two countries," the Israeli Embassy in Ankara stated on Monday.

"The visit is the expression of the great potential that exists in bilateral political and economic relations," the Israeli Embassy added.

Steinitz is also expected to meet his Turkish counterpart, Berat Albayrak, for the first time during his short visit to Turkey this upcoming Thursday.
 
Russian, Turkish energy ministers discuss Turkish Stream, Akkuyu NPP

http://tass.com/economy/905686?_ga=1.231376154.428721801.1475907383

On October 10, the two countries signed an intergovernmental agreement on construction of the Turkish Stream gas pipeline

Energy Ministers of Russia and Turkey discussed the Turkish Stream pipeline project and Akkuyu NPP, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak told journalists on Tuesday on the sidelines of the World Energy Congress.

"We discussed the issues of cooperation, implementation of the agreement signed yesterday (on construction of the Turkish Stream gas pipeline - TASS), construction of pipeline infrastructure across the Black Sea, and the details of further action on construction of Akkuyu nuclear power plant," Novak said.

According to Novak, the parties also discussed Akkuyu project receiving the strategic status, which requires additional documents and the final approval for construction.

In addition, the meeting was dedicated to the cooperation issues in the electrical power industry, coal industry, oil supplies of oil and petroleum products.

Earlier Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak and Minister of Energy and Natural Resources of Turkey Berat Albayrak in the presence of the Presidents of the two countries signed an intergovernmental agreement on construction of the Turkish Stream gas pipeline.


Russia, Turkey may boost trade to $100 bln a year — minister

http://tass.com/economy/905806?_ga=1.232482458.428721801.1475907383

Trade between the two countries stood at $24 billion in 2015 and at $11.2 billion in 2016

Turkey and Russia plan to boost their trade to $100 billion a year, Turkey’s Minister of Economy Nihat Zeybekci said on Tuesday.

"Our goal is to bring bilateral trade up to 100 billion dollars a year. We can reach it in several years," he told Haberturk television channel.

According to the minister, issues of trade and economic relations between the two countries are in focus of a session on the Russian-Turkish intergovernmental commission underway in Istanbul on October 10-12.

Zeybekci told TASS earlier that the two countries will be able to regain former dynamics of trade and economic cooperation when Russia lifts its ban on Turkish imports.

He said that Russia is an important country for Turkey as they are linked by serious relations in the economic sphere. In his words, the use of national currencies might help boost bilateral trade.

According to the Turkish ministry of economy, trade between the two countries stood at $24 billion in 2015 and at $11.2 billion - in the first eight months of 2016.

Russia imposed trade restrictions on Turkey following an incident with a Russian warplane that was downed by the Turkish air force in Syria on November 24, 2015. Thus, Russia banned imports of Turkish vegetables and fruits and restricted operation of Turkish companies.
 
sToRmR1dR said:
Israeli minister to visit Turkey for the first time in six years

https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/israeli-minister-visit-turkey-first-time-six-years/


Israeli minister makes first visit to Turkey after reconcilation

http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2016/10/13/488875/Israel-Energy-Minister-Berat-Albayrak-Turkey-gas-project

Israel’s energy minister has traveled to Turkey to hold talks with the country’s officials, the first such trip since the two sides normalized ties after some six years of diplomatic tensions.

On Thursday, Yuval Steinitz arrived in the Turkish city of Istanbul, where he sat down for talks with Turkish Energy Minister Berat Albayrak, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s son-in-law.

After the talks, Steinitz said Israel and Turkey have agreed to examine the possibility of constructing a pipeline that would carry natural gas from the Israeli-occupied territories to Turkey and onward to European markets.

He also said while Israel was building regional energy cooperation links with Jordan, Egypt, Cyprus and Greece, “the Turkish option is very important.”

The Israeli minister added that the Tel Aviv regime welcomes the Turkish participation in the exploration of new gas fields, describing his visit as “a token of the normalization process that just started” between the two sides.

Steinitz, who attended an energy congress in Istanbul, is the most senior Israeli official to visit Turkey since Ankara and Tel Aviv agreed this summer to end six years of acrimony over an Israeli on a Gaza-bound Turkish aid ship in 2010.

Ankara and Tel Aviv’s once close relations soured after Israeli commandos raided the Gaza Strip-bound Turkish-flagged Freedom Flotilla in international waters of the Mediterranean on May 31, 2010, killing nine Turkish citizens and injuring about 50 other people. A tenth Turkish national later succumbed to his injuries.

The vessel was attempting to break the Israeli naval blockade of the Gaza Strip.

Ankara demanded an apology, which was not forthcoming only until recently, as well as compensation for the families of the victims of the Israeli raid.

