Vladimir Putin to Erdogan: You ain’t worth my time anymore
Putin was too smart for Erdogan. He avoided the trap the Turkish prime minister had set for others interested in drawing the Russians into something in Syria designed by the United States/NATO/Israel/Saudi agenda in that country.
By Jonas E. Alexis
Alexis: It
has been reported that Erdogan is really desperate. Russia has
strategically shut down Turkey’s economic stronghold and Erdogan is
hopelessly trying to find a way out. He has recently sent Vladimir
Putin a letter stating that he hopes to resume friendly relations
with Russia. The letter said in part:
“Dear
Mr. President. On behalf of the Turkish people, I congratulate all
Russians on Russia Day, and hope that the relations between Russia
and Turkey will rise to the deserved level.”[1]
Newsweek has
said: “there is a sense of strategic desperation that made Erdogan
take this step. Turkey is frozen out of the equation in Syria, cannot
stop the expansion of the Kurdish forces there and can’t even fly a
plane for fear it would be shot down by Russians.”[2]
At
the same time, Erdogan refuses to apologize for bringing down a
Russian fighter jet. The Kremlin responded by saying that Erdogan’s
letter warrants no response largely because it appears to be
insincere.[3]
If
Erdogan is interested in friendly dialogue, Russia seems to be
saying, then it would behoove him to stop his terrorist activities in
Syria and in other regions; he would cut his essentially diabolical
deal with ISIS and other terrorist cells, and he would genuinely
apologize for attacking Russia. Newsweek has
been demonizing Russia for a long time, but they are partially right
here:
“Turkey
is desperate for a speedy normalization of ties with Russia and not
just for economic reasons. On the economic front, the loss of tourism
revenues in the absence of nearly four million Russian tourists is
devastating to Turkey’s tourism sector, which is already suffering
due to ISIS (Islamic State) and PKK (Kurdish Socialist Worker’s
Party) attacks.”[4]
Newsweek could
never report that Erdogan, who resembles J.
R. R. Tolkien’s Gollum,
is in bed with ISIS because that would ruin the Zionist ideology. VT
has been reporting for
over a year now that Turkey
and ISIS are
basically concentric circles. Gordon
Duff and Jim
W. Dean in
particular have written numerous
articles exposing Turkey’s
terrorist activities.
Moreover,
Zionist outlets such as the Daily
Beast,
the International
Business Times,
and the Jerusalem
Post have
said the same thing.[5] In
fact, Newsweek itself
had an article back in 2014 saying that “ISIS sees Turkey as its
ally.”[6] David
L. Phillips—Director of the Program on Peace-building and Rights,
Columbia University’s Institute for the Study of Human
Rights—showed conclusively that Turkey and ISIS are brothers.[7]
Erdogan
proved beyond any shadow of a doubt that he was sleeping with ISIS by
attacking ISIS’ enemies, the Kurds.[8]There
is more. It was recently reported that ISIS fighters were “brought
to Turkey hospitals in pick-up trucks.”[9]
“Islamic
State militants are frequently transported across the Syrian border
to Turkish hospitals for treatment, according to eyewitness accounts…
Their crossing was allegedly ensured by Turkish officials.
“Both
Islamic State (IS, previously ISIS/ISIL) and Free Syrian Army
fighters were able to cross the border from Syria into Turkey en
masse and receive medical help – only to then be allowed to go back
to resume fighting in Syria, the head of a local doctors’
association told RT’s Lizzie Phelan.”[10]
Obviously
we have a situation here. If the US were in the business of fighting
terrorism, then Erdogan and his henchmen would have been wiped out
from the pages of history long ago. I presented this contradiction to
a Zionist friend of mine a few weeks ago because he kept saying that
the US not only needs to fight terrorism but that countries like Iran
“can never be democratic.”
As
soon as he uttered that statement, I immediately started smiling
because the 1953 coup in Iran came to mind. In any event, what did he
say about Turkey and Saudi Arabia getting involved in terrorist
activities? “Well, we cannot go to war with Saudi Arabia right
now.” “So, you are you going to recant from saying that we ought
to fight terrorism?”
There
was no answer because his weltanschauung wasn’t
formed on the basis of practical reason. His so-called war on terror
was dug in an ideological system which does violence to the political
order and ultimately the truth.
