Turkey shot down Russian bomber over Syria

Aeneas said:
It is clear who is backing terrorists.
http://sputniknews.com/europe/20151207/1031361443/nato-turkey-air-defense.html

NATO Will Help Turkey to Strengthen Its Air Defense System

...
It is not like Iraq or Syria are attacking Turkey, but instead Turkey has attacked Iraq and Syria. Typical psychological projection. Truly crazy!

Yes, it's totally mad. They keep talking about stopping ISIS but doing exactly the opposite; they shoot down a Russian jet, they bomb a Syrian base, and now the want to reinforce Turkey's air defense. Because, why? ISIS is going to use their non-existent jets to threaten Turkey, who is actually doing oil business with them?? It's like a husband beating the wife while telling her he loves her deeply. Gaslighting taken into a whole new level!
 
Check this out!

The Isis papers: leaked documents show how Isis is building its state

Blueprint lays bare new contours of Islamic state, complete with civil service, regional government and Soviet levels of economic control

A leaked internal Islamic State manual shows how the terrorist group has set about building a state in Iraq and Syria complete with government departments, a treasury and an economic programme for self-sufficiency, the Guardian can reveal.

The 24-page document, obtained by the Guardian, sets out a blueprint for establishing foreign relations, a fully fledged propaganda operation, and centralised control over oil, gas and the other vital parts of the economy.

Analysis The Isis papers: behind 'death cult' image lies a methodical bureaucracy
From control of oil and land to rules governing leisure, internal memos seen by the Guardian show how deliberate Isis’s state-building exercise has been

Together with other documents obtained by the Guardian, it builds up a picture of a group that, although sworn to a founding principle of brutal violence, is equally set on more mundane matters such as health, education, commerce, communications and jobs. In short, it is building a state.

As western aircraft step up their aerial war on Isis targets in Syria, the implication is that the military task is not simply one of battlefield arithmetic. Isis is already far more than the sum of its fighters.

The document – written as a foundation text to train “cadres of administrators” in the months after Isis’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, declared a “caliphate” in Iraq and Syria on 28 June 2014 – sketches out how to organise government departments including education, natural resources, industry, foreign relations, public relations and military camps.

Dated some time between July and October 2014, it details how Isis will build separate training camps for regular troops and veteran fighters. Veterans, it says, should go on a fortnight’s refresher course each year to receive instruction in the “latest arts of using weapons, military planning and military technologies”.

It says they will also be given a “detailed commentary on the technologies” of the enemy and “how the soldiers of the state can take advantage of them”.

More on:

_http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/07/leaked-isis-document-reveals-plan-building-state-syria
 
sToRmR1dR said:
Updated- Foreign Ministry: U.S.-led coalition targets Syrian army post in Deir Ezzor

_http://sana.sy/en/?p=63630

Damascus, SANA- Foreign and Expatriates Ministry said that four U.S.- led coalition warplanes targeted with 9 rockets one of the Syrian army’s posts in Deir Ezzor province, claiming the lives of 3 soldiers and injuring 13 others in addition to destroying three armored vehicles, four military vehicles, 23 mm machinegun, 14.5 machinegun and a depot of arms and ammunition.

In two identical letters addressed to the UN Secretary General and Chairman of the UN Security Council on Monday, the Foreign and Expatriates Ministry stressed that the Syrian Arab Republic strongly condemns this heinous aggression by the coalition and affirms that it contradicts with the goals and wills of the UN Charter.

Syria called on the Security Council to immediately take the urgent measures to prevent such aggressions from occurring again, adding that the aggression on the military post hinders the efforts aiming to fight terrorism and reiterates that the U.S.- led coalition lacks seriousness and credibility in the fight against terrorism.

Syria urges immediate UN action over US-led airstrikes

_http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2015/12/07/440737/Syria-US-Deir-Ezzor-UN-Ban-USled-coalition

Syria has called on the UN Security Council to take immediate action against recent US-led airstrikes that killed three Syrian soldiers.

The Syrian Foreign Ministry sent a letter to the UN Security Council and Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Monday, condemning the airstrikes that killed the Syrian government soldiers on Sunday.

Damascus said four US-led coalition warplanes fired nine missiles at one of the Syrian army’s posts in the central-east of the country in Deir Ezzor Province, killing three soldiers and injuring 13 others.

"The Syrian Arab Republic strongly condemns this flagrant aggression by the US-led coalition forces, which blatantly violates the objectives of the UN charter," the letter read.

The Syrian Foreign Ministry urged the Security Council to "act immediately in the face of this aggression and take appropriate measures to prevent its recurrence."

The Syrian government has repeatedly condemned the US-led airstrikes in the Arab country as illegal and ineffective with the letter saying the recent attack once again showed the failings of the coalition’s operations.

"The US coalition lacks the seriousness and credibility to effectively combat terrorism,” the letter added.

The so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is based in Britain, earlier said the US-led attacks killed four Syrian soldiers near Ayyash town.

A spokesman for the US-led coalition denied responsibility for the attacks and said the coalition hit an area 55 kilometers away from a Syrian army camp.

"There were no human beings in the area that we struck yesterday, all we struck was a wellhead," the spokesman also said.

The air raids in Syria are an extension of the US-led aerial campaign against alleged Daesh positions in Iraq, which started in August last year. Many have criticized the ineffectiveness of the raids.

This is while the US and some of its regional allies, including Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, have lent staunch support to the Takfiri groups there.

Syria has been gripped by foreign-backed militancy for four and a half years. More than 250,000 have lost their lives and millions displaced as a result of the crisis in the war-torn Arab country.
 
Turkey has a duty to protect its troops in Iraq
http://srbin.info/2015/12/07/cavusoglu-turska-ima-duznost-da-zastiti-svoje-vojnike-u-iraku/

Turkey has a duty to protect its troops around the Iraqi city of Mosul, which is under the control of the jihadist Islamic state, because the reason for their presence there training and consultancy Turkish soldiers, said the head of the Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said yesterday that the official Baghdad could turn to the UN Security Council if Turkey withdraws its troops from northern Iraq within 48 hours.

Cavusoglu said in a Turkish television "Channel 24" said Abadi repeatedly asked Turkey's active support in the fight against the Islamic state.

Turkish minister added that he believed that other countries had a role in Iraq's response to the sending of Turkish troops to northern Iraq, but gave no details of the charges.

Ankara on Thursday deployed hundreds of soldiers in the camp near Mosul, stating that it was a routine rotation of its forces.

Baghdad claims that Turkish units with tanks and artillery entered Iraq without a license.

"Turkish troops entered without permission or knowledge of the Iraqi government," the statement said the office of Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi.

The media in Turkey reported that in Iraq Basik area, near Mosul, sent 600 soldiers and 25 tanks.



Baghdad ‘concerns’ stops flow of Turkish troops into Iraq
http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/12/06/440604/Turkey-Iraq-troops-mosul-

Turkey says it will halt further military interventions in northern Iraq for the time being following an ultimatum by Iraq.

