Turkey
Turkey | |
---|---|
Type | nation state |
Interest of | Morton Abramowitz, Maximator-Alliance, Sinan Ülgen |
Member of | G-20, Global Counter Terrorism Forum, International Energy Agency, NATO, OECD, UN |
Subpage | •Turkey/1993 Planned Military Coup •Turkey/Ambassador •Turkey/Central Bank •Turkey/Chief of the General Staff •Turkey/Deep state •Turkey/Deputy Prime Minister •Turkey/Foreign policy •Turkey/Leader of the Opposition •Turkey/Member of the Grand National Assembly •Turkey/Military •Turkey/Minister •Turkey/Prime Minister •Turkey/Undersecretary of state |
Turkey is a nation state at the south east corner of Europe. |
Contents
Sub-Pages
Page Name | Size | Description |
---|---|---|
Turkey/1993 Planned Military Coup | 8,441 | |
Turkey/Ambassador | 116 | |
Turkey/Central Bank | 321 | |
Turkey/Chief of the General Staff | 123 | |
Turkey/Deep state | 14,805 | 'Derin devlet' is a deep state network based in Turkey. Repeated indiscretions resulted in its partial exposure, leading to the English phrase 'deep state' to refer to the phenomenon of a 'state-within-a-state or 'shadow government'. |
Turkey/Deputy Prime Minister | 221 | |
Turkey/Foreign policy | 177 | |
Turkey/Leader of the Opposition | 787 | |
Turkey/Member of the Grand National Assembly | 2,779 | |
Turkey/Military | 203 | |
Turkey/Minister | 57 | |
Turkey/Prime Minister | 288 | |
Turkey/Undersecretary of state | 132 |
Deep state importance
The 1996 Susurluk indicent dramatically exposed the Turkish deep state and can even be through to be the beginning of the exposure of the concept of the deep state.
Events carried out
Event | Location | Description |
---|---|---|
2011 Attacks on Libya | Libya | "Perhaps one of the most egregious examples of US military aggression and lawlessness in recent memory", carried out under a pretext of "humanitarian intervention". |
Evacuation from Afghanistan | Afghanistan | The evacuation of foreigners from Afghanistan, one of the largest airlifts in history |
Related Quotations
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
1997 Turkish military memorandum | “In Turkey we have a marriage of Islam and democracy. (...) The child of this marriage is secularism. Now this child gets sick from time to time. The Turkish Armed Forces is the doctor which saves the child. Depending on how sick the kid is, we administer the necessary medicine to make sure the child recuperates.” | Çevik Bir | |
Joe Biden | “Our allies in the region were our largest problem in Syria. The Turks were great friends, and I have a great relationship with Erdogan, [who] I just spent a lot of time with, [and] the Saudis, the Emirates, etcetera.
What were they doing? They were so determined to take down Assad, and essentially have a proxy Sunni-Shia war, what did they do? They poured hundreds of millions of dollars and tens of tons of weapons into anyone who would fight against Assad – except that the people who were being supplied, [they] were al-Nusra, and al-Qaeda, and the extremist elements of jihadis who were coming from other parts of the world. Now, you think I'm exaggerating? Take a look. Where did all of this go? So now that's happening, all of a sudden, everybody is awakened because this outfit called ISIL, which was al-Qaeda in Iraq, when they were essentially thrown out of Iraq, found open space and territory in [eastern] Syria, [and they] work with al-Nusra, who we declared a terrorist group early on. And we could not convince our colleagues to stop supplying them.So what happened? Now, all of a sudden – I don't want to be too facetious – but they have seen the lord. Now we have ... been able to put together a coalition of our Sunni neighbors, because America can't once again go into a Muslim nation and be the aggressor. It has to be led by Sunnis. To go and attack a Sunni organization. And so what do we have for the first time? President Erdoğan told me, he is an old friend, said you were right, we let too many people through, now we are trying to seal the border.” | Joe Biden The Washington Post | 2014 |
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan | “The wannbe Sultan of a new Ottoman Reich, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, let his people vote in a referendum about new extensive powers for his office. Yesterday's "yes"/"no" vote was allegedly won by the "yes" side with 51.4% of the votes. This even though the "no" vote won in all major cities. In Turkey the vote in the major cities usually reflects the total. The campaign for the vote was very unfair with all state media and offices pushing for a "yes". Opposition politicians were put to jail or threatened with retribution. Media opposing Erdogan were suppressed or completely closed down.
