Turkish
Lawyers Want To Raid Incirlik Air Base, Arrest US Troops For
Terrorist Ties
10
August, 2018
Authored
by Jason Ditz via AntiWar.com,
A
group of lawyers aligned to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
has filed formal charges against a number of US Air Force
officers who
are stationed at Turkey’s Incirlik Air Base.
The complaint accuses them of having ties to terrorist groups, and of
being in league with the banned Gulenist organization.
Since
the failed 2016 military coup, Erdogan
has blamed cleric Fethullah Gulen for plots against him, and has been
targeting any and all perceived enemies, accusing
them of being in league with Gulen. This is the first time US troops,
let alone US troops inside Turkey, have faced such charges.
Analysts
say they believe the
charges are a direct response to last week’s imposition of
sanctions against two Turkish cabinet members by the US. The
sanctions were imposed in protest of Turkey’s detention of American
pastor Andrew Brunson, who has been held since 2016 on accusations of
Gulenist ties.
The
criminal complaint names Cols. John C. Walker, Michael H. Manion,
David Eaglen, David Trucksa, Lt. Cols. Timothy J.Cook, Mack R. Coker,
and Sgts. Thomas S Cooper and Vegas M. Clark. Air Force officials
said they were “aware” of the complaint but would not comment
beyond that.
The Air
Force also praised their relationship with “our Turkish military
partners,” though
as US-Turkey tensions continue to rise, as they have in recent years,
it’s not at all clear how long the US will be able to use the
Incirlik base for its military operations in the Middle East.
The
lawyers, on the other hand, demanded
the government halt all flights out of Incirlik to keep the US
officers from fleeing the country, and called
on the government to raid the base and seek to capture the
officers.
*
* *
[ZH:
As a reminder, Incirlik is a central hub for US air power in the
region and the resting
place of a few dozen B-61 nuclear gravity bombs with adjustable
yields.
Though the bombs are securely confined to the US-controlled side of
the base, regularly maintained and looked after, and at little risk
of falling into enemy hands, experts
have long questioned the wisdom of holding US nuclear weapons in
Turkey.]
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