a protester in Turkey said this: “We’ve been living together for years (Syria and Turkey). America and Israel are trying to pit us against each other to steal the petrol in the region.”
The War for the Caspian Sea Basin rolls on.
The recent terrorist bombings in Turkey (May 11th) were intended to be blamed on the Syrian government. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan did his part pointing the finger of blame Syrian government as soon as it happened, but it didn’t stick. Several videos of the aftermath can be found.
So the people of Turkey are pissed off and out in the streets by the thousands demanding Erdogan’s resignation.
Turkish demonstrators and the opposition say the United States and the Turkish government are trying to pull the nation into a sectarian war. They also say the crisis in Syria has begun to spill over into Turkey.
Hatay (Iskenderun) Governor Mehmet Celalettin Lekesiz told reporters on May 17 that police had detained a prime suspect in connection with the Reyhanli explosions.
The suspect, identified as Mehmet G., is said to be the owner of the two vehicles that were blown up in the attacks. He is of Turkish origin and comes from Hatay. Press TV
It certainly would be an incredibly stupid more for the Syrian government to attack Turkey at a time when they are effectively winning against The mercenary terrorists in their country, so I am sure, global public opinion is heavily in favor of the Syrian government and their people, and strongly against the terrorists hired to produce government change, for the favor of Washington, London and Tel Aviv.
So what is behind the false flag attack in Turkey? Is the Turkish protester correct? Is it about oil and natural resources? In a word: yes.
Couple this recent attack with the fact that the Turkish government was coming up on the deadline for making a decision about cutting their Iranian oil imports due to Washington’s newest round of sanctions. They had previously been granted a 180 day extension by the U.S. government. Turkey is one of the largest purchasers of Iranian oil along with China and India, days ago, Erdogan announced Turkey’s decision.
Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said that his country does not plan to cut oil imports from Iran.
Destabilizing and removing various governments who stand in the way of our Great Game a.k.a. “our national interests” has been standard operating procedure” at the CIA since its inception. First, check out who is holding the leases on the various oil fields in the Caspian Sea.
Names like BP, Exxon-mobile, CONOCO all over that map. It is of the LNG and oil fields laying in wait under the Caspian Sea. It’s a buried treasure waiting to be extracted with a price tag of trillions of dollars in profits just waiting to be plundered. Here’s another more recent view of the vast resources in the area.
The Caspian Sea basin has enormous reserves even compared to both Saudi Arabia and Iraq. When you couple those potential profits with what Iran already has on their own soil, that’s a great deal of influence that could be controlled by the Iranians.
Getting the resources out of the ground isn’t the problem. Transporting them to markets is.
As you can see from the map, Iran control a great deal of the land surrounding the Caspian Sea. You can also see the strategic importance of all of our various “Global War on Terror” targets in the past few years from Afghanistan to Iraq to Pakistan, Yemen, Sudan, Egypt and Somalia. Here’s another way to look at it.
Turkey seems to be wavering in their commitment to the Great Game. Or at least in their commitment to the team they sided with. However, if they change sides, if they denounce the destabilization of Syria and maintain their business relations with Iran, that would shift the balance of power in this contest quite measurably.
The Peace Pipeline is still underway despite our best efforts to derail it and there is still a pipeline in the works in Syria to bring Iranian oil to the Med. Sea.
Whatever Turkey decides to do in the future, you can see it’s all about this Great Game of theirs to control those vast resources and the ability to get them to various markets. By now BP, Exxon and Conoco were supposed to have their routes and pipelines firmly in place, but that has yet to happen. The destabilization of Syria and Pakistan are just the latest efforts to that end.
Source: wordpress.com
B.N