There is significant reasons to believe that the vote count was fraudulently manipulated. On the day of the vote the election commission, stuffed with Erdogan cronies, suddenly allowed ballots without the official stamp to be counted. According to Turkish election laws each ballot, and each envelope of a postal vote, needs to be officially stamped before voting starts. This is supposed to prevent ballot stuffing with ballots printed outside of the official channels. The election commission has given no reason yet why it thought that such a last minute rule change, in opposition to the law, was necessary or even legal. Use of unstamped ballots was reported out of many election localities in rural areas where the "yes" votes now were the majority. Additionally video was recorded of local election workers stamping ballots after they had been used for voting. The opposition is protesting and will go to court. But it will likely have little success. Erdogan has removed all judges and other legal personal that could go against him. An amateurish coup attempt against him, which he knew about before it happened, was used by him to clean all public offices of people not aligned with his party and program. The new powers of the presidency will only come into force after the next election for the presidency. But everyone expects that Erdogan will use them right away. With the issue of the referendum put aside Erdogan is now free to escalate interior and exterior conflicts. We can expect new Turkish operations in Syria as well as in Iraq to be launched soon. In the 1990s I extensively traveled in Turkey - alone, by local buses and mostly in the east. The country was waking up and in an intellectual and commercial growing phase. During the last years a new wave of conservatism has stopped that move. My friends there report of stagnation. Turkey does not have the economic and intellectual power to become a new Ottoman Reich. It will fail in new expansive endeavors. But the attempt alone will be destructive for Turkey as well as for the countries around it. Turkey is no longer a democracy. It is now a one man dictatorship with an expansive and distinct Islamist agenda. To change that will require the removal of Erdogan through some act of force.” | Recep Tayyip Erdoğan | |
Nigel Gould-Davies | “For Azerbaijan, [the reconquest of Nagorno-Karabakh] is a total victory won by the cruel, hard methods of military force and economic blockade, together with training and equipment from Turkey....But the key question is how relations between the west and Azerbaijan will develop. The west's energy ties with the oil and gas-rich country are more important than ever as it weans itself off Russian supplies. Now there are new security possibilities, especially in light of the war in Ukraine. Azerbaijan is the only country that borders both Russia and Iran, two western adversaries whose ever-closer relations evoke growing alarm. Azerbaijan’s ties with Turkey, a Nato member that also provides weapons support to Ukraine, means that it is receiving military training according to the alliance's standards. All this offers the potential for a deeper relationship, if the west has the strategic imagination to grasp it.” | Nigel Gould-Davies | 5 October 2023 |
Wayne Madsen | “The Turkish Gray Wolves and the pan-Turkic National Action Party (NAP) made common cause with the neo-cons and their Israeli friends. The Wolves and the NAP considered the peoples of Soviet Central Asia to be "captive Turks." The Turkish right-wing nationalists foresaw a nuclear-armed Turkey extending from Thrace to the central Asian steppes.” | Wayne Madsen | 28 May 2007 |
Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu | “It is not possible to give up our rights and interests in the Eastern Mediterranean just because sanctions will come or because the EU will criticize us.” | Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu | 14 December 2020 |
Events
Event | Description |
---|---|
1980 Turkish coup | |