Ankara announced that it will cease transferring troops to Daesh-controlled areas near the northern Iraqi city of Mosul after Baghdad threatened to appeal to the UN over the troop deployments on Sunday, Reuters reported.

"No further forces will be deployed to Bashiqa until concerns of the Iraqi government are overcome," read a letter sent to Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi by his Turkish counterpart, Ahmet Davutoglu.

Earlier in the day, the Iraqi premier warned that if Ankara does not withdraw its troops within 48 hours, Iraq may turn to the UN security council.



Iraq May Seek "Direct Military Intervention From Russia" To Expel Turkish Troops
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-12-06/iraq-may-seek-direct-military-intervention-russia-expel-turkish-troops

Turkey just can’t seem to help itself when it comes to escalations in the Mid-East.

First, Erdogan intentionally reignited the conflict between Ankara and the PKK in an effort to scare the public into nullifying a democratic election outcome. Then, the Turks shot down a Russian warplane near the Syrian border. Finally, in what very well might be an effort to protect Islamic State oil smuggling routes, Erdogan sent 150 troops and two dozen tanks to Bashiqa, just northeast of Mosul in a move that has infuriated Baghdad.

We discussed the troop deployment at length on Saturday in “Did Turkey Just Invade Iraq To Protect Erdogan's ISIS Oil Smuggling Routes?,” and you’re encouraged to review the analysis in its entirety, but here was our conclusion:

The backlash underscores the fact that Iraq does not want help from NATO when it comes to fighting ISIS. Iraqis generally believe the US is in bed with Islamic State and you can bet that Russia and Iran will be keen on advising Baghdad to be exceptionally assertive when it comes to expelling a highly suspicious Turkish presence near Najma.

The point is this: Iran is not going to stand idly by and let America and Turkey put more boots on the ground in Iraq which is why just hours after Ash Carter announced that The Pentagon is set to send in more US SpecOps, Kataib Hezbollah threatened to hunt them down and kill them. Not coincidentally, PM Haider al-Abadi rejected a larger US troop presence just moments later.

Iraq “may soon ask Russia for direct military intervention in response to the Turkish invasion and the violation of Iraqi sovereignty.” "Iraq has the ability to repel these forces and drive them out of Iraqi territory. We could also request Russia to intervene militarily in Iraq in response to Turkish violation of Iraqi sovereignty," he told Al-Araby al-Jadeed.

All major Shi’a parties denounced the deployment as a violation of Iraqi sovereignty, with a leading Sadrist official calling for Iraqi airstrikes on the Turkish force if it did not depart the country. Another pro-Maliki CoR member suggesting that “a Russian force” could intervene to expel the Turkish battalion.

The U.S. will not likely press Turkey on the issue, as anonymous U.S. defense sources merely indicated that the U.S. was "aware" of Turkey’s intentions. Iranian proxy militias, however, could challenge Turkey elsewhere in the country. Iran likely ordered Iranian proxy militias to kidnap 18 Turkish construction workers on September 2 in order to pressure Turkey into ordering Turkish-backed rebels to cooperate with a ceasefire around the besieged Shi’a majority towns of Fu’ah and Kifriya in northern Syria. The kidnappings provided sufficient leverage against Turkey and the kidnapped workers were released after Syrian rebels enacted a local ceasefire. Iran could pursue similar actions against Turkish assets in Baghdad or in southern Iraq.

This situation may escalate further if Iran views the deployment as threatening its vital strategic objectives in Iraq or Syria. Iran rejects any foreign forces other than their own on Iraqi soil and backs the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), Barzani’s rival in Iraqi Kurdish politics trying to contest his control over the Kurdistan regional presidency. Iranian proxies also recently sparred violently with the Peshmerga in Tuz Khurmato in eastern Salah al-Din proxies on November 12.

Shi’a parties will use the episode to pressure PM Abadi to strongly reject foreign intervention, particularly if reports that Turkey and Barzani signed an agreement to establish a permanent Turkish base in Bashiqa are correct. These calls could complicate U.S. plans to additional Special Operations Forces (SOF) to Iraq to as a “specialized expeditionary targeting force” that will conduct raids and intelligence-gathering in Iraq and Syria.



Suspected Israeli organ trafficker arrested in Turkey: reports
http://www.dw.com/en/suspected-israeli-organ-trafficker-arrested-in-turkey-reports/a-18896905

A suspected Israeli organ trafficker who was wanted on an Interpol red notice has been arrested at Istanbul's Ataturk airport. A court has ordered that he be extradited to Israel.

Boris Volfman was arrested at Istanbul's Ataturk airport on suspicion of organ trafficking and fraud after flying from Bangkok on Friday night, Turkey's Dogan news agency reported.

The Ukrainian-born Israeli citizen reportedly came to Turkey to harvest organs from desperate Syrian refugees, the daily Vatan newspaper reported.

A court on Saturday ordered his extradition to Israel after a 40-day arrest period.

There was no comment from Turkish or Israeli authorities concerning Volfman's arrest.

Turkish media reported an investigation has been launched to determine his contacts in Turkey.

Local media outlets reported Boris' last name as both Volfman and Walker.
 
Another article with some geopolitical input:
http://fortruss.blogspot.fr/2015/12/what-is-us-cooking-up-for-turkey-iraq.html
What is the US cooking up for Turkey, Iraq, Syria, and Iran? "Divide and conquer" on a whole new level
“Turkey versus Iraq and Syria: prologue of the Third World War?”

Military publications and information agencies have exploded with the news that Turkish security forces are beginning to consolidate on Iraq territory. For the last few days, the Turkish army has been crossing the Syrian border and started digging in and equipping their border positions. Earlier, Turkish armed forces had already penetrated into both Syrian and Iraq territory (and “experts” were sure that they had been there the whole time), but this time we are dealing with a fundamentally new approach.

In February 2015, the Turks went a few dozen kilometers into Syrian territory to evacuate the remains of the founder of the Ottoman Empire, Suleiman Shah, and protect their honor. In September 2015, Turkish armed forces held a short-term operation against activists of the Kurdish Workers Party in Iraq not long after a clash with police in Turkey. Plus, for quite some time Turkish air forces have attacked the Kurds under the pretext of fighting Daesh. Turkey’s willfulness, of course, is not liked by Baghdad or Damascus, but air raids are one thing. A totally different thing is an actual occupation.

On November 26, the Turkish army broke into the territory of Syria and captured the border height tal-Sieb. It started with infantry accompanied with construction equipment. And then, after the erection of fortifications, tanks and light armored equipment were placed on the heights. Various media report that the local residents were convinced that this was all done with the aim of covering oil exports of the terrorists to Turkey, so that external forces would not prevent Daesh’s peaceful hydrocarbon trade, and in order to replenish the family budget of the country’s leadership.

And now units of the Turkish army have already “materialized” in the area of Bashiq near Mosul in Iraq. In the beginning there was talk of a company, then a battalion of infantry reinforced by 20-25 tanks. That is, there was talk of a battalion-tactical group capable of performing separate tasks. In particular, one capable of retaining positions or landing areas until the arrival of the main forces located not far away.

