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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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US airstrikes resume as Turkey's Incirlik air base lockdown is lifted

us plane fueling in turkey after coup
© Flickr/ U.S. Department of Defense
The US-led coalition has resumed airstrikes against positions of Daesh terrorist group from an airbase in Turkey, US Department of Defense spokesman Peter Cook said on Sunday.

On Saturday, Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said that Turkish airspace was closed due to the coup attempt in the country. US media reported that the Incirlik base in southern Turkey has been left without electricity and local authorities prevented movement to and from the base. Air operations from the base have also been suspended.
"UPDATE: After close coordination with our Turkish allies, counter-ISIL [Daesh] coalition air operations in Turkey have resumed," Peter Cook wrote in his official Twitter account.

Comment: What cards did the US/NATO pull to get this base operational again so quickly after the failed coup attempt? For more information:


Light Saber

Pepe Escobar on coup in Turkey: Hell hath no fury like a teflon Sultan

Erdogan on facetime
© Sputnik/ STR
When Turkish President/aspiring Sultan Recep Tayyip Erdogan landed at Istanbul's Ataturk airport early Saturday morning, he declared the attempted coup against his government a failure, and a "gift from God."

God apparently uses Face Time. It was via that iconic iPhone footage from an undisclosed location shown live on CNN Turk by a bewildered female anchor that Erdogan managed to call his legion of followers to hit the streets, unleash People Power and defeat the military faction that had taken over state TV and proclaimed to be in charge.

So God does work in mysterious mobile ways. Erdogan's call was heeded even by young Turks who had fiercely protested against him in Gezi Park; were tear-gassed or water-cannoned by his police; think the AKP governing party is disgusting; but would support them against a "fascist military coup." Not to mention that virtually every mosque across Turkey relayed Erdogan's call.

Comment: See also:


Camera

Your city will be next: Before and after photos of the devastation brought to Syria by the U.S.

Syria1
Syria is one of the oldest and most beautiful countries in the world. It is a disgusting shame that we have allowed ourselves to destroy it for power.

Aleppo, the largest city in Syria, has seen the brunt and, likely, the most devastation of any city in the country. The civil war has gone on for years and much of the city has been ruined.

These images show the beauty and serenity of a world in peace, juxtaposed with the result of mindless warfare.
Syria2

Bomb

UK may reelect Saudi cluster-bombing 'child killers' to UNHRC

gravediggers
© www.cnn.com
Yemeni grave diggers burying civilian casualties after Saudi airstrike.
London may help Riyadh return to the UN Human Rights Council despite a troubling United Nations report linking the Saudi regime to hospital and schoolhouse bombings in Yemen. The UK is likely to back Saudi Arabia's re-appointment as a member of UN Human Rights Council, despite international outcry over Riyadh's practice of beheading its citizens as a punishment for crimes and its bloody military operation in Yemen.

Saudi Arabia, a country notorious for its draconian laws and neglect of basic human rights, became a member of the panel in 2013 amid harsh backlash from international community. Since then Riyadh has interfered in the simmering civil war in neighboring Yemen, conducting military operations that claimed thousands of civilians' lives. "The Saudi-led coalition has launched scores of airstrikes which appear to have deliberately targeted civilians, including hospitals, schools, markets, mosques, and so on. They also have used internationally banned cluster munitions," Richard Bennett, the head of Amnesty International's UN office, told Radio Sputnik.

On Thursday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon requested that Saudi Arabia provide proof on the "concrete actions" they have taken to prevent minor's deaths in Yemen. According to Children and Armed Conflict (CAAC) annual report, some 60% of children deaths in Yemen in 2015 were caused by Saudi-led coalition's air attacks. However, that data hasn't resulted in any particular steps to sanction Riyadh's actions.

The fact that Riyadh enjoys unconditional support from the UN and the UK is based on economic considerations. London seems to be ready to turn a blind eye on horrifying human rights abuses - that under some estimates escalate to the level of war crimes - in exchange for arms deliveries to the country. During first three months of Saudi-led bombings of Yemen, the UK increased its supplies to the country 100 times, the Independent reported. The revenues for Britain in this period jumped from1 billion pounds to 9 billion.

Comment: Surely there is a council more appropriate for the Saudis to chair. Let's see: Is there a UN Human Wrongs Council? UN Human Atrocities Council? The UN was threatened and 'prepaid' to look the other way. And it did. For the UK, it is just busine$$ as usual.


Info

Putin and Erdogan have telephone conversation after military coup attempt in Turkey

President Vladimir Putin and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
© Mikhail Metzel/TASS, file
Russia's President Vladimir Putin had a telephone conversation with Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The Kremlin's press service said the conversation was initiated by the Russian side.