2016 Istanbul airport attack | Shootings and suicide bombings at Atatürk Airport in Istanbul, |
2016 Turkish coup attempt | |
Bilderberg/1959 | The 8th Bilderberg and the first in Turkey. 60 guests. |
Bilderberg/1975 | The 24th Bilderberg Meeting, 98 guests |
Bilderberg/2007 | The 55th Bilderberg meeting, held in Turkey |
Castle Plan | Turkish government plan to widen the range of means used to fight the Kurdistan Workers' Party. This included using the resources of the Counter-Guerrilla, such as the Grey Wolves, to assassinate PKK members and supporters. To get the plan started the deep state had to assassinate President Turgut Özal. |
Ergenekon trials | |
Le Cercle/1998 (Istanbul) | Other dates uncertain |
Operation Cage Action Plan | |
Susurluk car crash | A seminal but still rather poorly understood deep event. It led to the coining of the phrase "deep state", and by extension "deep politics" and "deep politician". |
Turkish Council of State shooting | |
Turkish Straits crisis |
Groups Headquartered Here
Group | Start | Description |
---|---|---|
Academics For Peace | November 2012 | |
Ankara University | 1923 | Important Turkish university |
Batı Çalışma Grubu | 1997 | Deep state group of high ranking Turkish military officers |
Bilkent University | 1984 | Ranked among the top Turkish universities |
Boğaziçi University | 1863 | Turkish elite university with strong ties to the American educational system. |
Cumhuriyet | 7 May 1924 | Turkish newspaper with Bilderberg habit |
Ergenekon | A Turkish deep state group with ties to members of the country's military and security forces. Exposed in 1996 car crash. | |
Galatasaray High School | 1481 JL | Oldest high school in Turkey. |
Hacettepe University | 1967 | Faculty of Medicine is ranked the best in Turkey. |
Hürriyet | 1948 | Turkish newspaper with Bilderberg habit |
Istanbul Bilgi University | 1996 | A private university located in Istanbul, Turkey. |
Istanbul Technical University | 1773 | Many of the graduates take role in the development of Turkey. |
Kadir Has University | 1997 | Established in 1997 by billionaire Kadir Has |
Kadıköy Maarif College | 1955 | Prestigious high school in Istanbul |
Koç Holding | 1926 | The largest industrial conglomerate in Turkey, |
Koç University | 1993 | |
Marmara University | 1883 | A leading institution of higher education in Turkey for 124 years |
Milliyet | 11 February 1926 | Turkish newspaper with Bilderberg habit |
Robert College | 1863 | A long established school with many Turkish Bilderbergers among its alumni. |
Sabah | 22 April 1985 | Turkish newspaper with Bilderberg habit |
Sabancı University | 1994 | Founded under the guidance of the Sabancı family, with Bilderberg connections. |
TESEV | 1994 | |
Turkey/Central Bank | ||
Turkey/Deep state | 'Derin devlet' is a deep state network based in Turkey. Repeated indiscretions resulted in its partial exposure, leading to the English phrase 'deep state' to refer to the phenomenon of a 'state-within-a-state or 'shadow government'. | |
Turkish Industry and Business Association | 1971 | Possible deep state milieu, under suspicion because it so well represented at the Bilderberg. Identifies with Western interests. |
Yildiz Technical University | 1911 | Turkish engineering school |
Özyeğin University | 2008 | Training future Turkish businesspeople |
Citizens of Turkey on Wikispooks
Title | Born | Died | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Semih Akbil | 1927 | 21 June 1986 | Spokesman for the Turkish government after the invasion of Cyprus. Attended the 1975 Bilderberg |
Gündüz Aktan | 7 August 1941 | 19 November 2008 | Single Bilderberger Turkish diplomat |
Yıldırım Aktürk | 1941 | Connections in the Turkish government. Member of the Board of Directors of TUSIAD | |
Mustafa Akyol | 20 February 1972 | Single Bilderberg Turkish journalist and author arguing for Islamic liberalism | |
Ali Hikmet Alp | 5 December 1932 | Turkish diplomat who attended the 1994 Bilderberg meeting. | |