In general, according to media reports, directly on the south-eastern border of Turkey more than 1,000 armored vehicles, or about 8 brigades, are now concentrated. Given the size of the Turkish army, in a short time this grouping could be expanded significantly.

Unlike previous “raids,” the Turks seem to be accustoming themselves to being in Iraq and Syria for a while.

The intention to train the Turkish-loyal Kurdish militia group “Peshmerga” was officially announced. But in fact, there is a bigger question. Why are groups loyal to Turkey not being prepared on its own territory? Why go to a territory which, according to news agencies, is controlled by the “Islamic State.” Moreover, nothing has been heard of supposed conflicts between Turkish forces and the Islamic State.

Official Baghdad in a rage

Iraq authorities have stated that they gave no permission for this entry onto their territory and they have demanded that it their territory be left immediately. Turkey has pretended that it doesn’t hear anything. Then the head of the Iraq parliamentary committee on security and defense, Hakim al-Zamili, officially appealed to the government to airstrike the positions of Turkish occupational forces.

And, if the decision will be made, the consequences could be unpredictable. Given the policies of Ankara in recent times, being three our four times wrong as an aggressor, Turkey nonetheless believes that those who it his committing acts of aggression against have no right to use force. And Iraq, in this situation, might be blamed as the aggressor with all the ensuing consequences.

The situation is quite delicate, remembering that the US is officially continuing to “nurture” official Baghdad and that Turkey is a NATO ally and has recently, clearly been the pet of the alliance. Here it should be noted that relations between Washington and Baghdad are becoming more and more formal at an eye level. Iraqi authorities have openly pro-Iranian positions, and Tehran is clearly closer to them in every sense than their overseas “partners” who are bombing their country back to the stone age. In the words of American authorities, there is all the less heat aimed at Baghdad while there is more undisguised irritation at the growing influence of Tehran in the region and, indirectly, Moscow.

Turkey, despite the fact that the US has publicly distanced itself from the Mosul situation, is unlikely to decide on an invasion of a foreign territory without approval from Washington. Moreover, the situation is slippery. This member of the alliance’s troops could be struck at. But this would not be a strike at the territory of a member of the alliance, but against what is in fact an occupation force on a different territory. Formally, the allies have all the legal bases to politely (or rudely) refuse to support Ankara. But how everything will actually turn out is unknown. However, it is 90% probable that Turkey will not just leave its soldiers to be bombed. And then a spark can ignite a flame. And it is very likely that Iran will be compelled to come to the aid of its friends and fellow believers in Iraq.

Syria is being pulled apart

The situation in Syria is no less complex. Given the audacity and impudence with which Ankara acts, and its absolute nihilism in regards to issues of international law, it is impossible to exclude that, once established in one place in Syria, Turkish troops will move further. It is impossible for the Syrian army no to react to this, but what will happen if it does react? I recall that the Syrian army today operates in tandem with the Russian air force.

Russia is trying with all of its strength to maintain peace, and it is not responding to the military provocations of Turkey. But in view of the total and complete inadequacy of the Turkish leadership, it is impossible to predict its next steps. Turkey’s policies are, unfortunately, beginning to look more and more like the policies of Nazi Germany and, if a finger is raised, then the hand will be slapped...

Moreover, the situation in Syria and Iraq is already appearing to be not merely indirectly, but straightforwardly terrifying to Russian security. If earlier couch experts and idealists reasoned that the Caucasus are separated from the positions of ISIS by Turkey, then today it is obvious to everyone that the Turkish border is fully transparent for terrorists.

ISIS is now becoming more powerful in almost openly cooperating with Turkey. In Afghanistan, the death of the leader of the Taliban, Mullah Omar, has been announced. This information has not been fully confirmed but, if it is true, then a vacuum will be created among the leadership of Islamic groupings in Central Asia, and ISIS will immediately rush to fill it. Plus, in recent months (under the nose of American security forces), its forces are growing with impunity in Northern Afghanistan. I think that it is not necessary to explain how this could threaten Russia.

In all of this terrible game, we don’t need to delude ourselves over the relationship between the US government and Erdogan. The US and the West in general have been traditionally close to nationalist Pan-Turkists in Turkey who are popular in the military. It is not excluded that Washington will once again plan a reshuffle similar to the one which Soviet spies thwarted in Germany 70 years ago. From 1943 to 1945, London and Washington thought through the technical variants of replacing Hitler with Nazi military and secret service men who were loyal to them, together with whom a united front could be formed against the USSR. But thanks to the efforts of brilliant Soviet agents, Moscow was constantly one step ahead, and attempts to “make friends” with the Nazis while simultaneously sacrificing Hitler resulted in an ugly international scandal.

Now, the United States is encouraging Erdogan with a conspiratorial half-smile while trying not to cross a certain line. Once his job is done and the fires of war have been lit, then it will be possible to accuse him of all mortal sins (first and foremost the financing of international terrorism) and skillfully replace him with someone fully controlled by the West from among the military-based nationalists who are dreaming of revenge against Erdogan over recent mass imprisonments and other humiliations.

Who is interested?

Why the United States? Everything is very simple. We have already written about the fact that the US has “ventilated” the question of changing borders in the Middle East into ones more comfortable for it over the past few years.

Moreover, this is done by force and “unofficial” but also “non-accidental” entities. In particular, experts from the former leadership of security and diplomatic structures of the US. Former chief of staff of the US Army, General Raymond Odierno, spoke on the feasibility of changing borders at his press-conference upon resigning. A former high-ranking intelligence officer, Ralph Peters, whose books are taught at leading military colleges in the US, wrote on this. And not long ago he was joined by one of the most authoritative American experts, the former deputy secretary of state and representative of the US to the UN, John Bolton:

“The current reality is such that the Iraq and Syria which we knew no longer exist. The Islamic State has carved out a new structure out of the heritage of the post-Ottoman empire, mobilizing Sunnis who are in opposition to the regime of President Bashar al-Assad and the government of Iraq controlled by Iran. In addition, after years of struggle, a de fact independent Kurdistan has been formed...Instead of fighting for the restoration of the map of the world from after the First World War, Washington should recognize the new geopolitical situation. The best alternative to the Islamic State in north-eastern Syria and western Iraq is a new, independent, Sunni state."

Bolton almost verbatim repeated Peters and cynically stressed that the new government is clearly not democratic, but that there is, supposedly, nothing wrong with this! If Peters had only predicted in theory a change of borders, then Bolton’s speech would have been about this, but such statements have now been based in a real, operative setting! This leads to very serious suspicions that the entire situation is being completely modified in the framework of realizing one strategic plan.

There is not need to have any illusions. This “new independent Sunni state” designated by Bolton is ISIS! Just at the right moment some of its most odious leaders will be sacrificed! Once again, the “Dulles-Himmler variant of 1945”!

