Misfire:
NATO mortar ‘gift’ from Turkey to Syrian rebels – newspaper
The
mortar used to attack the Turkish town of Akcakale is a design
specific to NATO and was given to Syrian rebels by Ankara, according
to Turkey’s Yurt newspaper. The mortar killed one adult and four
children from the same family on Wednesday.
RT
,
9
October, 2012
An
article by the paper’s Editor-in-Chief, Merdan Yanardag, states
that the newspaper received information from a reliable source, which
claimed that Turkey itself sent the mortars to rebels in the
so-called "free army."
“Turkey
is a longtime member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and
they’re going to act in conjunction with other NATO powers, so it’s
unsurprising that this has happened,” editor
of the Pan-African news wire, Abayomi Azikiwe, told RT.
NATO
has so far shunned any military involvement in the conflict, but
Azikiwe says the alliance is deeply involved in every decision that
Turkey makes.
“Ankara
isn’t taking any military actions or contemplating any type of
military strategy without being in full cooperation with NATO
forces,” he
said.
Turkey
retaliated at Syria for a sixth
consecutive day on
Monday, after a mortar from Syria landed in Turkey’s Hatay
province.
And
as Turkey fights to defend its border towns, the country’s
president says the country’s military will take any action
necessary.
"The
worst-case scenarios are taking place right now in Syria … Our
government is in constant consultation with the Turkish military.
Whatever is needed is being done immediately as you see, and it will
continue to be done," President
Abdullah Gul said in a statement on Monday.
But
it’s not only leaders within Turkey that are stating their opinions
on the conflict.
Earlier
on Monday, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon warned of the
consequences that the conflict could bring to the region.
“The
escalation of the conflict along the Syrian-Turkish border and the
impact of the crisis on Lebanon are extremely dangerous,” Ban
said at the opening of the World Forum for Democracy in Strasbourg,
France.
The
exchange of fire began
last Wednesday,
when Syrian mortar shells killed a woman and four children from the
same family in Akcakale.
Many
fear the situation will lead to regional conflict, with political
analyst Dan Glazebrook, saying that Ankara aims to drag NATO into a
war with Syria.
“On
the one hand the [Turks] are trying to give cover to the rebels to
continue their fight, as they know that the rebels are getting
defeated on the ground so they are bombarding Syria as a way to help
the rebels not lose too many of their positions,” Glazebrook
told RT. “But
I think also they may be hoping that they can somehow nudge, provoke
NATO into taking action as well, into prompting a kind of blitzkrieg
that is actually the only thing really that would enable the rebels
to win now at this state.”


Isn't blowback fun!?
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