Fuat Alpkartal | 1902 | April 1978 | A Turkish officer with strong ties to the Turkish intelligence community and a former Military Attaché in Washington. Attended the 1959 Bilderberg. |
Ertuğrul Apakan | 1947 | Turkish diplomat who chaired the The UN Security Council's Counter-Terrorism Committee in 2010. | |
Tekin Ariburun | 3 October 1903 | 13 October 1993 | Attended the 1959 Bilderberg as Commander of the Turkish Air Force. Retired in 1960 because he was against the military coup. Briefly acting President of Turkey in 1973. |
Mustafa Aydin | 15 September 1967 | Turkish "security" academic. German Marshall Fund. Bilderberg/2024 | |
Senem Aydın-Düzgit | Single Bilderberger Turkish academic. Opponent of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, strongly for the European Union. Published about COVID-19 | ||
Aslı Aydıntaşbaş | 24 February 1973 | Turkish journalist in Cumhuriyet, Milliyet, CNN Türk. Deep state connections. Attended the 2013 Bilderberg meeting. | |
Mehmet Ağar | 30 October 1951 | Turkish politician who escaped the Susurluk car crash after being forewarned. Reportedly in charge of heroin trafficking through Turkey. Arrested and served time in jail. Released in 2013 | |
Mehmet Ali Ağca | 9 January 1958 | ||
Ali Babacan | 4 April 1967 | 8 times Bilderberg visitor, Turkish politician | |
Galip Balkar | 1936 | 11 March 1983 | Assassinated by Armenians while Turkish Ambassador to Yugoslavia |
Evren Balta | Turkish Bilderberger academic | ||
Evelin Banev | 8 October 1964 | Bulgarian "cocaine kingpin". | |
Mehmet Bayar | 1960 | Turkish politician and foreign policy advisor to former President Suleyman Demirel. Attended Bilderberg/2003. | |
Uğur Bayar | 1 May 1957 | Turkish businessman and financier. | |
Deniz Baykal | 20 July 1938 | Turkish perennial politician, had to resign after 2010 sextape | |
Egemen Bağış | 23 April 1970 | Bilderberg Turkish politician. Former president of the Federation of Turkish American Associations. | |
İlker Başbuğ | 29 April 1943 | Chief of the General Staff of Turkey. | |
Erdem Başçı | 1966 | Governor of the Central Bank of Turkey from 2011-2016 | |
Burhan Belge | 1 February 1899 | 12 January 1967 | Turkish diplomat. First husband of Zsa Zsa Gabor, father of Murat Belge |
Enis Berberoğlu | 1 April 1956 | Turkish politician and journalist sentenced in 2017 to 25 years in prison on spying charges | |
Feyyaz Berker | 7 October 1925 | 22 August 2017 | spooky Turkish businessman, Turkish Industry and Business Association chair |
Selahattin Beyazit | 5 July 1931 | 21 January 2022 | One of the biggest industrialists in Turkey and member of the Bilderberg Steering committee. |
Dinc Bilgin | 1940 | Turkish media mogul whose media empire was seized by the Turkish government in 2002. | |
Çevik Bir | 1939 | Turkish general who organized 1997 'soft' coup. | |
Mehmet Ali Birand | 9 December 1941 | 17 January 2013 | Turkish journalist with Milliyet and CNN Türk. Spoke positively of Fethullah Gülen. Attempted framed by intelligence services. |
Nuri Birgi | 1907 | 1986 | 23 Bilderbergs, Turkish Permanent Representative to NATO |
Eşref Bitlis | 1933 | 17 February 1993 | Turkish general who was assassinated by deep state as part of the Turkey/1993 Planned Military Coup |
Cem Boyner | 23 September 1955 | Turkish businessman. Selected a Global Leader for Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum in 1994, and attended the 1995 Bilderberg meeting, just as he was going from leader of the Turkish Industry and Business Association to an attempted political career. | |
Ümit Boyner | 28 September 1963 | Double Bilderberg President of the Turkish Industry and Business Association | |
Ali Bozer | 28 July 1925 | 30 September 2020 | Became acting Prime Minister of Turkey for 9 days in 1989 after attending two Bilderbergs |
Sedat Bucak | 31 October 1960 | Survived the 1996 Susurluk car crash. | |
Selin Sayek Böke | 24 August 1972 | US born Turkish World Bank economist being groomed by the USA to high positions in Turkey. Attended the 2015 Bilderberg | |
Ihsan Sabri Caglayangil | 1908 | 30 December 1993 | Turkish politician who lost his job 3 times in separate military coups. Bilderberg/1975 |