In a certain sense, the problem today is Kurdistan. The Kurds on the territory of Turkey and Syria are obviously negative towards Ankara, as towards the West, and do not hide their leftist views. Therefore, the West will carry on work with the Iraqi Kurds loyal to it, out of whom a new elite can be “forged.” It is possible that a united, independent Kurdistan, unlike today’s “anti-Western” mosaic of Kurdistan, could be deployed against Damascus, Baghdad, and Tehran. One option is that it could be either restricted to northern Syria and Iraq or a new Turkish elite would be compelled to sacrifice part of their territory in exchange for power and recognizing legitimacy. In the situation of a “great war,” this would be perceived normally.

And so, the ideal map for the West includes:

the division of Iraq into three parts (a Shiite South, part that will leave for a new Sunni state, and part going towards a new Kurdistan)


the division of Syria into three or four parts (one part goes to the new Sunni state, another to the new Kurdistan, and the costal part will be made into a miniature, secular and pro-Western state, or, over the course of trading, could be left for the Alawites)


a weakened, reduced, and more Western-controlled Turkey


The countries which the West would like to throw into the fire of war are Iran (from which Washington would obviously and with pleasure separate the northern part inhabited by Kurds and Azerbaijanis) and Saudi Arabia, which is heading towards policies more independent from Washington (this recent behavior of yesterday’s ally cannot but annoy the United States).

The ideal option for Washington would be excluding Iran’s north, which is populated by ethnic minorities and which has access to the Caspian Sea. The resulting strip would be turned into a land corridor for pro-American forces in Central Asia.

And, of course, the strategic goal of this grand plan would be the southern part of Russia which, according to Western military doctrines, is the “main threat” against which all measures are good.

If this plan is carried out from across the ocean according to plan as written and in a controlled scenario, then this would be entirely tragic for us.

But it would be no less tragic for us than for the whole world if over the course of the implementation of this plan uncontrolled reactions begin (the appearance of unexpected players, the use of WMD’s, etc.), which could set the world on fire.


Russia’s actions in this situation are turning into a complicated chess match. One this is 100% clear. The decision to start operations in Syria was strategically, absolutely correct. And it has only one drawback: it was not taken earlier.
 
Breaking: Russian Air Force Intercepts two Turkish F-16
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=b75_1449522593

According Russian Official's Colonel-General Andrei Kartapolov Two Turkish F-16 has penetrated Syrian airspace.
Russian Sukhoi's SU-34 interceptors has been called to intercept Turkish F-16.

A radio communication will be published soon.
But the content is Already described here below:


Sukhoi :
To the pilots of aircrafts heading 274 FL 18500.
You are entering restricted Airspace controlled by Russian Air Force
If you don't leave this area immediately we will engage !

To the pilots of aircrafts heading 274 FL 18500.
You are entering restricted Airspace controlled by Russian Air Force
If you don't leave this area immediately we will engage !

After 2 warnings F-16 disappeared in turkish airspace.
 
Flight Recorder belonging to Su-24 downed by Turkey found (Photo - Video)
http://fortruss.blogspot.com/2015/12/flight-recorder-belonging-to-su-24.html

8th December, 2015 - Volunteers of the Russian edition of Anna-News have published a video in which they state that they have discovered one of the flight recorders in Syria of the Russian su-24 bomber downed by a Turkish fighter jet.

On the November 24th, a Russian su-24 was shot down by a missile from a Turkish F-16. The Navigating Pilot of the bomber, Murakhtin Constantine, managed to escape. During the rescue operation a Russian marine, Alexander Pozynich, was killed aboard the helicopter. Turkish media then published a video which showed militants shoot down the pilot of the Russian bomber.

On the 25th of November, the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, signed a document awarding three persons of the Russian military. The deceased pilot Oleg Peshkov was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Russian Federation, Alexander Pozynich awarded the Order of Courage. The same award was given to Konstantin Murakhtin.
 
Russia, Turkey Tensions Heating Up: Putin Surrounds Turkey with Military Presence
https://pjmedia.com/trending/2015/12/9/russia-turkey-tensions-heating-up-putin-surrounds-turkey-with-military-presence

Vladimir Putin was dead serious when he warned Turkey that it would "regret more than once" shooting down a Russian fighter yet. Not only has the Russian president announced all kinds of sanctions against Turkey, but he's now also surrounding the Islamist-led country with his military.

As Hurriyet Daily News reports, Putin has sent 14 helicopters to Erebuni air base in Armenia. Half of these helicopters are armored Mi-24 attack helicopters, while the other seven are Mi-8 model transport helicopters.

Meanwhile, Putin has also sent a submarine called the Rostov-on-Don to the Mediterranean. Russia has a naval base there, and the Russian president is apparently looking to give it a major boost: the submarine is armed with Caliber cruise missiles.

As if that doesn't make his aggressive intentions clear enough, Putin has also stepped up its presence at the Hmeymim air base outside Latakia in Syria. This air base is now home to 55 Russian fighter jets, "including SU-30 fighter jets and SU-24, 2U-25 and SU-34 bombers along with seven Mi-24 and five Mi-8 helicopters."

These jets are obviously weapons of aggression, not of defense. Putin says they'll be used against ISIS and other groups fighting against Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad, but their presence will undoubtedly make Turkey nervous, not in the least because Putin's also stepping up his military presence in other places in the region. And there's more: the air base is also fortified with Pantsir-S1, Buk-M2, S-200, Pechora-2M and S-400 air defense batteries.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan may wonder why Putin has taken the time to do so, since ISIS and Al Nusra aren't exactly known for having dozens of fighter jets and bombers they can use against Assad and Russia. Only one country in the region does: Turkey.

The only question is now whether and if so how Turkey will respond to this obvious challenge to its hegemony in its own backyard.


Turkish jets strike Kurdish positions in Iraq amid rising tension between Ankara & Baghdad
https://www.rt.com/news/325265-turkish-jets-kurds-iraq/?utm_source=browser&utm_medium=aplication_chrome&utm_campaign=chrome

Ankara carried out airstrikes targeting Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) forces in northern Iraq, the Turkish army said on Wednesday. The action comes in the wake of rising tensions between Ankara and Baghdad over the deployment of Turkish troops in Iraq.

Ten F-16 fighter jets launched an attack between 10pm and 10:50pm on Tuesday, targeting PKK positions in the Kandil, Hakurk, Zap and Avasin-Baysan regions in northern Iraq, the Turkish General Staff said in a statement. It added that the targets were “destroyed in an aerial campaign.”

Tensions have been rising between Ankara and Baghdad after Turkey deployed hundreds of troops equipped with tanks and artillery to Iraq’s northern Nineveh Governorate last Thursday, saying they will train forces battling Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL).

Baghdad said it had not asked for the help of Turkish forces, and demanded their withdrawal after it said Turkey had “illegally” sent the troops into Iraq. Describing the move as violation of sovereignty, the Iraqi government also asked NATO to intervene.


Security Council to meet at Russia's request on Syria, Iraq
http://middle-east-online.com/english/?id=74321

Russia denounced Tuesday the deployment of Turkish troops to Iraq, but the United Nations Security Council did not take a stand on the dispute.