The two sides, however, announced a reconciliation agreement on June 27, after several rounds of negotiations. Later, Ankara and Tel Aviv began the procedure of exchanging ambassadors.

Turkish and Israeli officials have both defended the deal, under which a main Turkish condition for the normalization of ties remains unmet, namely Israel’s lifting of the blockade on the Gaza Strip.

The Israeli regime has now paid Turkey $20 million (18 million euros) in compensation to the families of the Turkish activists killed in the Gaza aid vessel incident.
 
Russia may consider delivering air defense systems to Turkey

http://tass.com/politics/906527?_ga=1.101336580.428721801.1475907383

The Kremlin spokesman confirmed that "various air defense systems were mentioned" during the negotiations

Russia may consider delivering air defense systems to Turkey, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Friday.

The presidential spokesman made this statement as he was answering questions about the visit, which Russian President Vladimir Putin had paid to Turkey on Monday.

"Indeed, the issues related to military and technical cooperation were on the agenda of contacts between Putin and [Turkish President Tayyip] Erdogan," Peskov told journalists.

"Various air defense systems were mentioned," he added.

"If the Turkish side expresses its desire, Russia may consider the possibility of their delivery to Turkey in various modifications," the Kremlin spokesman said.

"But this is a purely commercial issue, a very sensitive area of cooperation," Peskov said.

The Kremlin spokesman said earlier this week that Putin and Erdogan had not discussed the issues of creating a joint air defense system.

The Russian leader told journalists after his talks on Monday that Russia was ready to continue interaction with Turkey in the sphere of military and technical cooperation and fill it with serious projects of mutual interest.

According to Putin, the proposals from both sides are being studied and have all the grounds for being implemented.
 
angelburst29 said:
Guess What You’re Funding Now? A $100 Million Drone Base in Africa
_http://undergroundreporter.org/funding-drone-base-africa/

DARPA has a publicly disclosed budget of at least $3 billion spent across 250 programs, as well as black budget programs with unknown financial figures. Now the government plans to spend $100 million building “one of the most important U.S. military construction efforts in Africa,” according to once-secret files obtained by the Intercept through the Freedom of Information Act.

The base will be constructed in the center of Niger, one of the only countries that is allowing MQ-9 Reapers — the newer, larger, and potentially more lethal model of drone than its Predator predecessor.

The US Air Force deployed a fleet of aircraft to east Africa over the summer to respond to potential threats in South Sudan.
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201610141046349817-south-sudan-f-16-deployment/

A statement released by US Africa Command on October 14 indicates that the Pentagon has been prepared to engage in South Sudan since July, when the US Air Force quietly moved a number of F-16 fighters and KC 135 refueling tankers to Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti.

"[The deployment was a] precautionary measure in order to protect Americans and American interests in South Sudan if required," said a statement from US Africa Command, according to Stars and Stripes.

"These assets have remained in Djibouti out of an abundance of caution in response to that situation in South Sudan."

The move included roughly 50 combat-ready troops.

Defensive in nature, the deployment was a response to diplomatic personnel coming under fire.

"I can say that we do not believe our vehicles and personnel were specifically targeted in the attack," US State Department spokesman Mark Toner told reporters in September. "It’s our assessment that the attack was connected to the breakdown of command and control among South Sudanese government forces, and we have demanded that the government of South Sudan investigate this incident and punish and hold accountable those responsible for it."

Also on Thursday, the US military launched strikes on three radar installations in Yemen. A response to recent threats made on naval vessels in the Red Sea, this marked the first time the United States has directly engaged in the Yemen conflict.

The strikes came in the wake of recent missile attacks on the USS Mason and other US Navy ships operating in international waters near the Bab al-Mandab Strait that separates Yemen and Djibouti. "Early this morning local time, the US military struck three rad#mce_temp_url#ar sites in Houthi-controlled territory on Yemen’s Red Sea coast. Initial assessments show the sites were destroyed," Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said. "These limited self-defense strikes were conducted to protect our personnel, our ships and our freedom of navigation in this important maritime passageway. The United States will respond to any further threat to our ships and commercial traffic as appropriate, and will continue to maintain our freedom of navigation in the Red Sea, the Bab al-Mandeb and elsewhere around the world."


Despite Washington pouring millions of American taxpayers' dollars into the US military infrastructure and arms supplies to troubled African states, the continent is not getting any safer. So what are the real objectives of the US African Command in the region.

Oil Could Lie at the Root of US Growing Military Presence in Africa
https://sputniknews.com/politics/201610011045905717-oil-africa-us-military-presence/

In his latest article for The Intercept a US award-winning journalist, Nick Turse, turned a spotlight on a paradoxical situation: although the US government has poured hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid to the Pan Sahel African countries since 2002, the region has become less secure.

