The Turkish leadership has become the proverbial loose cannon on deck: no one knows which way Ankara will roll, but everyone realizes that the results will be very damaging, a former CIA Case Officer Philip Giraldi remarks.
Turkey
with its unique geographic position, a 600,000-strong army and a
vibrant and diversified economy is both "indispensable" as well as a
dangerous power in the Middle East, former CIA Case Officer and Army
Intelligence Officer Philip Giraldi underscores.
So, it is hardly surprising that Ankara has been repeatedly spotted colluding with radical Islamists, most notably Daesh (IS/ISIL), in Syria and Iraq.
It has long been rumored that Ankara is funding terrorists, providing them with arms and treating wounded Daesh militants in Turkey's hospitals. However, when two well-known Turkish journalists stepped out to provide ample evidence of Ankara's complicity in terrorism they were immediately detained and charged with treason.
But it is only a part of the story. On the other hand, Turkey has been twisting the EU's arm, threatening the European leaders with flooding the European Union with refugees from the Middle East and North Africa.
Furthermore, Ankara has been involved in oil smuggling from Daesh-held territories in Syria and Iraq. The president's son Bilal Erdogan, the principal owner of BMZ Group Denizcilik, is transporting the stolen oil to Asia and Israel, according to the former intelligence official. Turkey is also smuggling Kurdistan oil despite vocal protests from the Iraqi government.
"Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is now seeking to increase his own considerable de facto powers, has certainly become a danger to all its neighbors but mostly inflicts damage on itself," Giraldi emphasizes, adding that Ankara's treacherous attack against the Russian Su-24 proved this assumption once again.
"Erdogan has become, internationally speaking, the proverbial loose cannon on deck. No one knows which way he will roll, but everyone has become absolutely certain that the results will be very, very damaging," the former CIA Case Officer concludes.
"It is perhaps Turkey's indispensability that
is part of the problem, as it has given its current government a
hubristic sense of entitlement that has developed into a conceit that it
can be the arbiter for all its neighbors while also transforming itself
into an autocracy at home," Giraldi writes in his article for The Unz
Review.
The
former CIA official calls attention to the fact that a largely secular
Turkish republic has now turned into an "illiberal democracy"
increasingly run on "Islamic principles." Turkey's independent media
have been eradicated, protesters beaten and shot and the opposition
ruthlessly suppressed.
Giraldi stresses that it was Turkish President Recep Erdogan who is responsible for this embarrassing transformation.So, it is hardly surprising that Ankara has been repeatedly spotted colluding with radical Islamists, most notably Daesh (IS/ISIL), in Syria and Iraq.
"As Turkey is nominally a US ally in combatting
ISIS [Daesh] going after another de facto ally would seem to be a
strange choice, but it ignores the fact that Ankara has been duplicitous
from the beginning in terms of its real objectives," Giraldi notes.
Indeed, during the US-led operation against Daesh Turkey allowed
jihadists to travel through it in and out of the war zone in the Middle
East. Turkey's motif is understandable: Ankara's major goals in Syria
are to eliminate the Kurdish military forces and topple Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad.
According to the former CIA officer, Recep Erdogan has no interest at all in defeating Daesh, quite the contrary.
"One
might reasonably go a step farther to assert that Turkey has been an
ally of ISIS [Daesh], supporting from the beginning radical Sunni groups
that eventually came together to form the terrorist organization," the
former CIA Case Officer underscores.
Giraldi refers to that fact that back in 2014 he himself saw a
certain number of Daesh supporters collecting money for Islamic
extremists in various Istanbul neighborhoods.It has long been rumored that Ankara is funding terrorists, providing them with arms and treating wounded Daesh militants in Turkey's hospitals. However, when two well-known Turkish journalists stepped out to provide ample evidence of Ankara's complicity in terrorism they were immediately detained and charged with treason.
But it is only a part of the story. On the other hand, Turkey has been twisting the EU's arm, threatening the European leaders with flooding the European Union with refugees from the Middle East and North Africa.
"It has been taking advantage of the refugee
crisis, which it has helped create, and exploited legitimate fear
of ISIS [Daesh] infiltration. Erdogan has promised to slow the human
wave engulfing Europe only if the European Union comes up with 3 billion
Euros to cover expenses," Giraldi points out.
In light of this Turkey resembles nothing so much as a blackmailer and a racketeer, not a credible partner.Furthermore, Ankara has been involved in oil smuggling from Daesh-held territories in Syria and Iraq. The president's son Bilal Erdogan, the principal owner of BMZ Group Denizcilik, is transporting the stolen oil to Asia and Israel, according to the former intelligence official. Turkey is also smuggling Kurdistan oil despite vocal protests from the Iraqi government.
"Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is now seeking to increase his own considerable de facto powers, has certainly become a danger to all its neighbors but mostly inflicts damage on itself," Giraldi emphasizes, adding that Ankara's treacherous attack against the Russian Su-24 proved this assumption once again.
"Erdogan has become, internationally speaking, the proverbial loose cannon on deck. No one knows which way he will roll, but everyone has become absolutely certain that the results will be very, very damaging," the former CIA Case Officer concludes.
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