Russia had called the informal talks, which were presided over by the United States, which heads the rotating presidency of the 15-nation council in December and leads the international coalition fighting the Islamic State Group in Iraq and Syria.


"It was very important to call the attention of the Security Council to this situation," Russia's UN envoy Vitaly Churkin.

"We believe Turkey has acted recklessly and inexplicably in carrying out additional deployments in Iraq without the consent of the Iraqi government."

A "disappointed" Churkin deplored the fact that the United States and other Western members of the Council have refused to call ally Turkey to order or reaffirm Iraq's sovereignty.

He called the Turkish moves "a reflection of the lack of legality in the actions of the international coalition led by the US."


UN refuses Russian request to make statement against Turkey, Iraq downplays dispute
http://www.todayszaman.com/diplomacy_un-refuses-russian-request-to-make-statement-against-turkey-iraq-downplays-dispute_406555.html?

Russia's attempt to have the UN Security Council issue a statement calling on Turkey to respect international law and the sovereignty of Iraq after Turkey's recent troop deployment in Mosul failed on Tuesday, while the Iraqi ambassador to the UN appeared to downplay the dispute between Ankara and Baghdad.

Churkin expressed disappointment that the council did not agree with Russia's proposal for the UN to issue a statement reaffirming the need to respect international law and sovereignty, and calling for unity against ISIL. Russia's move on Tuesday came after two weeks of deteriorating relations between Ankara and Moscow since Turkey shot down a Russian jet at the Syrian border over its airspace violations. Russian President Vladimir Putin called the move a “stab in the back,” while Moscow soon after announced a number of economic sanctions against Turkey. Due to the ongoing tension, Russia is expected to take a position against Turkey in international platforms.


Erdogan sends 'Grey Wolves' to Crimea - A History Lesson
http://fortruss.blogspot.ru/2015/12/erdogan-sends-grey-wolves-to-crimea.html

Ukrainian nationalists and activists of the so-called Crimean Tatar Mejlis recently began to receive reinforcements in the face of right-wing members of the Turkish group "Grey wolves". One of the organizers of the blockade of Crimea, Lenur Islyamov, on his blog posted a photo with Turkish fighters. "Turkish patriots from the organization Bozkurtkar Turk ulkuculeri, people call it — "Grey wolves", visited us at the blockade. The blockade is compressed", — signed "islyamov".

To make it clear who decided to be friends with the "svidomye", please refer to history. "Grey wolves" ("Bozkurtlar") appeared in the late 1960s as the youth wing of the far-right "nationalist movement Party", which proclaimed the goal of uniting all Turkic peoples in one state. Colonel Alparslan of Turkey led the organization, and was an open admirer of Hitler and Nazi ideas. The Turkish state, regardless of whether it has formally forbidden the "wolves" or allowed them to emerge from the underground, actively used them to suppress opposition and promote foreign policy. On record there are hundreds of crimes by "Bozkurtlar". They killed trade unionists, activists of the Kurdish movement, the Communists, objectionable journalists and officials and staged a mass massacre on may day demonstrations in Istanbul in 1977. It is believed that the crimes organized by the "wolves" death squads in the Kurdish areas consisted of thousands of civilians.

Active Grey wolves also operated abroad. They staged an assassination attempt on the Pope in 1981. Now they are actively collaborating with the terrorist underground in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous region of China, considering it part of the "great Turan". In August of this year, "wolves" staged an attack in the capital of Thailand, in which 19 people died and 123 were injured. In Europe the wolves organize mass rallies in Turkey, they sometimes kill people in the Old World of the Kurds, and defile the monuments to the Armenians and beat up Chinese tourists. In recent years the "Grey wolves" focused on the recruitment of people for war in Syria on the side of ISIS.

In the post-Soviet arena, "Grey wolves" appeared immediately after the collapse of the USSR. In 1992, the organization's leader, Colonel Turkesh, met in Baku with the future President of Azerbaijan Abulfaz Elchibey. Later the wolves fought in Nagorno-Karabakh and on the side of the terrorists in Chechnya.

The fact that now the Crimean Tatar nationalists decided to cooperate with "Bozkurtlar", is not surprising, as well as the worsening of Russian-Turkish relations. It is known that our pilot, catapulted from the downed su-24, was shot by the son of the leader of the "Party of the nationalist revival" and the Commander "the Grey wolves", Alparslan çelik. As was stated in an interview to Aleksey Zhuravko, now, in the Kherson region, there are about 700 fighters of "Bozkurtlar". There are documented cases of attacks on local residents. In Kherson region the wolves are going to create some kind of "Tatar Republic".

But it would be bad if the wolves had acted only according to Erdogan's will. Everything points to the fact that they are backed by the Turkish leadership. But because of threats issued by the radicals, their presence around the border with Crimea should be taken seriously.

In August this year the leader of the Mejlis, Mustafa Cemil, in Ankara, participated in the "World Congress of the Crimean Tatar people". And in September the Majlis, under the leadership of Dzhemilev and Chubarov, joined the Ukrainian nationalists and began a food blockade of the Peninsula. Then everyone laughed because such unwise actions affected primarily Ukrainian entrepreneurs. But few people noticed that Turkish food exports on the Peninsula immediately increased four times. According to reports in the media, for organizing the blockade, one of the active members of the Majlis, Lenur Islyamov, (who now is friends with the "Grey wolves") received from the Turks 500 thousand dollars. Previously, Turkey became saturated with content and sponsored Islyamov for the TV channel ATR. A few years ago Islyamov was seen in cooperation with "Hizb ut-Tahrir".

The plans of the Crimean Tatar radicals today involve a sea blockade of Crimea. In a conversation with the prankster Vovan, Islyamov admitted that his guys are ready to arrange the armed invasion in Crimea. Now that reinforcements have arrived of "Grey wolves", you can be sure that these scenarios will be considered seriously.

Senior research fellow at IMEMO, Russian Academy of Sciences, Viktor Nadein-Raevsky, believes that though it may be a large-scale provocation, Ukraine should be more wary of cooperation with the "wolves": This is a very strong organization that has a legal branch in Germany and the Netherlands. In Turkey they are officially prohibited, but we see that they can act quite freely in neighboring Syria. Recently, the "Grey wolves" appeared in Ukraine, together with "Dzhemilev", and publicly demonstrated their intentions. The plans of the "Grey wolves" are quite large, they by any means will not stop. You have to understand that this Pro-fascist terrorist organization's goal is to build a great Turan state, as taught by the "wolves"ideological leader, Alparslan Turkes.

It's hard to say how many "wolves" there are. Before the coup in Turkey in 1980, there were from 200 to 400 thousand, but this information has not been verified . They have their training camps, it is quite a modern organization. By and large, the wolves are little different from ISIS. The difference is that they are based not only on Islam, but Turkish nationalism. Three of the Crescent, depicted in the form of a swastika, is their old symbol, and they greet each other by throwing the palm forward.
 