"The region, relatively free of transnational terror threats in 2001, is now beset by regular attacks from Boko Haram, a once-tiny, nonviolent, Islamist sect from Nigeria that has since pledged allegiance to the Islamic State and threatens the stability of not only its homeland but also Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. And Boko Haram is just one of 17 militant groups now menacing the region," Turse points out.

Unsecure Continent: True Aims of US Military in Africa Remain Murky Citing declassified military documents obtained by The Intercept, the journalist underscores that between 2009 and 2013 alone the US allotted $288 million in the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership (TSCTP) funding to help armed forces of Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger.

US special operations forces provide regular training to Niger's army. Washington has spent millions of dollars on planes, trucks and "other gear" to the African nation, Turse points out, adding that this is just the tip of iceberg given the Pentagon's significant military presence on the continent. In his 2015 article for TomDispatch.com, Turse disclosed that there are dozens of US military installations in Africa, besides Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti. These numerous cooperative security locations (CSLs), forward operating locations (FOLs) and other outposts have been built by the US in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Chad, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Mali, Niger, Senegal, the Seychelles, Somalia, South Sudan, and Uganda.

According to the American journalist, US military also have access to locations in Algeria, Botswana, Namibia, São Tomé and Príncipe, Sierra Leone, Tunisia, Zambia and other countries.

Citing Richard Reeve, the director of the Sustainable Security Programme at the Oxford Research Group, a London-based think tank, Turse noted that the Pentagon has maintained covert control over "about every country" in West and Central Africa. Still the exact number of US military installations on the continent is shrouded in secrecy. Likewise the Pentagon's tasks and objectives in Africa remain murky. However, there is a strange correlation between the growing number of US military installations in the region, the increased activity of regional Islamist groups and Africa's oil production sites.

Africa's Crude Has Strategic Importance for US In 2005 GIGA Institute of African Affairs published a book entitled "Resource Politics in Sub-Saharan Africa." One of the authors of the book, German academic Lutz Neumann, presented a list of top African crude producers and stressed the US' growing interest in the African crude.

The German academic listed the continent's top oil producers in order of decreasing output: Nigeria, Algeria, Libya, Angola and Egypt. Other oil-producing countries mentioned by the author were Sudan, Equatorial Guinea, Congo, Gabon, Chad, Cameroon, Congo-Kinshasa and Cote d'Ivoire.

Neumann also highlighted the importance of the Gulf of Guinea, emphasizing that "the hydrocarbon-rich Gulf of Guinea is the main location of oil reserves in SSA, thus bearing the greatest prospects."

"Considering bilateral oil-trade relations, one should particularly emphasize the fact that the US receives 16% of its total oil imports from Africa, with the share of West African oil equaling the share of Saudi Arabia… The National Intelligence Council (USA) predicts that 'West Africa will play an increasing role in global energy markets, providing 25% of North American oil imports in 2015.' This reveals the strategic importance of the SSA [Sub-Saharan Africa] oil sector for the USA," Neumann emphasized.

Indeed, West and Central African countries listed by Neumann's as Africa's top oil-producers have become the Pentagon's focus since 2002, let alone Libya which was invaded by NATO in 2011.

It is hardly a coincidence, according to Chris Mansur of Geopolitical Monitor.

"West African oil remains strategically important for US policy makers, especially since it provides an alternative to Persian Gulf oil," Mansur wrote in his 2012 article.

"In 2007, the US African Command (AFRICOM) was established… Many critics of AFRICOM, including energy security expert Michael T. Klare, believe there is a direct relationship between the existence of AFRICOM and America's interest in African oil."


The journalist explained that there is a parallel between the US' increased military presence in Africa and its military expansion into the Persian Gulf since the establishment of the Carter Doctrine. In accordance with the doctrine, Washington had to ensure security of oil supplies to the US.

There is also the Wolfowitz doctrine that stipulates that Washington should control resource-rich regions to prevent the emergence of a "geopolitical rival."

Remarkably, Roger Stern, an economic geographer at Princeton University, revealed in 2010 that the US had "wasted" almost $8 trillion between 1976 and 2007 on protection of the Gulf oil sites.

Likewise, Washington has been pouring American taxpayers' money into its military infrastructure in Africa since 2002.

US Military Presence in Africa Can't Curtail Emergence of Terror Groups

On the other hand, experts call attention to increased activity of Islamist terrorist groups across Africa. Curiously enough, the groups' terror attacks have targeted oil-rich regions of the north, west and central parts of the continent.

Most notably, Boko Haram, al-Qaeda in Maghreb (AQIM) and al-Shabaab — the three Islamist terrorist organizations — pose a significant threat to the African nations. However, the US military presence has not led to diminishing the Islamist threat. Quite the contrary, Islamic extremist groups have recently intensified their activities on the continent. Dan Glazebrook, a freelance political writer emphasized in his 2015 op-ed for RT that Boko Haram had got a second wind after NATO's invasion of Libya, through obtaining large quantities of weapons and ammunition from Libyan stockpiles. He underscored that the Western invasion directly resulted in the upsurge of terrorist activity in the Sahel region and beyond. The question than arises whether the terrorist threat serves as a justification for America's further military expansion in the region.
 
THE US SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WILL VISIT TURKEY

http://katehon.com/news/us-secretary-defense-will-visit-turkey

The US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter told about an urgent visit to Turkey. Carter is planning to meet with the military leadership of the country to discuss Ankara's actions in Iraq.

The representative of The US Secretary of Defense informed: «He (Carter) is scheduled to meet with Turkish leaders to discuss a range of security challenges in the region including the latest developments in Iraq and Syria».

Meanwhile, despite the progress made over the weekend an agreement with Washington, before the visit of Carter President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan managed to consult with the Russian president on the phone. Putin congratulated Turkey on successes in Mosul and expressed confidence in the supporting Ankara's effort to establish peace in Syria. The leaders agreed to step up efforts to end the conflict in Aleppo and to deliver humanitarian aids in the northern part of the city.
 
SEVERE CONVERSATION: HOW WILL ANKARA GREET US SECRETARY OF DEFENSE?

http://katehon.com/agenda/severe-conversation-how-will-ankara-greet-us-secretary-defense

The US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter will pay a visit to Turkey on Friday, October 21. The chief of Pentagon is going to meet with all key partners of the Counter-Daesh coalition. He also plans to discuss the current situation in Iraq, including the start of the fight for Mosul, as well as a number of other issues.

After the coup

Carter's visit to Turkey is held against the background of a sharp alienating that began with the failed upheaval attempt in the country in the summer of 2016. Turkish security services have declared the direct involvement of US military advisers and spies to the coup.

Incirlik

Another issue to discuss with the Turkish leadership should become an Incirlik Air Base. It is operated by the US Air Force Command in Europe. During the coup attempt this base has become one of the main strongholds of the rebels. Patriotic groups in Turkey insists on closing the base and in the future - withdrawing from NATO.

Kurdish factor

Another very serious issue in relations between Washington and Ankara are Kurds. Turkish troops are currently battling with various Kurdish groups in Syria. Meanwhile, the US openly support the Kurds, supplying them with arms and ammunition. Americans are planning to use Kurdish formation as the main force to achieve their military and political objectives in the region. Also there exists the "Greater Middle East" plan, composed by Ralph Peters,which includes a state of Kurdistan, formed from the Turkish, Syrian and Iraqi territories.


Pentagon chief to stress Iraq sovereignty in Turkey talks

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-usa-turkey-idUSKCN12L0HR

U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said he would stress the need to respect Iraq's sovereignty during a visit on Friday to Turkey, which has been locked in a dispute with Baghdad over who should participate in the campaign to retake Mosul from Islamic State.

Carter, acknowledging it was a delicate issue, declined to explicitly say whether he thought Turkey should be allowed toparticipate in the operations in Iraq. Washington in the past has deferred that matter to Baghdad.

"Of course we'll talk about that. And yes, of course there are sensitivities there. We conduct ourselves, and the coalition does, respecting Iraqi sovereignty. That's an important principle of ours," Carter said.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has been frustrated that NATO member Turkey has not been more involved in the U.S.-backed assault on Mosul and angered by Washington's support for Kurdish militia fighters battling Islamic State in Syria.

Asked about Turkish air strikes that pounded a group of Kurdish fighters allied to a U.S.-backed militia in northernSyria, Carter said he was not certain about what precisely transpired.

"I can’t clarify that now," he said.

A U.S. defense official said on Thursday the specific groups struck by Turkish jets were not themselves U.S.-backed, but were "close to and friendly with" the fighters Washington is working with.

Ankara has been in a row with Iraq over the presence of Turkish troops at the Bashiqa camp near Mosul, as well as over who should take part in the offensive in the largely Sunni Muslim city of Mosul, once part of the Ottoman empire and still seen by Turkey as firmly within its sphere of influence.

Erdogan has warned of sectarian bloodshed if the Iraqi army relies on Shi'ite militia fighters.

