Puppet MastersS


Chess

Turkey's failed coup may bring unintended consequences

Turkish coup
© Reuters
What emerges on the sixth day of the failed coup attempt in Turkey is that three inflection points could be in play in the Turkish-American relations in the coming days and weeks. They are:
  • The functioning of the Incirlik Air Base on the Syrian border;
  • Extradition of Islamist cleric Fetullah Gulen from the US; and,
  • The massive purge of 'Gulenists' that is under way in Turkey.
Each of them is going to be trickier to negotiate than the other two and, yet, all three are also inter-related.

The power supply for Incirlik has been suspended since Friday and a back-up generator is barely enabling the US facilities there to support flight operations and around 2700 stationed in that NATO base. It's an untenable situation. The US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter telephoned his Turkish counterpart Fikri Isik on Tuesday evening to stress the importance of operations at the Incirlik to the counter-ISIS campaign.

But on his part, Isik regretted his inability to attend the counter-ISIS defence ministerial that Carter was hosting in Washington on Wednesday. Turkey was represented only at ambassadorial level at Wednesday's conference which was attended by the defence ministers of some 30 countries, NATO, and top Pentagon officials to discuss "the next plays in the campaign that will culminate in the collapse of ISIL's control over Mosul and Raqqa". (Pentagon)

The detention of the commander at Incirlik Gen. Bekir Ercan Van and his subordinates underscores the sensitivities involved here. Gen. Van resisted arrest and had apparently sought political asylum in the US before being led away by the Turkish security.

Light Sabers

Polish parliament recognizes WWII killings by Ukrainian nationalists against Poles as genocide

ukraine insurgent army
© Chekachkov Igor / SputnikMarch marking the 72nd anniversary of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army in Lviv
The lower house of Polish parliament, the Sejm, has passed a resolution which labels as genocide crimes committed by Ukrainian nationalists against the Poles in during World War II. The decision was met with regret in Ukraine.

The document, adopted by the lower house of parliament on Friday, declared July 11 "the Day of commemoration of the Poles who fell victim to the genocide committed by OUN-UPA (Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists - Ukrainian Insurgent Army) and pays homage to the victims of the genocide committed by Ukrainian nationalists against citizens of the Second Polish Republic in 1943-1945."

The move follows a resolution adopted by the upper house, the Senate, on July 8, meaning that the crimes of Ukrainian nationalists in Volhynia (also called Volyn) - an area of southeast Poland that was occupied by Nazi German troops during the war - are officially viewed as genocide by the Polish state.

The "genocide" committed during this period "resulted in the massacres of more than 100,000 citizens of the Second Polish Republic, mostly peasants. Their exact number is still unknown, and many of them have not been buried with dignity to date," the Sejm's resolution said, according to TASS.

"The memory of the victims of the crimes committed by Ukrainian nationalists in the 1940s has not been duly cherished until now, and mass murders were not called genocide in accordance with historical truth," the Polish MPs stressed.

Magnify

Turkey, Greece and the fascist coup of Cyprus in 1974

cyprus invasion
My colleague, Alex Christoforou, has written a fine piece drawing attention to the fact that today is the anniversary of one of modern Europe's tragedies, which however the governments and media of the West dislike being reminded of. That is the Turkish invasion and subsequent partition of Cyprus.

This is for me a particularly distressing episode, not just because as a Greek I share in the tragedy of the Greek people of Cyprus who were the victims of the invasion but because as a Greek I feel guilt and shame for the role my country - Greece - played in the affair.

The pretext for the Turkish invasion (though not the real reason) was a fascist military coup that took place in Cyprus and which overthrew the democratically and constitutionally elected government of Cyprus's President, Archbishop Makarios.

This coup did not have its origins in Cyprus itself. Instead it was ordered from abroad by Dimitrios Ioannides, leader of the fascist military government of Greece, which had seized power in Greece in 1967 by way of a US backed coup. By 1974 the fascist government in Greece sensed power was slipping away as it faced popular protests in Greece and was itself becoming subject to internal divisions and infighting. As a way to bolster its support in Greece it used certain fascist Greek army officers seconded to the Cypriot army to carry out a coup in Cyprus with the eventual aim of uniting Cyprus to Greece.