A crew of Russian journalists were detained on December 7 on their way to the Province of Gaziantep bordering Syria.

Moscow calls for harsh OSCE reaction to deportation of Russian reporters from Turkey
http://tass.ru/en/politics/842506

Russian Foreign Ministry's Special Representative for Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law Konstantin Dolgov has stated the necessity of a harsh OSCE reaction to the deportation of Russian reporters from Turkey.

"Deporting the Russian reporters without explanations, the Turkish authorities continue trampling freedom of speech and access to the media. Ankara’s disregard for its international obligations requires a harsh reaction from OSCE and other relevant international organisations," he tweeted.

On December 8, the Russian Foreign Ministry said, "On December 7, members of the crew of the Special Correspondent program of the Rossiya 1 TV channel were detained in the Hatay Province in south-eastern Turkey bordering Syria as they were going to the neighbouring Province of Gaziantep," the ministry said. "The detention was carried out by unknown persons wearing civilian clothes who, in reply to the journalists’ legitimate request, refused to introduce themselves or let them see their IDs." The Turkish authorities refused to give explanations to representatives of the Russian Embassy in Turkey who got in touch with the crew shortly after its detention," the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

"We strongly condemn the illegal actions of the Turkish authorities," the ministry said. "Such attitude towards the media is absolutely unacceptable."

The ministry also said it was curious as to what "rules" had been violated by the Russian journalists. "One gets the impression that Ankara is scared that correspondents of the Rossiya 1 TV channel may throw spotlight on facts about the illegal activities carried out in the Turkish-Syrian border area the Turkish government would prefer to keep in the shadow," it said.

The Russian Foreign Ministry noted that the incident was quite telling in the light of a series of violations of the rights of the local and foreign media in Turkey. "The international organizations, including the OSCE, have repeatedly drawn attention of the world public to this. In this regard, the detention of Editor-in-Chief of the Turkish daily newspaper Cumhuriyet Can Dundar and the newspaper’s Ankara bureau chief Erdem Gul in late November over a report about the involvement of the Turkish intelligence agencies in the supplies of weapons to militants in Syria is indicative in this respect. The journalists were charged with ‘espionage, disclosure of state secrets and terrorism.’ They are facing life in prison," the Russian Foreign Ministry said.


Putin invites British experts to take part in deciphering data from Su-24 flight recorders
http://tass.ru/en/politics/842664

Russian President Vladimir Putin and UK Prime Minister David Cameron have agreed in their telephone conversation that both countries have "similar approaches toward the threat coming from ISIL (Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant — former name of Islamic State terrorist organization) and other terrorist groups operating in the region (Middle East)," the Kremlin press service said on Wednesday.

The conversation was held on the initiative of the British side. "The leaders exchanged opinions on relevant issues of ensuring security in the Middle East, first of all in the context of efforts on settling the situation in Syria. It was noted that Russia and UK have similar approaches toward the threat coming from ISIL and other terrorist groups operating in the region. In this context, issues of establishing bilateral cooperation between different state structures should be discussed," the press service said.
 
Daesh has reportedly beheaded five unidentified Russian nationals accused of spying on the Takfiri terrorist group.

Daesh beheads five Russians over espionage charges
http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/12/09/441059/Daesh-Russian-spy-behead-Syira

Wed. Dec. 9, 2015 - “The five Russian spies were beheaded after providing information on an organized network of spies,” a media worker with links to the terrorist group in the Syrian city of Raqqah was quoted by ARA News as saying on Wednesday.

He added that “their identities were not uncovered because Daesh’s leadership tries to pursue other members of this network before they escape,” and noted that Daesh is now trying to capture all Russian spies who have infiltrated their ranks.

On December 2, Daesh released a propaganda video showing the beheading of an alleged Russian spy, Magomed Khasiyev, in Raqqah by a Russian Daesh member identified as Anatoly Zemlyanka.

Before being executed, the prisoner claimed to be a Russian national from the Chechen Republic, and said he joined Daesh to spy for the Federal Security Service (FSB) in 2014.

The executions happened after Russia started attacking Daesh targets in Syria upon a request by the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on September 30.

The foreign-sponsored conflict in Syria, which flared in March 2011, has claimed the lives of more than 250,000 people and left over one million injured, according to the United Nations.


Turkish government files suit against Gulen
http://iran-daily.com/News/132563.html?catid=3&title=Turkish-government-files-suit-against-Gulen

The Turkish government has lodged a civil suit with a US court against a US-based opponent of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, alleging human rights abuses.

Robert Amsterdam, the founder of the UK-based firm Amsterdam and Partners LLP, said on Wednesday that the case against Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen was filed with a district court in the northeastern US state of Pennsylvania on December 7.

The suit alleges that, on Gulen's orders, his followers "illegally planted evidence, fabricated search warrants, secured illegal wiretaps and ultimately arrested plaintiffs without any legal basis" back in 2009.

The suit, which seeks punitive damages, names three individuals as plaintiffs, rather than the Turkish government, which has hired the law firm.

The suit was brought under the Alien Tort Statue, an 18th century law that has been used to try alleged human rights cases from across the globe in US courts.

"We're suing them (Gulen and 50 of his followers) ... in respect to these false imprisonments. Mr Gulen has a long history in Turkey of engaging his followers aggressively and falsely imprisoning hundreds of people," Amsterdam said.

Gulen is facing another suit in a Turkish court, which accuses him of plotting against a rival religious group.

Over the past few weeks, the Turkish government has intensified its crackdown on the supporters of Gulen.

Earlier this week, police in Turkey arrested 18 people, including senior police officers, in 13 provinces, accusing them of supporting the cleric.

Gulen, who has lived in self-imposed exile in the United States since 1999, is regarded as an outspoken opponent of President Erdogan and his policies.

Erdogan has accused the cleric and his followers of plotting to overthrow the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) after prosecutors seen as sympathetic to Gulen launched a corruption probe against the Turkish leader’s inner circle in 2013.
 
angelburst29 said:
Daesh has reportedly beheaded five unidentified Russian nationals accused of spying on the Takfiri terrorist group.

Daesh beheads five Russians over espionage charges
http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/12/09/441059/Daesh-Russian-spy-behead-Syira

Wed. Dec. 9, 2015 - “The five Russian spies were beheaded after providing information on an organized network of spies,” a media worker with links to the terrorist group in the Syrian city of Raqqah was quoted by ARA News as saying on Wednesday.

He added that “their identities were not uncovered because Daesh’s leadership tries to pursue other members of this network before they escape,” and noted that Daesh is now trying to capture all Russian spies who have infiltrated their ranks.

On December 2, Daesh released a propaganda video showing the beheading of an alleged Russian spy, Magomed Khasiyev, in Raqqah by a Russian Daesh member identified as Anatoly Zemlyanka.

Before being executed, the prisoner claimed to be a Russian national from the Chechen Republic, and said he joined Daesh to spy for the Federal Security Service (FSB) in 2014.

The executions happened after Russia started attacking Daesh targets in Syria upon a request by the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on September 30.

