Welcome to Sott.net
Fri, 05 Nov 2021
The World for People who Think

Puppet Masters
Map

Mr. Potato

Beyond belief: The U.S. finally explains why they've avoided bombing ISIS' oil wells

ISIS oil trucks
© Reuters
Why hasn't the U.S. bombed the oil wells that ISIS controls into oblivion by now? Would you believe that it is because the Obama administration "didn't want to do environmental damage"? Former Deputy Director of the CIA Michael Morell has publicly admitted that we have purposely avoided damaging the main source of income for ISIS, and his explanation for why we were doing this is utterly bizarre. But at this point what could the Obama administration say that would actually make sense? Everyone now knows that ISIS has been making hundreds of millions of dollars selling oil in Turkey, and that this has been done with the full knowledge and complicity of the Obama White House. This is potentially the biggest scandal of the entire Obama presidency, and yet so far the Republicans have not jumped on it.

If you or I even gave five bucks to ISIS, we would be arrested and hauled off to Guantanamo Bay. And yet Barack Obama is allowing ISIS to funnel massive quantities of oil through our NATO ally Turkey, and he is not doing anything to stop this from happening. It is a betrayal of the American people that is so vast that it is hard to put into words.

Comment: Check out: Russia versus NATO's Gladio 2.0: Turkish jihad from China to Syria


Bad Guys

French politician: Erdoğan attempting the ethnic cleansing and occupation of Northern Syria

Evil Erdogan
French politician Nicolas Dhuicq believes that the Turkish government may be attempting to carry out a campaign which amounts to an indirect form of ethnic cleansing in northern Syria, resettling abandoned villages in the north of the country with Turkic-speaking peoples.

Speaking with Radio Sputnik France on Tuesday, Dhuicq, an MP in the French National Assembly and a member of the legislative body's Defense Commission, said that he thinks "that Mr. Erdogan seeks, like the Ottoman Empire did before him, to move people and resettle several villages in northern Syria with Turkic-speaking peoples."

The MP explained that he has access to information which leads him to believe that "these villages, abandoned by Syrians, will be settled by Uighurs from China."

Comment: It seems all of these psychopaths think alike:


Jet3

Turkey curries NATO favor by opening airspace to French jets on questionable legal grounds

French Rafale fighter jet
© AP Photo/ French Air Force
The Turkish government's decision to open its airspace to French aircraft carrying out airstrikes against Daesh in Syria, and give logistical assistance to France's aircraft Charles de Gaulle at the port of Mersin is based on questionable legal grounds, leading Turkish lawyer Ali Riza Aydin told Sputnik.

"When two countries participate together in military action, according to Turkey's constitution that has to be approved by the Turkish parliament," said Aydin.

"At the present time it is unclear whether France is acting in the framework of the international agreement among the countries of the Alliance, or its forces are in Turkish airspace at Turkey's request, as was the case with the deployment of Patriot air defense systems in Turkish territory."

"This issue has to be investigated, in order to find out whether the Turkish-French agreement is in accordance with the norms of constitutional law," said Aydin, a former constitutional court judge.

Comment: With Britain and Germany set to join in on the war party, lack of a coordinated coalition could create unintended consequences while they argue who the 'enemy' terrorists are.


Info

Turkish sub meets Russian ship in Dardanelles

Yauza transport ship
© SRP NERPA
The Russian Navy transport ship Yauza was met by a Turkish Navy submarine while passing through the Dardanelles on Monday, Russia's RT reports, citing Turkey's Hurriyet Daily News.

The Russian ship, which was passing from the Aegean Sea into the Sea of Marmara, is believed to have been on its way to the Black Sea. The video accompanying the news report was reportedly filmed in the city of Canakkale, on the southern coast of the Dardanelles, at their narrowest point.

The Turkish sub is said to have been accompanying a Turkish coast guard vessel.

Comment: Hopefully Turkey doesn't make another 'mistake' here.


TV

South Front International Military Review: Syria (Nov. 29-Dec. 1)

south front
International Military Review (Dec. 1)


Extinguisher

What about the mayor? Chicago's top cop forced to resign, new accountability task force created following protests

Rahm Emanuel
© Jim Young
ARCHIVE PHOTO: Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy (L) stands with Mayor of Chicago Rahm Emanuel (C) during a recruitment graduation ceremony in Chicago, Illinois
In the wake of the arrest of a Chicago, Illinois cop for the murder of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, Mayor Rahm Emanuel has made the embattled police superintendent go and created a police accountability task force.

Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy was forced to resign overnight after the meeting with the mayor. The controversy surrounding the McDonald case ‒ and the gang execution of 9-year-old Tyshawn Lee in early November ‒ became too much for McCarthy to be able to remain on the job, they said.

Though McCarthy's record "is a strong one, and one he can be proud of," Emanuel said at a press conference.

"I'm grateful for his service to the city," the mayor said, noting that McCarthy, 56, had modernized the department and brought results in the 4.5 years since Emanuel hand-picked McCarthy to serve as superintendent. But "now it is time for fresh eyes and new leadership," he added.

Comment: Is McCarthy just the fall guy for Emanuel?


USA

Torture and other human atrocities in Turkey as American as apple pie

Water torture
© Counterpunch
On the topic of torture the nation of Turkey could teach some gruesome techniques to ISIS, the terrorist movement executing a savage reign across Syria and beyond (reportedly with Turkish government support).

That reality of brutality in Turkey - another problematic American ally - is a fact known all too well by Turgay Ulu, a Turkish journalist who endured a 15-year imprisonment in Turkey, where he was tortured. During Ulu's long imprisonment, Turkish authorities justified his conviction on their claim that they had evidence against him - - evidence authorities obtained from two other victims of torture.

"I was tortured with electro shocks," Ulu said during an interview earlier this year in Berlin, Germany where he is a leading figure in a movement for refugee rights. Ulu's long imprisonment in Turkey led many, including Amnesty International, to consider him a political prisoner. Ulu was released from a Turkish prison in 2011 and he immediately fled to Europe.

Ulu was initially arrested in 1996 when Turkish authorities accused the then 23-year-old of belonging to two communist organizations. Ulu admits being a "Marxist" activist in Turkey but denies membership in those two organizations. A report Amnesty International released in 2006 examining serious flaws in Turkey's justice system cited Ulu's case. That AI report noted it was "highly improbable" that Ulu would be involved in "two ideologically unrelated" armed organizations.

"They tortured me but I still would not talk to the police," Ulu said. "When I did not talk to the police they said that was proof that I was a terrorist because I did not talk."

Comment: Russia versus NATO's Gladio 2.0: Turkish jihad from China to Syria


Stock Down

Sanctions could cost Turkish economy up to $20 billion

turkey, sanctions turkey
© Murad Sezer / Reuters
Russia's economic sanctions could cost Turkey up to $20 billion, or three percent of the country's GDP, according to members of Turkey's Republican People's Party's (CHP).

"Turkey earned around $6 billion in exports and $7 billion in tourism revenue from Russia. There is also extensive suitcase trade traffic between the two countries. Turkey's suitcase trade has declined from $8.5 billion in 2013 to $6 billion in 2014. Turkey can lose up to $20 billion, three percent of its annual GDP if the crisis escalates with Russia," CHP Deputy Osman Budak told Hurriyet Daily News.

The Antalya region, known for its Mediterranean resorts, is going to be hit hard, according to Budak's fellow CHP members.

Comment:


Eye 2

Zbigniew Brzezinski's bizarre comments on the Russian Su-24 shoot down by Turkey

Image
© Flickr/CSIS
Zbigniew Brzezinski as you've never heard him before!
In what might come as a surprise, Zbigniew Brzezinski, a prominent geopolitical strategist and a former National security advisor, downplayed tensions between the United States and Russia, as well as between Moscow and Ankara after the Su-24 bomber was shot out of the Syrian skies by the Turkish Air Force.

All sides opted for a measured response to what transpired on November 24 in the Syrian airspace, the analyst said in an interview with Politico.

Comment: See also:


USA

More boots: Ash Carter sending 'specialized expeditionary targeting force' to Iraq

Ash Carter
© Yuri Gripas
U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter.
Secretary of Defense Ash Carter announced Tuesday that the U.S. military will send "a specialized expeditionary targeting force" aimed at conducting more raids in Iraq.

A U.S. official tells CNN that decision means that there will be additional U.S. Special Operation forces on the ground in Iraq to fight ISIS.

Carter made the remarks testifying before the House Armed Services Committee.

"Next, in full coordination with the Government of Iraq, we're deploying a specialized expeditionary targeting force to assist Iraqi and Kurdish Peshmerga forces and to put even more pressure on ISIL," Carter said. "These special operators will over time be able to conduct raids, free hostages, gather intelligence, and capture ISIL leaders."