A U.S. defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, acknowledged Turkey had legitimate security concerns in Iraq but added that Washington had been clear that "no military should be operating in areas (of Iraq) where they aren't invited expressly."

"We have been working behind the scenes to get the Iraqis and the Turks to come to an understanding about how we're going to move forward on Mosul," the official said.

Carter steered clear of directly commenting on the matter ahead of his talks in Turkey. He acknowledged the United States was partnering with both Iraq and Turkey in the fight against Islamic State.

"These are two close friends of ours. In the case of Turkey, it's a NATO ally. And we want to keep everybody focused on the objective here, which is to defeat ISIL, because that is a threat to all three of us," Carter said.
 
Turkey, Iraq reach agreement 'in principle' on Mosul, U.S. says

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-usa-carter-idUSKCN12L1ZW?il=0

Turkey and Iraq have reached an agreement in principle that could eventually allow a Turkish role in the campaign to retake Mosul from Islamic State, U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said on Friday after talks with President Tayyip Erdogan.

Erdogan has previously voiced frustration that NATO member Turkey has not been more involved in the U.S.-backed assault on the Iraqi city, once part of the Ottoman empire and still seen by Turkey as firmly within its sphere of influence.

Iraq, meanwhile, views Turkish military moves on its territory with apprehension, and any agreement on Mosul would defuse a major source of tension between the neighbors.

Carter made clear that details on Turkey's potential role in the unfolding Mosul campaign still needed to be hammered out and a senior U.S. defense official noted non-military assistance was also a possibility.

"That will have to obviously be something that the Iraqi government will need to agree to and I think there's agreement there in principle," Carter told reporters traveling with him in Turkey, voicing his own conditional support for some type of Turkish role in Iraq.

"But now we're down to the practicalities of that ... and that's what we're working through."

Turkey has been locked in a row with Iraq's central government over the presence of Turkish troops at the Bashiqa camp near Mosul, where it has trained thousands of forces.

Erdogan has warned of sectarian bloodshed if the Iraqi army relies on Shi'ite militia fighters to retake the largely Sunni city of Mosul.

Turkish Defence Minister Fikri Isik, who met Carter, also said there was agreement in principle on Turkish involvement in "determining the future of Mosul" and that he had agreed with his U.S. counterpart on the need for the three countries to work together to reduce tensions between Ankara and Baghdad.

"We will work jointly on Turkey's participation in the Mosul campaign and on Turkey being at the table in the process after that," Fikri said in an interview on state broadcaster TRT.

"LEGITIMATE CONCERNS"

Carter also met Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, who said earlier this week that Turkish jets would be deployed at some point in the offensive to retake Mosul, the last big stronghold held by Islamic State in Iraq.

The push to capture it is expected to become the biggest battle in Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. Mosul is around five times the size of any other city Islamic State has held.

The senior U.S. defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the United States recognized that Turkey had legitimate security concerns over the outcome of the Mosul campaign and expressed hope that Turkish and Iraq officials could meet next week.

The United States was also raising the issue of a Turkish role in Mosul in its regular talks with Iraqi leadership.

"We will talk about, in an aspirational way, some of the things that the Turks could do," the U.S. official told reporters traveling with Carter, noting the possibility of non-military support, including medical and humanitarian assistance.

Even once questions about Mosul are resolved, the United States and Turkey still have major hurdles to overcome in their joint approach to battling Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

Turkey has been angered by Washington's support for Kurdish militia fighters battling Islamic State in Syria.

The United States sees the Syrian Kurdish YPG as a useful ally in the fight against the jihadists. But Turkey views them as a hostile force, an extension of Kurdish militants who have waged a three-decade insurgency on its own soil.


US will continue to be a strong ally of Turkey: US Secretary of Defense

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/us-will-continue-to-be-a-strong-ally-of-turkey-us-secretary-of-defense.aspx?pageID=238&nID=105203&NewsCatID=358

The U.S. will continue to support democracy in Turkey, U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter said on Oct. 21 during his visit to sections of the Turkish Parliament damaged in attacks during the failed July 15 military coup attempt.

“I would like to express my condolences. People fought for democracy and freedom and the whole world, including the U.S., watched the images. The whole world saw the heroes of this horrible incident,” Carter told reporters during his visit to the Turkish capital Ankara.

“In this context, we will continue to be a strong ally of Turkey. We will continue to support democracy in Turkey,” he added.

The U.S. secretary of defense arrived in Ankara on Oct. 21 for several meetings with Turkish officials on rising tensions between Ankara and Baghdad over the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Iraq. He held meetings with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım and Defense Minister Fikri Işık.

Following his visit to Turkey, Carter is scheduled to go to the United Arab Emirates for meetings with Emirati leaders.
 
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