The foreign-sponsored conflict in Syria, which flared in March 2011, has claimed the lives of more than 250,000 people and left over one million injured, according to the United Nations.

Sad to think due to their fate, but they probably were spies for FSB. The vengeance of the psychopaths is merciless.

angelburst29 said:
Turkish government files suit against Gulen
http://iran-daily.com/News/132563.html?catid=3&title=Turkish-government-files-suit-against-Gulen

The Turkish government has lodged a civil suit with a US court against a US-based opponent of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, alleging human rights abuses.

Robert Amsterdam, the founder of the UK-based firm Amsterdam and Partners LLP, said on Wednesday that the case against Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen was filed with a district court in the northeastern US state of Pennsylvania on December 7.

The suit alleges that, on Gulen's orders, his followers "illegally planted evidence, fabricated search warrants, secured illegal wiretaps and ultimately arrested plaintiffs without any legal basis" back in 2009.

The suit, which seeks punitive damages, names three individuals as plaintiffs, rather than the Turkish government, which has hired the law firm.

The suit was brought under the Alien Tort Statue, an 18th century law that has been used to try alleged human rights cases from across the globe in US courts.

"We're suing them (Gulen and 50 of his followers) ... in respect to these false imprisonments. Mr Gulen has a long history in Turkey of engaging his followers aggressively and falsely imprisoning hundreds of people," Amsterdam said.

Gulen is facing another suit in a Turkish court, which accuses him of plotting against a rival religious group.

Over the past few weeks, the Turkish government has intensified its crackdown on the supporters of Gulen.

Earlier this week, police in Turkey arrested 18 people, including senior police officers, in 13 provinces, accusing them of supporting the cleric.

Gulen, who has lived in self-imposed exile in the United States since 1999, is regarded as an outspoken opponent of President Erdogan and his policies.


Erdogan has accused the cleric and his followers of plotting to overthrow the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) after prosecutors seen as sympathetic to Gulen launched a corruption probe against the Turkish leader’s inner circle in 2013.

Strange to think that the state in which I live harbors Gulen. I think Erdogan is subject to the same treatment that Saddam Hussein got after he was no longer useful to the Western elites agenda.

It seems that Gulen looks a lot like an IS educator to me as is illustrated in this 2009 article:

Fethullah Gülen's Grand Ambition
Turkey's Islamist Danger


An unnamed former Gülen follower who also once worked in Gülen schools and ışıkevi reported that Fethullahists called the Dutch "filthy, blasphemous infidels" and that they said "the best Dutchman is one who has converted to Islam. All the Dutch must be made Muslims."[20] Indeed, of the thousands of Fethullahist schools in more than one hundred countries that allegedly teach moderation, none are located in countries such as Saudi Arabia or Iran that exist under domineering strains of official Islam, and most appear instead geared to radicalize students in secular Muslim and non-Muslim societies.

Does "radicalize" sound familar?

Even though Erdogan seems to be playing the pro-ISIS part by allowing the oil shipments through Turkey it seems he is walking a tightrope as far as internal opposition goes with Gulen and possibly others.

Those "senior police officers" are not perhaps what they appear to be:

Fethullah Gülen's Grand Ambition
Turkey's Islamist Danger

More on police officers:

Islamization within police ranks also contributes to police brutality against anti-AKP demonstrators. On May 1, 2008, the police used gas bombs, pepper gas, water cannons, and clubs against workers who wanted to celebrate May Day peacefully in Istanbul's Taksim Square, the traditional site of demonstrations in Turkey's largest city; scores were injured.[33] Labor unions and opposition parties condemned the police brutality and accused Erdoğan of using police to silence opposition voices.[34] Police also suppressed labor protests in Tuzla (Istanbul) shipyards.[35] Similarly, police have harassed individual citizens after they criticized Erdoğan's policies. Erdoğan's own security guards abducted a 46-year-old man from Antalya for speaking out in public against his social security policies, taking the man to a deserted location where the guards beat and threatened him. The victim alleged that his attackers said they could easily plant guns or drugs on him and kill him

Sounds good for Erogan but what if he is the next to go?

And the accusation of attempting to overthrow the AKP (Erdogan's party) is probably true as well. I imagine that the US and the CIA approve of Gulen as being quite acceptable as perhaps even Erdogan's replacement?:

[url=http://www.meforum.org/2045/fethullah-gulens-grand-ambition]Fethullah Gülen's Grand Ambition
U.S. Government Support for Gülen?

Many Turkish analysts believe that, prior to Erdoğan's election, Gülen and his supporters in the U.S. government helped obtain an invitation to the White House for him at a time when Erdoğan was banned from politics in Turkey due to his Islamist activities—an event viewed as a U.S. endorsement ahead of the 2002 Turkish elections. That the U.S. government and, specifically, the Central Intelligence Agency support the Gülen movement is conventional wisdom among Turkey's secular elite even though no hard evidence exists to support such allegations.

When Turkish secularists are asked to defend the view that Gülen enjoys U.S. support, they often point to his almost 20-year residence in eastern Pennsylvania. After the Supreme Court of Appeals in Turkey (Yargıtay) confirmed on June 24, 2008, a lower court's ruling to acquit Gülen on charges that he organized an illegal terrorist organization to overthrow the secular government in Turkey, Gülen won another legal battle, this time in the United States. A federal court reversed U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service decisions that would have denied Gülen's application for permanent residency in the United States on the basis that Gülen did not fit the criteria as someone with "extraordinary ability in the field of education." The Department of Homeland Security characterized Gülen as neither an expert in the field of education nor an educator but rather as "the leader of a large and influential religious and political movement with immense commercial holdings."[51]

While the court ruling that allowed Gülen to remain in the United States may provide fodder for Turkish analysts who suggest U.S. support for Gülen, the process is actually more revealing. Indeed, the U.S. government noted that much of the acclaim Gülen touts is sponsored or financed by his own movement. Gülen attached twenty-nine letters of reference to his June 18, 2008 motion, mostly from theologians or Turkish political figures close to or affiliated with his organization. John Esposito, founding director of the Saudi-financed Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, who, after receiving donations from the Gülen movement sponsored a conference in his honor, also supplied a reference. Two former CIA officials, George Fidas and Graham Fuller, and former U.S. ambassador to Turkey Morton Abramowitz also supplied references.

The letters may have worked. On July 16, 2008, U.S. district judge Stewart Dalzell issued a memorandum and order granting Gülen's motion for partial summary judgment and ordering the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service to approve his petition for alien worker status as an alien of extraordinary ability by August 1, 2008. The court found that the immigration examiner improperly concluded that the field of education was the only statutory category in which Gülen's accomplishments could fit and that Gülen's accomplishments in such fields as theology, political science, and Islamic studies should also be considered. The court further determined that the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service Administrative Appeals Office erred in concluding that Gülen's work was not "scholarly" by applying an unduly narrow definition of the term. Finally, with regard to the statutory requirement that the applicant show that his or her entry into the United States would substantially benefit the United States, the court found that Gülen had met the requirement.[52]

Regardless of the legal rationale behind his current stay, the U.S. decision to grant Gülen residency will enable his movement to continue to imply Washington's endorsement as the AKP and its Fethullahist supporters seek to push Turkey further away from the secularism upon which it was built.
 
