TURKEY
1823 – Samuel Russell
established Russell and company in 1823. He made a fortune with opium in Turkey
smuggling it into China. (Who really runs the world ©2005 UK T.Burnett and
A.Games)
3 Feb 1913 – Adrianopole
II, first Balkan war between Bulgaria’s King Feroinano and Turkish
Nationalists, led by Enver Pasha, for the possession of Adrianopole (Edirne),
ceded to Bulgaria in the armistice of Decemeber 1912. The Bulgarians captured
the city on March 26, and a treaty was signed in London on May 30. Re-occupied
and kept by Turkey in the second Balkan war.
1919 – Mustafa Kemel began
takeover.
1922-24 – In 1924 the
Turkish Parliament abolished the Caliph of Islam. Ending an office which
existed on and off since the death of Muhammad in 632, nearly 1,300 years
earlier. The Ottoman empire was abolished in 1922. (The Middle East ©2006
C.Catherwood)
1923 – Modern Turkey was
founded by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1923, following the collapse of the Ottoman
empire. An Islamic institution. Kemal, a military commander, established the
Turkish Republic, as a “secular” entity, along the lines of other European
states. (Stratfor morning intel brief 29 august 2007, Geopolitical diary
Turkey)
1929 –Saudi spy chief
Kamal Adham was born in Turkey in 1929, of a Turkish mother and Albanian
father. A year later he was taken to Saudi Arabia and educated in Egypt.
1939 – Constantine C
Menges was born in Turkey of German parents on 1 September 1939, the day world
war II began. His father was a scholar specialising in the languages and
peoples of the southern Iran and Turkey and had been with the academy of
sciences in Berlin. The Gestapo arrested and interrogated him in 1936. He then fled to Czech. In 1937 his father
moved to Turkey where his mother joined him. In 1967 he moved to California and
joined the staff at the Rand corp. A foreign policy think tank. During his four years at Rand he wrote on a
range of global issues including counter-insurgency in Vietnam etc ---
1949-51 – The CIA had
active operations going into Albania, the Baltic, Ukraine and from Turkey into
southern Russia. Agents parachuting in, walking in, boating in, but, most of
these operations failed. Philby played a part in compromising CIA agents in
eastern Europe.
1970’s – BCCI established
offices in every country it was allowed to., including Turkey. Rep offices
which were not allowed to collect deposits or make loans. It also set up joint
venture banks in partnership with other foreign banks or local investors.
28 May 1971 – Israeli
Consul Efraim Elrom was assassinated in Istanbul. The Turkish Liberation Army
in alliance with Palestinians claimed responsibility.
1973 – In Turkey Lockheed
were more involved, paying commissions of $876,000 over a few years. In 1973
their agent in Ankara, Nezih M Dural, asked for his fee to be increased to
$5,000 a month, but Lockheed said that in future he must buy influence not just
intelligence. Dural’s great opportunity came after the Turks invaded Cyprus,
when the US imposed an embargo on arms to Turkey. It was circumvented with the
secret approval of the State Department,
when Turkey brought two squadrons of Starfighters, produced in Italy.
For one squadron Dural received a commission of $240,000. Three years later he
was arrested on charges of currency fraud.
1976 – By 1976 the Turks
were spending more than $2 billion a year on defence, or more than 30% of their
budget. Turkey brought arms wherever they could. Including Northrop Tigers via
Libya and Iran and submarines and torpedo boats from West Germany. A proposed
tank factory was to be built by the West Germans in Turkey.
11 August 1976 – Attack on
terminal at Istanbul airport. PFLP, Japanese Red army terrorists killed four
people including an American, Harold Rosenthal, and injured 20 others.
11 August 1976 – Istanbul
machine gun grenade attack killed four people and wounded 17.
29 May 1977 – Istanbul
baggage area explosion killed five people and inured 24.
1978 – The PKK was formed
as a Marxist Leninist group in 1978, by political science student Abdullah
Ocalan.
13 October 1980 – Turkish
Boeing 72 Istanbul to Ankara was hijacked to Iran. It landed in Diyarbakir
Turkey. The plane was stormed and four hijackers arrested.
7 August 1982 – Ankara
machine gun attack killed nine people and wounded 71.
15 August 1984 – The first
time the PKK elements launched an attack against Turkish government
installations.
15 August 1984 – The PKK
began an armed struggle against Turkey. During the conflict with Turkey 40,000
people were killed and more than 5,000 Kurdish villages destroyed and two
million Kurdish refugees fled their homes.
1985 – Turkish embroidery.
Pauline Johnson. Victoria and Albert museum. ISBN 0-9481-0702-2
July 1986 – An article by
Judith Miller in the New York Times magazine described a terrorist attack in
Ankara Turkey, a synagogue bombing. Clearly marked communist weapons the direct
sponsors of the attack were Syria, Libya and Iran.
27 January 1989 – Three
simultaneous bombings of US businesses in Istanbul and Ankara. The Dev sol
revolutionary left claimed responsibility.
12 June 1989 – US Consul
boat bombed in Bosphorus straits, no injuries. The Warriors of June 16th
movement claimed responsibility.
11 October 1989 – Bombing
outside a US military px. Dev sol claimed responsibility.
7 February 191 – A US civilian contractor was killed at his car
at Incirlik air base. Dev sol claimed responsibility.
28 February 1991 –A US air force officer was shot and wounded in
Izmir.
28 October 1991 – A car
bomb kills one American serviceman and wounds his wife. Islamic Jihad
responsible.
28 October 1991 – Two car
bombs kill one American in Ankara. Islamic Jihad responsible.
1995 – About 80% of the
drugs that enter Europe transit through Turkey. In the late 1990’s the annual
drug budget of the Turkish mafia was slightly higher than the annual budget for
the Turkish government. (Modern Jihad ©2003 L Napoleoni)
3 November 1996 – A car
crashed near Susurluk in Turkey. The passengers were all involved in smuggling
drugs to Europe. Between 70 to 80% of the drugs that enter Europe transit
through Turkey. High ranking politicians are also involved in this illegal
trade and the Turkish mafia.
20 November 1998 – Italian
authorities last week arrested Turkey’s most wanted fugitive, the leader of the
Kurdistan workers party PKK and waged a guerrilla war against Turkey from
Syria. Until Damascus cut ties with the group last month. PKK leader Abdullah
Ocalan was caught in Rome 13 November after arriving from Moscow carrying a
false passport. The Turkish ambassador
to the US Bakiilkin said the Kurdistan workers party PKK has killed more than
30,000 people since Abdullah Ocalan formed it in 1978. Mr Ilkin urged Italy to
extradite the rebel leader to Turkey to stand trial on charges of terrorism and
treason. (VOA)
7 December 1999 – Sardan
Tolga, Bin Lardin activities in Turkey reported. Istanbul Milliyet/internet
news translated from Turkish –
19 October 1999 – Egypt
air flight 838 Istanbul to Cairo was hijacked over Turkey. It flew to Hamburg
and the hijacker was arrested after a promise of asylum.
15 March 2001 – Airliner
hijacking in Istanbul. Three Chechens hijacked a Russian airliner during a
flight from Istanbul to Moscow and forced it to fly to Medina Saudi Arabia. The
plane carried 162 passengers and a crew of 12. After a 22 hour seige during
which more than 40 passengers were released. Saudi security forces stormed the
plane, killing a hijacker, a passenger and a flight attendant.
1 November 2001 – Turkey
announced it would send 90 troops to northern Afghanistan to train northern
alliance forces.
29 April 2002 – Turkey
officially agrees to assume command of the peacekeeping mission in Afghanistan.
The Turkish government plans to take control of the 4,500 member 18 nation
force from the UK in six months. Turkey currently has 270 peacekeepers in
Afghanistan and is the only Muslim country that has contributed to the
peacekeeping mission.
2003 – The bulk of the
drug money enters Turkey in suitcases carried by couriers.
November 2003 – A Turkish
man admitted receiving $50,000 from an Iranian source and sent it to Turkey to
fund last months suicide bombings in Istanbul. (Iranfilter 21 Dec 2003)
15 November 2003 –
Synagogue bombing in Istanbul. Two suicide truck bombs exploded outside the
Neve Shalom and Beth Israel synagogues in Istanbul killing 25 people and
wounding at least 300 more. A Turkish militant group, the great eastern Islamic
raiders, claimed responsibility. An al-Qaeda connection was suspected. An
al-Qaeda branch called, the brigades of the martyr Abu Hafz al-Masri, claimed
responsibility.
20 November 2003 – Two
more suicide truck bombings in Istanbul, devastated the British HSBC bank and
the British consulate general in Istanbul, killing 27 people and wounding at
least 450. The dead included consul general Roger short. Al-Qaeda was
suspected. The great eastern Islamic
raiders front claimed responsibility.
17 May 2004 – Four small
bombs exploded outside branches of HSBC in Ankara and Istanbul before Tony
Blair’s visit to Turkey.
20 May 2004 – In the
Acibadem district of Istanbul a bomb exploded in the parking lot of a McDonalds
restaurant, breaking windows, destroying one car and damaging several other
vehicles. No group claimed responsibility.
3 August 2005 – A blast in
Istanbul killed two people.
5 August 2005 – Five
Turkish soldiers died in aq bomb attack blamed on the PKK in Hakkari province.
To be continued …

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