No
one with an ounce of common sense can honestly say that the United
States is fighting terrorism. If that were the case, then we would be
supporting the Syrian government, which is now fighting against ISIS
in Syria. If you don’t think that US officials can really be funny,
then listen to this:
“Bucking
current US policy, dozens of State Department officials have
reportedly signed an internal document calling for military action
and regime change in Syria, claiming it is the only way to defeat
Islamic State and end the war.”[11]
So,
the best way to stop ISIS is to fight against ISIS’ enemies! If
that is not really dumb—and quite frankly diabolical—then I don’t
know what is. Why wonder why Roosevelt didn’t apply that principle
in the 1940s. Why didn’t he attack Germany’s enemy, the Soviet
Union, in order to destroy Germany itself? Why didn’t Bush attack
Saddam Hussein’s enemies instead of invading the entire country and
destroying it? Does that make sense at all? Can you help us here,
Mark Dankof?
Alexander
Solzhenitsyn with Vladimir Putin
Dankof: That
Erdogan is overtly working with ISIS in Syria and on behalf of the
United States/NATO nexus, Israel, Saudi Arabia, and GCC states is not
in doubt.
A
few of the salient facts include: 1) the involvement of his
intelligence service in the assassination of Press TV reporter Serena
Shim in October of 2014 on the Turkish/Syrian border, within days of
representatives of his government issuing direct overt threats to Ms.
Shim;[12] 2)
the demonstrable role of the Turkish oil firm BMZ, Ltd., with direct
links to Mr. Erdogan and his son, Bilal, in allowing ongoing two way
tanker traffic into and out of Turkey from ISIS controlled territory
in Syria, bringing millions of oil profits to the Erdogans and their
cronies; 3) the direct involvement of Mr. Erdogan’s
daughter, Sümeyye,
in managing a Turkish medical operation on the Turkish side of the
Turkey-Syrian border attending to ISIS wounded subsequently
reintroduced into the fighting in Syria; and 4) the criminal actions
of Erdogan in sanctioning the shoot down of a Russian aircraft in
Syria involved in anti-ISIS operations. These are only the most
obvious instances of Erdogan’s overt pro-ISIS, anti-Putin,
anti-Assad operations in alliance with the aforementioned players.
Putin
was too smart for Erdogan. He avoided the trap the Turkish prime
minister had set for others interested in drawing the Russians into
something in Syria designed by the United States/NATO/Israel/Saudi
agenda in that country.
Putin’s
economic squeeze on Turkey is now extracting serious blood from the
Erdogan regime. At the same time, Mr. Putin’s chess-playing
diplomacy and strategic vision conveys a larger truth to Mr. Erdogan
and the Bigger Boys working with him inside Syria and against both
Russia and Iran. Mr. Putin will choose the time, the place, and the
methods for engaging Russia’s enemies on terms which favor Mr.
Putin and his country.
And
just as Erdogan rues the day he crossed Mr. Putin, so will all of the
Neo-Conservative, Zionist, and NWO Globalists trying to provoke the
Russian President now. That is my take on the tragic endgame
unfolding to the ultimate destruction of these players and those who
mistakenly follow their lead.
Alexis: Your
assessment is right in line with what Alexander Solzhenitsyn said
about Putin.[13] Peter
Eltsov of National Defense University says that Putin’s “favorite
guru” was none other than Solzhenitsyn.[14] Solzhenitsyn
said of Putin:
“Putin
inherited a ransacked and bewildered country, with a poor and
demoralized people. And he started to do what was possible — a slow
and gradual restoration. These efforts were not noticed, nor
appreciated, immediately. In any case, one is hard pressed to find
examples in history when steps by one country to restore its strength
were met favorably by other governments.”[15]
Putin
returned the favor by saying:
“We
are proud that Alexander Solzhenitsyn was our compatriot and
contemporary. We will remember him as a strong, courageous person
with a great sense of dignity. His activities as a writer and public
figure, his entire long, thorny life journey will remain for us a
model of true devotion, selfless service to the people, motherland
and the ideals of freedom, justice and humaneness.”[16]
The International
Business Times admitted
in 2014:
“In
October 2010, after it was announced that Solzhenitsyn’s works
would become required reading for all Russian high school students,
Putin described ‘The Gulag Archipelago’ as ‘essential reading’:
‘Without the knowledge of that book, we would lack a full
understanding of our country and it would be difficult for us to
think about the future.’