This article sounded to me like Putin was putting out a subtle (or not so subtle) reminder that Russia has nukes and will not continue to tolerate the transgressions of Turkey and NATO:

http://www.sott.net/article/308112-Putin-Hopefully-no-nukes-will-be-needed-against-Islamic-State
"We must analyze everything happening on the battlefield, how the weapons operate. The Kalibrs (sea based cruise missiles) and KH-101 (airborne cruise missile) have proved to be modern and highly effective, and now we know it for sure - precision weapons that can be equipped with both conventional and special warheads, which are nuclear," Putin said.

"Naturally, this is not necessary when fighting terrorists and, I hope, will never be needed," the president added.
 
The English translation at Rushincrash is a little rough but you can get the gist of it.

Media reported the Turkish aircraft bombarded Iraq

December 9, 2015
Turkish fighter aircraft violated Iraqi airspace and bombed its border area. On Wednesday December 9 reported the Iranian news agency Fars.

Airstrike occurred in the al-Imad in the province of Dohuk. “According to eyewitnesses the air strikes which lasted more than an hour were deposited on the positions of the Turkish Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in areas Deyrluk and Shiladzhi” – said in a statement.

In the evening December 8 Turkish aircraft attacked the base of the PKK in the mountainous region of Qandil in Iraqi Kurdistan the agency said citing informed sources.

Iraq and Turkey must do to resolve the issue of the presence of Turkish troops in northern Iraq said December 8 US State Department spokesman John Kirby.

At the same time Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi asked NATO to “use its moral authority” to make Turkey – a member of the military-political alliance – to withdraw its troops from the north.

December 4 it became known that the battalion of Turkish soldiers positioned in northern Iraq near the captured ” Islamic state “of the city of Mosul. The troops are equipped with armored vehicles. The official purpose of the mission – training of local militias to fight against banned in Russia “Islamic state” (IG).

Iraqi Foreign Minister has described Turkey’s actions as an invasion. Baghdad rejected the possibility of a military operation and unmatched demanded the immediate withdrawal of the Turkish units.

Ankara stated that Turkey no plans for a ground military operation and the direction of additional troops war is not planned. But Iraq left the right to make any counter-measures if Turkish troops will not be withdrawn.

I couldn't find this on the Iranian news agency Fars so take it with a grain of salt.
 
angelburst29,

In a previous post you mentioned the Grey Wolves in Crimea and this:

It is not excluded that Washington will once again plan a reshuffle similar to the one which Soviet spies thwarted in Germany 70 years ago. From 1943 to 1945, London and Washington thought through the technical variants of replacing Hitler with Nazi military and secret service men who were loyal to them, together with whom a united front could be formed against the USSR.

I am wondering if the above scenario is not what is going on with all these groups/variants (IG,IGIL,ISIS,IS,ISIL,DAESH,Taliban,Al qaeda and now possibly Hamas). Turkey is remembering perhaps the Ottoman Empire days of glory and the structure is already in place thanks to the CIA/Mossad etc.(who have allowed Gulen to reside in eastern PA of USA) to pull all these groups together to restructure the Middle East into the desired "regions".

Could the Grey Wolves also be just a part of the system envisioned by Gulen/Golem here? The Grey Wolves are almost similar to our CIA or the Mossad.

Gulen's influence has already has taken care of the police, media, education, and government officials in Turkey to be loyal to the Fethullahists' ideology. It is just one more "varient" of IS with just a slightly Turkish nationalistic twist.

It almost seems like they are posturing for position in the new regional divisions that they want to create. What they are doing is, just ironically, not that different than Israel's concept of a Greater Israel. And Israel seems to be the least affected by terrorism other than by the Palestinians. It is like an attempted unification of the Middle East in the name of Islam which seems to be working in most of the Arab countries except for Iran, Syria and Iraq (Libya is kind of decimated at this point).

The main countries left to align with Russia are Syria, Iran, Iraq, China and perhaps the economic group of BRICS. Of course there could be a wild card as far as the NATO countries are concerned.

Turkey certainly seems to be a pivotal player to say the least.
 
Pentagon Insiders: ISIS War Plan is ‘Not Working’

It’s not just Obama’s critics in Congress who think he can’t defeat the Islamic State. Defense officials also say his plan will fail.

The Obama administration’s strategy against the self-proclaimed Islamic State is facing increasing skepticism, not only on Capitol Hill, but also in the halls of the Pentagon.

From Iraq to Washington, there are quiet murmurs within from those in uniform that either the U.S. should commit more ground forces to the war effort or stop suggesting it can defeat ISIS with airstrikes and a sprinkling of Special Forces.

On Wednesday, the former top Army officer added to the growing chorus of criticism of the strategy, as did four defense officials in interviews with The Daily Beast.

The current approach “is not working,” one defense official conceded.

Ret. Gen. Raymond Odierno, the former chief of staff of the Army, who retired in August, said there was only so much Special Forces and Kurdish troops, who are considered the best local force on the ground, could do on their own against ISIS.

“You can’t defeat ISIS without having people on the ground,” Odierno said on MSNBC’s Morning Joe. “The intelligence we’re missing is the intelligence you gain on the ground.”

The lesson of the past 17 months, since the U.S. launched a multi-nation air campaign against the militant group in Iraq and Syria, is that airstrikes alone cannot defeat ISIS, skeptics argued. They said the most accurate intelligence comes from U.S. ground troops, who could assess the effect of the airstrikes and when the next strike campaign should happen.

But those troops aren’t forthcoming.

“Our hands are tied. You want us to do more, then go talk to those guys across the river,” a second frustrated defense official explained, referring to the White House.

Complicating the fight against ISIS, as well as al Qaeda, which has a branch in Syria, is the way that the groups have embedded themselves in the broader crisis of failing governments and civil war in the wake of the Arab Spring.

“The terrorists have fused their jihad with the civil wars in Syria, Iraq, Libya, and Yemen, as well as the Sinai [in Egypt]. Traditional counterterrorism intelligence analysis is not sufficient to assess the situation, which requires a much broader approach,” said Bruce Riedel, a veteran CIA officer and terrorism expert.

Technical intelligence-gathering with satellite imagery and communications intercepts is the kind of spying the U.S. excels at, but it’s unlikely to make a dent in ISIS’s advance.

“We see everything there is to see, and can intercept and decode almost every type of electronic communication. What the U.S. is singularly bad at is human intelligence,” gathering information from spies on the ground, said Christopher Harmer, a naval analyst at the Washington-based Institute of the Study of War, and a critic of the current strategy. “It takes a lot of time, patience, and credibility to develop sources that are willing to share what they know.”

More on:

_http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/12/09/pentagon-insiders-isis-war-plan-is-not-working.html
 
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