Yavuz Canevi | 1939 | Attended the 1986 Bilderberg as Governor of the Turkish Central Bank | |
Huseyin Celem | 28 September 1937 | Turkish diplomat who attended the 1993 Bilderberg in Greece as Turkish Ambassador | |
İsmail Cem | 15 February 1940 | 24 January 2007 | Turkish politician and Robert College alumnus. Attended 1 Bilderberg as mooted presidential candidate, a second as Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs. |
Hasan Cemal | 1944 | Turkish writer who published on the Armenian Genocide. Opponent of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Attended the 2004 Bilderberg conference. | |
Ahmet Ünal Ceviköz | 6 November 1952 | Former Turkish ambassador to the UK. He attended the Bilderberg for the first time in 2019. | |
Mehmet Fatih Ceylan | 6 October 1957 | Turkish spooky diplomat | |
Süreyya Ciliv | 1958 | Turkish businessman, Microsoft | |
Esra Eczacıbaşı Coşkun | WEF-backed Turkish "Digital Transformation Coordinator" | ||
Canan Dagdeviren | Turkish academic who attended the 2018 Bilderberg. | ||
Ahmet Davutoğlu | Former Turkish Prime Minister | ||
Selva Demiralp | Bilderberg economist who has extensive interactions with several central banks including the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank and the Central Bank of Türkiye. Pushed COVAX in 2021. | ||
Süleyman Demirel | 1 November 1924 | 17 June 2015 | Turkish PM |
... further results |
Events Participated in
Event | Start | End | Location(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Armenia/Genocide | 1914 | 1923 | Armenia | |
Bandung Conference | 1955 | 1955 | Indonesia | Important conference for the global south; participants soon became prime targets for US foreign policy |
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:Nato Expansion and Turkey | blog post | 17 May 2022 | Craig Murray | There is another, specifically Turkish interest in play here, which is very much a factor in Erdogan’s willingness to stand up to Biden over Swedish and Finnish NATO entry. This of course relates to the permanent tension between NATO members Turkey and Greece. |
Document:Speech by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on 20 August 2017 to the Syrian Diplomatic Corps | Speech | 31 August 2017 | Bashar al Assad | The US President is not the maker of policies, but the executor. Therefore, the “Deep State” in the United States does not govern in partnership with the President, but leaves him a small margin. |
Document:The Curious Case of the Freedom Flotilla | blog post | 28 April 2024 | Craig Murray | Craig Murray: "I am therefore entirely perplexed that the organisers went with Guinea Bissau as the flag state rather than a state likely to stand up to Israel and the US. Of course it failed. Is the problem incompetence, or is it again security service influence?" |
Document:The ‘Stolen Province’: Why Turkey Was Given A Corner Of Syria By France 80 Years Ago | Article | 29 February 2020 | Under the Treaty of Lausanne, Hatay Province was part of the French Mandate for Syria and Lebanon but just before the Second World War broke out, Paris suddenly decided to hold a referendum and Hatay voted to become part of Turkey. | |
Document:Turkey ambushed Su24 using information supplied by US | report | 27 November 2015 | Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation | Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Aerospace Forces, General Bondarev, presents facts of the attack on the Russian Su-24M aircraft carried out by Turkish F-16 fighters in the sky over Syria on 24 November 2015 |
Document:US charged with war crimes in Syria prison siege | Article | 27 January 2022 | Bill Van Auken | Syria’s state media agency Sana quoted the country’s Foreign Ministry as denouncing the actions of the US and its puppet Kurdish-led militia as tantamount to “war crimes”. It demanded the immediate withdrawal of both US troops from northeastern Syria and the Turkish military from the northwest of the country. |