“Although
one might justifiably lament the usurpation of the rights of parents
by central government in the setting of a common core for education,
whether such usurpation takes place in Russia or the United States,
it must be said that the inclusion of a moral and literary giant such
as Solzhenitsyn in Russia’s common core serves to highlight the
relative trash and trivia included in the common core in the USA.
“At
least Russia’s common core offers real meat and gravitas, whereas
American kids are being fed a thin gruel of nutrient-free nonsense.
The former is health food for the mind and soul, full of nourishing
traditions; the latter is fast food and junk food for the soulless
and the mindless. In June 2007, Putin signed a decree honoring
Solzhenitsyn (who died in 2008) ‘for exemplary achievements in the
area of humanitarian activities.’”[17]
Dankof
and I agree with that assessment. In fact, nearly all Western leaders
have rightly praised Solzhenitsyn as a courageous and thoughtful
individual and a brilliant thinker and writer. But the same Western
leaders turn around and lambast Putin and call him a Hitler, which is
really weird. But we are not surprised at all, since weirdness has
become the nuts and bolts of the New World Order. In any event, Jim
W. Dean was
correct when he said that:
“Putin
continues to slay Western propaganda and leadership reputations
almost every time he gives a talk.”
[1] “Erdogan
sends Putin ‘first letter’ since Su-24 shot down by
Turkey,” Russia
Today,
June 14, 2016.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Thomas
Seibert, “Is NATO Ally Turkey Tacitly Fueling the ISIS War
Machine?,” Daily
Beast,
September 8, 2014; “Ya’alon: ISIS has ‘enjoyed Turkish money
for oil’ for a long time,” Jerusalem
Post,
January 26, 2016; Elizabeth Whitman, “Is Turkey Buying Oil From
ISIS? After Downed Plane, Putin Slams Islamic State’s Black Market
Fuel Sales,” International
Business Times,
November 24, 2015; see also Thomas Seibert, “Turkey Plans to Invade
Syria, But to Stop the Kurds, Not ISIS,”Daily
Beast,
June 29, 2015; Ivan Eland, “Turkey’s Reluctance to Help Against
ISIS Should Be a Red Flag,” Huffington
Post,
October 13, 2014; Ben Norton, “Turkey Is Supporting
ISIS,” Counterpunch,
November 11, 2014; “ISIS, oil & Turkey: What RT found in Syrian
town liberated from jihadists by Kurds,” Russia
Today,
March 24, 2016.
[6] “‘ISIS
Sees Turkey as Its Ally’: Former Islamic State Member Reveals
Turkish Army Cooperation,” Newsweek,
November 7, 2014.
[7] David
L. Phillips, “Research Paper: ISIS-Turkey Links,” Huffington
Post,
November 9, 2014; see also “Russia has ‘more proof’ ISIS oil
routed through Turkey, Erdogan says he’ll resign if it’s
true,” Russia
Today,
November 30, 2015.
[8] Sarah
Almukhtar and Tim Wallace, “Why Turkey Is Fighting the Kurds Who
Are Fighting ISIS,” NY
Times,
August 12, 2015.
[9] “Wounded
ISIS fighters brought to Turkey hospitals in ‘pick-up trucks’ –
doctors, eyewitnesses to RT,” Russia
Today,
June 16, 2016.
[10] Ibid.
[11] “Hawks
rising: Dozens of State Dept officials call for US strikes against
Assad in Syria,” Russia
Today,
June 17, 2016; see also “In Internal Document, US Diplomats Demand
Syria Action,” ABC
News,
June 16, 2016.
[12] John
Hall, “Mystery of American journalist killed in car crash in
Turkey… just days after she claimed intelligence services had
threatened her over her coverage of siege of Kobane,” Daily
Mail,
October 20, 2014; “Iranian TV reporter killed in Turkey car crash 1
day after ‘spying accusations,’” Russia
Today,
October 14, 2014; Roy Greenslade, “Iranian broadcaster raises
suspicions about death of reporter on Syrian border,” Guardian,
October 20, 2014; Vijay Prashad, “The Death of a
Reporter,” Counterpunch,
October 21, 2014.
[14] Peter
Eltsov, “What Putin’s Favorite Guru Tells Us About His Next
Target,” Politico,
February 10, 2015.
[15] “SPIEGEL
Interview with Alexander Solzhenitsyn: ‘I Am Not Afraid of
Death,’” Spiegel
International,
July 23, 2007.
[17] Joseph
Pearce, “Russian Revelations: Putting Putin In
Perspective,” International
Business Times,
March 13, 2014.
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