Vader

Ramstein: The most important US Air Force base you've never heard of is the center for the US drone 'war on terror'

Ramstein Air Base
© Getty
57,000 Americans run this all-important hub of the empire

The overseas hub for America's "war on terror" is the massive Ramstein Air Base in southwest Germany. Nearly ignored by US media, Ramstein serves crucial functions for drone warfare and much more. It's the most important Air Force base abroad, operating as a kind of grand central station for airborne war - whether relaying video images of drone targets in Afghanistan to remote pilots with trigger fingers in Nevada, or airlifting special-ops units on missions to Africa, or transporting munitions for airstrikes in Syria and Iraq. Soaking up billions of taxpayer dollars, Ramstein has scarcely lacked for anything from the home country, other than scrutiny.

Known as "Little America" in this mainly rural corner of Germany, the area now includes 57,000 US citizens clustered around Ramstein and a dozen smaller bases. The Defense Department calls it "the largest American community outside of the United States." Ramstein serves as the biggest Air Force cargo port beyond US borders, providing "full spectrum airfield operations" along with "world-class airlift and expeditionary combat support." The base also touts "superior" services and "exceptional quality of life." To look at Ramstein and environs is to peer into a faraway mirror for the United States; what's inside the frame is normality for endless war.

Ramstein's gigantic Exchange store (largest in the US military) is the centerpiece for an oversize shopping mall, just like back home. A greeting from the Holy Family Catholic Community at Ramstein tells newcomers: "We know that being in the military means having to endure frequent moves to different assignments. This is part of the price we pay by serving our country." Five American colleges have campuses on the base. Ellenmarie Zwank Brown, who identifies herself as "an Air Force wife and a physician," is reassuring in a cheerful guidebook that she wrote for new arrivals: "If you are scared of giving up your American traditions, don't worry! The military goes out of its way to give military members an American way of life while living in Germany."

Snakes in Suits

World Bank, tool of the Empire, refuses to commit to respecting human rights in new safeguards document

child labor
© ReutersUzbek boy pulls a bag with cotton collected on the field some 50 km south from Tashkent
After a four-year review, the World Bank has come up with a final draft of new safeguard policies, meant to prevent it from funding harmful projects. The document fails to state a binding commitment to respect human rights, disappointing advocacy groups.

The third and final draft was published after a subcommittee of World Bank's executive board endorsed it on Thursday. The board is expected to approve the document on August 4. Since 2012, when the policy review was launched, human rights groups have been calling on the bank to include stronger wording that would protect human rights in countries in which it develops projects, but the organization declined to do so.

Rights groups expressed their disappointment over the result of the long work, saying World Bank is missing a historic chance.

"In refusing to acknowledge its rights obligations once again, the World Bank anticipates it will be able to violate human rights without consequence," said Jessica Evans, senior international financial institutions researcher at Human Rights Watch. "Rather than using this review of key environment and social policies to advance human rights and cement its role as a leader in development, the World Bank has done the opposite."

Eye 1

The fearmongering continues: German police say more attacks on trains expected "any time"

german train
© Fabrizio Bensch / Reuters
German railways are vulnerable to new terror threats that might happen at any time, after a 17-year-old refugee injured four people with an ax on a commuter train, police have warned, while highlighting fears of reciprocal violence from the far right.

Railways in Germany are subject to increased security threats "that can manifest themselves in a successful attack at any time," the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) said in an internal report cited by Focus magazine.

Threats to railway transport will remain a "considerable issue," the report stressed. It comes days after a 17-year-old refugee, identified as an Afghan, badly injured four passengers with an ax and a knife on a commuter train bound for the town of Wuerzburg in northern Bavaria.

However, the Wuerzburg ax attack could trigger a violent response from the far-right, the BKA warned, adding that asylum seekers would largely be targeted by far-right extremists either "inside or outside"refugee centers.

Although the attacker was shot dead by police while on the run, the case shocked the public. Searching the perpetrator's flat, the police found a hand-painted Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) flag.

Attention

Russia's military base in Tajikistan put on high altert

201 military base
Drill of the motorized infantry unit of the 201st military base during counterterror exercise
The servicemen of the 201st military base deployed in Tajikistan have been woken up on alert, the press service of the central military district said on Friday. Two garrisons located in the cities of Dushanbe and Kurgan-Tyube will hold classes of combat readiness.