"Vladimir Putin in relation to the attempt of a force overthrowing of democratically elected Turkish authorities at night to July 16 stressed Russia's principal line for categorical inacceptance of anti-constitutional actions and use of force in life of a country," the Kremlin said. "Recep Tayyip Erdogan was offered condolences following the many victims among the civilians and law enforcers opposing the plotters, as well as wishes of soonest recovery of stable constitutional order and stability in Turkey.

Comment: The upcoming face-to-face meeting between Erdogan and Turkey is scheduled for the first week of August.


Attention

Military coup participants clash with Turkish police at Istanbul airport

 Istanbul Ataturk, Turkey
© Osman Orsal / Reuters
Ambulance cars arrive at Turkey’s largest airport, Istanbul Ataturk, Turkey, following a blast June 28, 2016.
Participants of the military coup attempt in Turkey have clashed with police while the law enforcers attempted to detain them at the Sabiha Gokcen airport in Istanbul, Reuters reported citing a Turkish official.

The Law enforcers opened warning fire during the arrest of the supporters of the military coup in Turkey; the coup plotters did not fire back. Currently a police operation is being carried out, the Turkish official said.

Moreover, clashes took place near an airbase in Konya, he added.

"The situation is under control," an unnamed official said as cited by Reuters.

Info

Serbian FM: Turkish coup plotted to stop mending of Russia-Turkey ties

Turkey military coup
© AP Photo/ Burhan Ozbilici
The coup attempt in Turkey was masterminded by forces that were seeking to halt the restoration of good relations between Turkey and Russia, the acting Serbian foreign minister said Sunday.

The official condemned Friday's coup attempt in Turkey which claimed lives of over 260 people, saying that a violent change of government cannot bring anything good to the citizens.

"I am sure that the coup [in Turkey] has a lot of influences from the outside.... It is now clear that the Russian plane was taken down by the pilot who belonged to the same group as those behind the coup, and now that Turkey renewed its ties with Russia, it clearly did not suit someone," Ivica Dacic said as quoted by b92 broadcaster.

Attention

42 Helicopters reported missing in Turkey sparking concerns of a second coup attempt

Turkish helicopter
© AFP 2016/ ADEM ALTAN
At least 42 helicopters have gone missing from Turkey's military inventory in the wake of the failed coup attempt on Friday evening causing concern that there may be another act to the attempted overthrow of Erdogan.

CNN Turk anchor Serdar Tuncer reports that at least 42 helicopters have gone missing from the Turkish military inventory and says concern is brewing that another coup effort may soon be underway.

"It is as though this rogue will try more things. Can they succeed? No! But will they try?" said the reporter.

Red Flag

Erdogan calls it the 'Gift from God', sees coup as a reason to cleanse the military, mulls reviving death penalty

Erdogan in car
© www.dw.com
Almost immediately after Friday night's coup attempt in Turkey began to falter and scenes of pro-uprising soldiers surrendering their weapons started to pour in, Turkey's leadership promised that the plotters would pay the highest price.

"As you know the death penalty had been removed from our legal system. We will discuss... what further measures we should take to prevent such future attempts," Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said on Saturday morning when the arrests of pro-coup officers and soldiers were in full swing across the country.

"This uprising is a gift from God to us because this will be a reason to cleanse our army," President Recep Taiyp Erdogan stated earlier on Friday night, addressing a large and desperate crowd of his supporters. The overnight coup attempt has been the latest, but not the first, in a string of Turkish military uprisings throughout the decades, exposing the complicated relationship between the army's leadership and Islamist-leaning President Erdogan.

The tensions between the military and Erdogan span back as long as his political career. In 1997, senior army officers pressured then-Prime Minister Necmeddin Erbakan to step down because he advocated for strengthening Islamism across Turkey and turning away from the West. Erdogan, an Erbakan supporter who was then mayor of Istanbul, was arrested and banned from pursuing a political career for five years for reading out a nationalist and Islamist poem in public at the time.


Comment: Erdogan sees this coup attempt as an opportunity and license to punish and weed his military, speed-change out his opposition, eliminate critics of his reign and dispose of bogeymen in general...a sort of 'reverse coup.'

See also: 2014 WikiLeaks: Things to know about the Gulen empire trying to take down Erdogan


Chess

Wheeling and dealing: US may lift sanctions against Russia in exchange for cooperation on Syria

John Kerry and Vladimir Putin
© Sputnik/ Sergey Guneev
Since the United States needs cooperation with Russia on Syria Washington would have to make concessions to Moscow, including the removal of sanctions in the long run, an article in The Wall Street Journal read.

Recently, US Secretary of State John Kerry has been a frequent visitor to Russia. Washington is increasingly demonstrating readiness to cooperate with Moscow on the Syrian settlement.

According to media reports, during the recent visit, Kerry offered Russia to establish a joint US-Russian group to share operative information and intelligence data to coordinate actions against terrorists.

Comment: It has been the US that is belligerent on cooperating with the Syrian crises so this just seems to be a carrot dangling in front of Russia for Putin to accept the US position. Can't see that working very well.