"The units have been put on high alert. The personnel is drilling maneuvers aimed at fulfilling surprise tasks such as repelling an attack of conditional enemy at vital facilities," the press service said.

The 201st military base is the biggest military facility in Russia located outside its borders. It is located in three cities - Dushanbe, Kulyab and Kurgan-Tyube. Under an agreement signed in October 2012, the unit will stay in Tajikistan until 2042.

Comment: Tajikistan recently announced their consideration of membership in joining the Russian led Eurasian Economic Union. Central Asia has for decades been the center of the continuation of the Great Games. As the West's plans are failing in Syria, we'll likely be seeing renewed expressions of their chaos in other parts of the world.

See: Tajikistan considers Eurasian Economic Union membership


Pistol

Obama will review ban on military-grade equipment sales to law enforcement after recent attacks on police

ferguson police
© Mario Anzuoni / ReutersPolice officers patrol a street in Ferguson, Missouri August 11, 2014
President Barack Obama is reportedly going to rethink his 2015 ban on military-grade equipment sales to law enforcement after eight police officers were killed in attacks in Dallas, Texas and Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Two police organization directors have told Reuters that President Obama agreed to review each item that was put on the so-called "controlled equipment list," including tracked armored vehicles, grenade launchers, bayonets, explosives and riot equipment.

The ban was imposed in May 2015, amid growing tensions between police and minority communities, as protests grew in response to deadly police shootings of black men in Ferguson, Missouri, Baltimore and other cities. Officers used military-grade riot gear and armored vehicles in response to anti-police brutality protests.

Citing "a substantial risk" of police "overusing" and "misusing"military-style weapons, Obama blocked the government from selling such items, leaving police departments across the US to rely on the private market.

Chess

Tajikistan nationals arrested for attempting to join ISIS in Afghanistan

isis brasil
© Reuters
Two Tajikistan nationals were arrested before they manage to join the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) loyalists in eastern Nangarhar province of Afghanistan. The Afghan Intelligence, National Directorate of Security (NDS), said two individuals were arrested from Bati Kot district. According to a statement by NDS, the two men have been identified as Ehsanullah and Asim who were accompanied by two other individuals identified as Rahmullah and Hussain hailing originally from the Parwan province of Afghanistan.

NDS further added that the men were looking to join the loyalists of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) terrorist group in Syria. This comes as the Ministry of Defense (MoD) earlier said Chechens, Punjabis, Arabs, Uzbeks, Uyghur and other foreign terrorists are actively participating in the war in Afghanistan and are continuously killing innocent Afghan civilians.

MoD said the regional intelligence agencies and terrorist groups are imposing on the Afghan nation and have a critical role in the ongoing violence in the country. According to MoD, the terrorists are deployed to Afghanistan with full financial and military support under the name of holy war.

Comment: See:


Network

Tajikistan considers Eurasian Economic Union membership

The government of Tajikistan is considering the country's accession of the
Eurasian Economic Union EEU map
Map of Eurasian Economic Union
Eurasian Economic Union (EEU), Avesta news agency reported with reference to Abdufattokh Goib, the head of Tajikistan's Customs Service. The EEU now consists of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia.

Goib told a news conference in Dushanbe on July 19 that this issue is the focus of attention of not only the media but also the government. Representatives of the Customs Service were included in a working group to assess Tajikistan's possible entry to the EEU. Goib said the Government had been submitted all the necessary materials and a thorough analysis of the issue. "The Government now has to make a decision," the official said.

Earlier this month, Leonid Slutsky, chairman of the Committee of CIS Affairs, Eurasian Integration and Relations with Compatriots in the Russian Duma (lower house of Parliament) said that Tajikistan would soon announce its intention to join the EEU.

"I think during the nearest year Dushanbe would announce its intention. Tajikistan is interested in that more than any other CIS country," Slutsky was quoted as saying.

The Eurasian Economic Union is an international organization for regional economic integration. It was established by the Treaty on the Eurasian Economic Union. The EEU provides for free movement of goods, services, capital and labor, and pursues coordinated, harmonized and single policy in the sectors determined by the Treaty and international agreements within the Union.

Comment: As Tajikistan and other Central Asian countries continue to form stronger ties with Russia and move towards creating a multi-polar world, we can expect to see more news of instability in the region.

See: