organization:turkish military

  • Turkey deploys tanks at border with Syria

    The Turkish military deployed tanks and armored vehicles to the border province of #Hatay on Jan. 13, as Turkey continues its preparations for a planned military operation in the east of River Euphrates in Syria against ISIL and the YPG, which it sees as the Syrian branch of the PKK.

    According to Demirören News Agency, several tanks and armored vehicles were dispatched from the eastern province of Erzurum to the border city of İskenderun by train.

    The vehicles were unloaded from trains at İskenderun train station and were loaded on to trucks en route to border troops stationed around Cilvegözü border gate under heavy security measures.


    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkey-deploys-tanks-at-border-with-syria-140488
    #Turquie #Syrie #frontières #militarisation_des_frontières #armée

  • Avec l’offensive en Syrie, la démocratie turque connaît un nouveau recul

    L’intervention militaire turque en cours contre l’enclave kurde d’Afrin a fourni au président Erdogan l’occasion de resserrer plus l’étau de la #censure dans son pays, au nom de la défense de la patrie menacée. Entre unanimisme forcé et vagues d’#arrestations, le maître de la Turquie met en place l’environnement qui assurera son succès aux prochaines élections.

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/030218/avec-l-offensive-en-syrie-la-democratie-turque-connait-un-nouveau-recul?on
    #Syrie #guerre #conflit #Turquie #Afrin #Kurdistan
    #paywall

    • 573 detained in Turkey for opposing Afrin operation: ministry

      A total of 573 people in total have been detained for their critical stance against Turkey’s Afrin operations so far, according to official data.

      The Interior Ministry said in a statement on Feb 5 that 449 people were detained for “terror propaganda in their social media postings on Afrin operation” while the remaining 124 were caught up for attending demonstrations in protest of the offensive, since the beginning of the operation.


      https://turkeypurge.com/573-detained-in-turkey-for-opposing-afrin-operation-ministry
      #purge

    • Turkey detains yet another 11 people for criticizing Afrin operation

      At least 11 people were detained for opposing the Turkish military’s offensive in Syria’s Afrin via their social media accounts.

      Media reported on Thursday that Ankara public prosecutor’s office issued detention warrants for 18 people.

      While 11 of them were rounded up, police were seeking the remaining 7. Among the detainees is Dilsat Aktas, the co-chair of the Halkevleri activist group.

      On Jan 22, Turkish troops entered Afrin area, which is controlled by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party’s (PKK) extension PYD. While most political parties in Turkey welcomed the offensive, police have detained, among others, many journalists for criticizing the operation since then.

      According to official data, at least 786 people in total were detained for their critical stance against the operation between Jan 22 and Feb 19.


      https://turkeypurge.com/turkey-detains-yet-another-11-people-criticizing-afrin-operation

    • En Turquie, les pacifistes emprisonnés

      Les voix dissidentes sont à nouveau réduites au silence en Turquie. Cette fois, il s’agit de L’offensive militaire à Afrin. Lancée par le président Recep Tayip Erdogan le 20 janvier dernier, l’opération vise une milice kurde de l’enclave syrienne d’Afrin, située tout près de la frontière turque. Activistes, journalistes, médecins, artistes ou simples citoyens, des centaines de personnes ont déjà été arrêtées pour avoir dénoncé cette intervention militaire. Le pouvoir leur reproche de soutenir le terrorisme et de ternir l’Union nationale. A Istanbul, le reportage d’Anne Andlauer.

      http://www.rfi.fr/emission/20180223-turquie-pacifistes-emprisonnes-arrestation-offensive-militaire-afrin

    • Father of Turkish soldier killed in Afrin turns out to be purge victim

      The father of Turkish soldier Abdullah Taha Koç, who was killed during an ongoing military operation in the Afrin region of Syria, has turned out to have been removed from his post at the Konya Metropolitan Municipality by a government decree, known as a KHK, the Sözcü daily reported.


      https://turkeypurge.com/father-turkish-soldier-killed-afrin-turns-khk-victim

    • 845 people in Turkey detained for criticizing military campaign in Syria

      The Turkish Interior Ministry on 26 February announced that a total of 845 individuals have so far been detained by police for expressing online criticism for Turkey’s military operation in the north of Syria.

      This marks a further increase from the figure of 786, which the ministry announced the previous week.The ministry didn’t specify how many of those detentions had turned into formal arrests and imprisonment.

      The statement said: “Since 20 January 1918 when Operation Olive Branch started to date, there have been 85 actions/protests against the operation; 648 instances of social media propaganda have been made and 120 provocateurs have been detected during demonstrations, and a total of 845 suspects have been taken into custody for events/demonstrations or propaganda efforts.”

      The statement also said that it was taking action regarding 423 social media accounts that were either praising terror organizations, spreading propaganda on behalf of the terrorist organization, inciting the public to hatred and hostility, threatening the integrity of the state and public safety or insulting state officials. It also said legal action had been taken against 251 people in charge of such accounts. It wasn’t clear whether these 251 were among the 845 taken into custody as part of the general crackdown on criticism of Turkey’s military campaign in Syria.

      https://medyavehukuk.org/en/845-people-turkey-detained-criticizing-military-campaign-syria

  • Turkey, US, Russia stage surprise tripartite regional security meeting in Antalya - INTERNATIONAL

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkey-us-russia-stage-surprise-tripartite-regional-security-meet

    The top soldiers of Turkey, the United States and Russia came together in Antalya in a first of its kind tripartite summit, the Turkish military has stated, highlighting developments in Syria and Iraq as top issues of the agenda. 

    In a written statement issued by the office of the Chief of General Staff, Turkish Chief of General Staff Gen. Hulusi Akar, U.S. Chief of General Staff Gen. Joseph Dunford and Russian Chief of General Staff Gen. Valery Gerasimov met in Antalya. 

    Sources said the meeting began early on March 7 and is expected to continue through the day. Pictures distributed by the Turkish army feature the three top soldiers sitting side by side. 

    The top soldiers of the three countries held bilateral meetings in recent months, particularly on security issues in Syria and Iraq, but have never met in a three-way meeting. 

    The statement said they discussed security issues concerning Syria and Iraq, without further elaborating. The meeting comes as Turkey presses both Russia and the U.S. to cease cooperation with the Syrian Democratic Union Party (PYD) for defeating the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

    Raqqa ops possible with coordination

    Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım hinted about a military-to-military meeting between the three countries in an interview with the private broadcaster A Haber late on March 6. 

    “There is no point in doing an operation [on Raqqa] without coordinating with Russia and the U.S. It would be futile and the consequences may become more complicated. For that, there are military, technical negotiations going on,” Yıldırım said.

    He recalled Turkey’s proposal for a joint operation on Raqqa on the condition that the PYD will be excluded but stressed that Washington has not yet replied to Ankara. 

    “We have conveyed our offer to the U.S. There has not been a formal response yet. So it would not be right to say ‘they have other plans’ just by taking what has been written about the issue into account. But we will not be anywhere there are terrorist organizations. It is that clear,” Yıldırım added.

    ‘PYD to east of Euphrates’ 

    Yıldırım said Turkey’s main purpose in possible operations toward Manbij, al-Bab or other parts of Syria is to push the PYD and its armed wing, the People’s Protection Units (YPG), to the east of the Euphrates River. “It is quite natural that there would be Syrian elements there after it is provided. Because it is Syrian territory,” he said. 

    “It can be the U.S. or it can be Russia. We are saying, if it is desired, we can make a triple mechanism with Russia, the U.S. and Turkey,” he said.

    “When terrorist groups like the PYD and the YPG are completely cleared, same as we did in Jarablus with the Euphrates Shield operation, or in al-Rai, Dabiq and as we have started to do in al-Bab, Syrians will come and settle there. Life will go back to normal,” he added.

  • Turkey entered Syria to end al-Assad’s rule: President Erdoğan - MIDEAST
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkey-entered-syria-to-end-al-assads-rule-president-erdogan.aspx

    The Turkish military launched its operations in Syria to end the rule of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said Nov. 29.

    “In my estimation, nearly 1 million people have died in Syria. These deaths are still continuing without exception for children, women and men. Where is the United Nations? What is it doing? Is it in Iraq? No. We preached patience but could not endure in the end and had to enter Syria together with the Free Syrian Army [FSA],” Erdoğan said at the first Inter-Parliamentary Jerusalem Platform Symposium in Istanbul.

    “Why did we enter? We do not have an eye on Syrian soil. The issue is to provide lands to their real owners. That is to say we are there for the establishment of justice. We entered there to end the rule of the tyrant al-Assad who terrorizes with state terror. [We didn’t enter] for any other reason,” the president said.

    On Aug. 24, the Turkish Armed Forces launched an operation in Syria, the Euphrates Shield operation, with FSA fighters to ostensibly clear the country’s southern border of both the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) forces, which Ankara considers as a terrorist group linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

    Last week, a total of six Turkish troops, of them four in a suspected Syrian government attack, and two in ISIL attacks, were killed in three separate attacks from Nov. 24 to 26.

  • Tensions increase between Ankara and Washington as relations between Erdogan and Putin begin to thaw
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/turkey-erdogan-syria-civil-war-special-forces-secret-mission-russia-u

    The Turkish military, with armour, air-power and troops on the ground – a thousand of them special forces – are moving deeper into Syria, along with Syrian opposition fighters, setting up a “security zone” across the border.

    Operation Euphrates Shield has been marked for Ankara by increasing acrimony with Washington and warming of relations with Moscow. The Turkish forces have attacked Kurdish fighters who are America’s key allies in the fight against Isis, while Russia, busy securing Aleppo for ally Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, has given tacit approval for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s actions in northern Syria.

    #Turquie #Syrie #Etats-Unis #Russie

  • Turkey launches fresh incursion into Syria | Fox News
    http://www.foxnews.com/world/2016/09/04/turkey-launches-fresh-incursion-into-syria.html

    Turkey’s military launched a second incursion into Syria Saturday against an Islamic State-held border town, in a move that U.S. officials view as a necessary step to flushing out the jihadist group from the war-torn country.

    A Turkish armored unit supported by artillery strikes moved across the border into Al-Rai, a Syrian city that Syrian rebels lost to Islamic State earlier in May and which is located roughly halfway along the line of control bebetween the Turkish-Syrian border.
    […]
    Saturday’s incursion took place 36 miles west of Jarablus and represents a new second front for the Turkish military in Syria. If Turkish-backed rebels can successfully hold the area, it would slice in half the approximately 62 miles of territory that Islamic State has controlled along the Turkish border and isolate its remaining forces in that corner of Syria.

  • How Turkey Came to This
    The attempted military coup isn’t the country’s first. But this time is different.
    http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/interrogation/2016/07/why_turkey_s_latest_attempted_coup_was_different.html

    To discuss these events, I spoke by phone Friday evening with Jenny White, a professor at Stockholm University’s Institute for Turkish Studies; White has also written several books about the region. During the course of our conversation, which has been edited and condensed, we talked about the Turkish military’s history of interfering in democracy, religious conflict in the country, and why a successful coup could lead to civil war.

    #Turquie #polarisation

  • How fighters are filtering across the Syrian-Turkish border - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/02/turkey-syria-civilians-militants-massed-at-turkish-border.html#

    According to information provided by the Turkish military and Kilis governorate, there are many foreign fighters among those trying to cross into Turkey. A well-placed security source at the border provided profiles of the refugees: civilians fleeing from the Aleppo-Azaz area, families of opposition fighters who used to live in the liberated areas, fighters supported by Turkey in the Bayirbucak and Aleppo-Azaz areas and foreign Islamic State (IS) militants.

    Et la conclusion est intéressante aussi :

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had bargained with EU officials Jean-Claude Juncker and Donald Tusk and agreed to keep the border under control in return for 3 billion euros ($3.4 billion). It has widely been reported that, according to alleged transcripts of a November meeting, Erdogan had unsuccessfully tried to double that amount by threatening, “We will open the Greek and Bulgarian borders and fill buses with refugees.”

    But the looming question is what Turkey will do with all those fighters who will flee across the border when the Syrian army recovers the area. This is certainly a serious worry — and not just for Turkey.

    #turquie #EI #réfugiés #migrants

  • 3 senior commanders detained over stopping of MİT trucks, reports say
    http://www.todayszaman.com/national_3-senior-commanders-detained-over-stopping-of-mi-t-trucks-repo

    According to Turkish media reports, Ankara Gendarmerie Regional Commander Maj. Gen. İbrahim Aydın and former Adana Gendarmerie Regional Commander Brig. Gen. Hamza Celepoğlu and former Gendarmerie Criminal Laboratory head, retired Col. Burhanettin Cihangiroğlu, were detained on Saturday.

    In January 2014, gendarmes stopped three Syria-bound trucks in the southern provinces of Adana and Hatay, after prosecutors received tip-offs that the vehicles were illegally carrying arms to armed organizations in Syria.

    The government quickly dismissed claims at the time that the trucks intercepted and searched by the Turkish military by order of prosecutors in Adana had any weapons. Current Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, who was foreign minister at the time, asserted that the cargo was humanitarian aid destined for embattled Syrian Turkmens on the other side of the border.

    Testimonials by gendarmerie intelligence officers involved in the interception confirmed, however, that the shipment’s destination was not an area with any Turkmens. The Syrian destination, as disclosed by the drivers, was often a target for reconnaissance by Turkish military personnel who secured the border.

    Moreover, the gendarmes said, the area was populated by radical groups.

    Justice and Development Party (AK Party) officials called the 2014 investigation of the MİT trucks “treason and espionage” on the part of the prosecutors because the trucks were claimed to be transporting humanitarian aid to Bayır-Bucak Turkmens, and a case was filed against those involved in the investigation.

    An indictment, which was approved by the Tarsus High Criminal Court in July, seeks a life sentence for Adana Chief Public Prosecutor Süleyman Bağrıyanık, former Adana Deputy Chief Public Prosecutor Ahmet Karaca and Adana prosecutors Aziz Takçı and Özcan Şişman, as well as Gendarmerie Commander Col. Özkan Çokay, who were involved in the probe.

  • Russia hails rescue operation as downed jet’s navigator denies Turkey warning
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/nov/25/second-russian-pilot-shot-down-turkey-alive-ambassador

    The Turkish military has released what it says is an audio recording of a warning it gave to a Russian fighter jet before the aircraft was shot down near the Syrian border, hours after the surviving Russian crew member insisted there had been no contact.

    A voice on the Turkish recording can be heard saying “change your heading”. But Konstantin Murakhtin, a navigator who was rescued in a joint operation by Syrian and Russian commandos, told Russian media: “There were no warnings, either by radio or visually. There was no contact whatsoever.”

    He also denied entering Turkish airspace. “I could see perfectly on the map and on the ground where the border was and where we were. There was no danger of entering Turkey,” he said.

  • Turkish Jets Shoot Down Drone at Its Border With Syria - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2015/10/16/world/middleeast/ap-ml-syria.html

    Turkey shot down an unidentified drone that flew into its airspace Friday near the Syrian border, while Russian President Vladimir Putin said his country’s air campaign backing a Syrian government offensive has killed hundreds of militants.

    A U.S. official said the downed drone was Russian, but Moscow staunchly rejected the claim.

    The incident underlined the potential dangers of clashes involving Russian, Syrian and U.S.-led coalition planes in the increasingly crowded skies over Syria. Russian and U.S. military officials have been working on a set of rules to prevent any problems.

    The Turkish military said it issued three warnings before shooting down the aircraft with its fighter jets. It didn’t specify how it had relayed the warnings to the operators of the drone.

    The drone crashed 3 kilometers (about 2 miles) inside Turkish territory, said Foreign Minister Feridun Sinirlioglu. “We have not been able to establish who the drone belongs to, but we are able to work on it because it fell inside Turkish territory,” he added.

    • Russia sets up contact with Turkish military after it downs aircraft : UNIAN news
      http://www.unian.info/world/1154919-russia-sets-up-contact-with-turkish-military-after-it-downs-aircraft

      Russia’s Defense Ministry says it has established direct contact with Turkey’s military to ensure flight safety of Russian combat aircraft near the Turkish border with Syria and prevent any future incidents, according to Radio Liberty. 

      It is reported that Russia has also established a hotline between a base used by the Russian air force in Syria and the Israeli air force command center, according to Chief of the Main Operations Directorate of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces, Colonel-General Andrei Kartapolov.

      The statement came after Turkish military on Friday said it had downed an “air vehicle” of unknown origin which had violated Turkish air space close to the Syrian border, with a U.S. official suspecting it was of Russian origin. However, the Russian Defense Ministry said on Friday all its planes in Syria had safely returned to the base.

      Meanwhile, social network users pointed that the photos of the drone of unknown origin that was downed in Turkey were very similar to the photos of the drone that was shot down over Donbas by Ukrainian military in May 2014. It was said to be a modified version of a Russian Orlan-10, although it was significantly different from the basic version of this air vehicle.

  • Turkish military says MIT shipped weapons to al-Qaeda - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/01

    Secret official documents about the searching of three trucks belonging to Turkey’s national intelligence service (MIT) have been leaked online, once again corroborating suspicions that Ankara has not been playing a clean game in Syria. According to the authenticated documents, the trucks were found to be transporting missiles, mortars and anti-aircraft ammunition. The Gendarmerie General Command, which authored the reports, alleged, "The trucks were carrying weapons and supplies to the al-Qaeda terror organization.” But Turkish readers could not see the documents in the news bulletins and newspapers that shared them, because the government immediately obtained a court injunction banning all reporting about the affair.

    New documents have been leaked online, prompting the government to immediatey ban reporting on the scandal and order the content deleted.

    When President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was prime minister, he had said, “You cannot stop the MIT truck. You cannot search it. You don’t have the authority. These trucks were taking humanitarian assistance to Turkmens.”

    Since then, Erdogan and his hand-picked new Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu have repeated at every opportunity that the trucks were carrying assistance to Turkmens. Public prosecutor Aziz Takci, who had ordered the trucks to be searched, was removed from his post and 13 soldiers involved in the search were taken to court on charges of espionage. Their indictments call for prison terms of up to 20 years.

    In scores of documents leaked by a group of hackers, the Gendarmerie Command notes that rocket warheads were found in the trucks’ cargo.

    According to the documents that circulated on the Internet before the ban came into effect, this was the summary of the incident:

    On Jan. 19, 2014, after receiving a tip that three trucks were carrying weapons and explosives to al-Qaeda in Syria, the Adana Provincial Gendarmerie Command obtained search warrants.
    The Adana prosecutor called for the search and seizure of all evidence.
    Security forces stopped the trucks at the Ceyhan toll gates, where MIT personnel tried to prevent the search.
    While the trucks were being escorted to Seyhan Gendarmerie Command for an extensive search, MIT personnel accompanying the trucks in an Audi vehicle blocked the road to stop the trucks. When MIT personnel seized the keys from the trucks’ ignitions, an altercation ensued. MIT personnel instructed the truck drivers to pretend their trucks had malfunctioned and committed physical violence against gendarmerie personnel.
    The search was carried out and videotaped despite the efforts of the governor and MIT personnel to prevent it.
    Six metallic containers were found in the three trucks. In the first container, 25-30 missiles or rockets and 10-15 crates loaded with ammunition were found. In the second container, 20-25 missiles or rockets, 20-25 crates of mortar ammunition and Douchka anti-aircraft ammunition in five or six sacks were discovered. The boxes had markings in the Cyrillic alphabet.
    It was noted that the MIT personnel swore at the prosecutor and denigrated the gendarmerie soldiers doing the search, saying, “Look at those idiots. They are looking for ammunition with picks and shovels. Let someone who knows do it. Trucks are full of bombs that might explode.”
    The governor of Adana, Huseyin Avni Cos, arrived at the scene and declared, “The trucks are moving with the prime minister’s orders” and vowed not to let them be interfered with no matter what.
    With a letter of guarantee sent by the regional director of MIT, co-signed by the governor, the trucks were handed back to MIT.
    Driver Murat Kislakci said in his deposition, “This cargo was loaded into our trucks from a foreign airplane at Ankara Esenboga Airport. We are taking them to Reyhanli [on the Syrian border]. Two men [MIT personnel] in the Audi are accompanying us. At Reyhanli, we hand over the trucks to two people in the Audi. They check us into a hotel. The trucks move to cross the border. We carried similar loads several times before. We were working for the state. In Ankara, we were leaving our trucks at an MIT location. They used to tell us to come back at 7 a.m. I know the cargo belongs to MIT. We were at ease; this was an affair of state. This was the first time we collected cargo from the airport and for the first time we were allowed to stand by our trucks during the loading.”
    After accusations of espionage by the government and pro-government media, the chief of general staff ordered the military prosecutor to investigate,. On July 21, the military prosecutor declared the operation was not espionage. The same prosecutor said this incident was a military affair and should be investigated not by the public prosecutor, but the military. The civilian court did not retract its decision.

    Though the scandal is tearing the country apart, the government opted for its favorite tactic of covering it up. A court in Adana banned written, visual and Internet media outlets from any reporting and commenting on the stopping of the trucks and the search. All online content about the incident has been deleted.

    The court case against the 13 gendarmerie elements accused of espionage has also been controversial. The public prosecutor, who in his indictment said the accused were involved in a plot to have Turkey tried at the International Criminal Court, veered off course. Without citing any evidence, the indictment charged that there was collusion between the Syrian government, al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (IS). The prosecutor deviated from the case at hand and charged that the killing by IS of three people at Nigde last year was actually carried out by the Syrian state.

    At the moment, a total blackout prevails over revelations, which are bound to have serious international repercussions.

  • Turkey’s Syria Problem in 5 Maps
    http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2014-10-10/turkey-s-syria-problem-in-5-maps?alcmpid=view

    I have a lot of sympathy for Erdogan’s predicament. The advance of Islamic State forces him to choose between two unpalatable options. The first is to join the U.S. campaign, which would carry huge downside risks. Part of his political base is sympathetic to Islamic State, which it considers a Sunni response to Shiite oppression. Worse, the organization now has enough adherents in Turkey to make the country highly vulnerable to terrorist attacks, should the Turkish military get involved.

    Turkish nationalists would simultaneously attack him for collaborating with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party. Indeed, he would be making a big bet on the PKK, which fought a war in which at least 30,000 Turkish citizens were killed before a cease-fire last year. The Kurdish group is getting a new lease of life from the turmoil in Syria, and Turks still fear the PKK wants to carve out a Kurdish state, though it claims to want only autonomy.

    To understand the conflict, and have a sense of where it might go next, it helps to know the following:

    –- Rojava, which means western in Kurdish (the PKK divides Kurdistan into North, South, West and East), is a de facto autonomous region carved out during Syria’s civil war where a majority of Syria’s roughly 2 million Kurds live:

    The headlines to the effect of “Turkey won’t send troops to aid Kobani” answer a question that isn’t being asked. The Kurds don’t want the Turkish military to intervene on the ground, and nor does the U.S. Only Turkey wants to send in troops — to create a “buffer zone” that it, and not Kurdish militants, would control. The Kurds just want Turkey to allow Kurdish fighters to be allowed to move from one part of Rojava to the other with arms and reinforcements.

    –- Kurds are convinced Turkey is arming and aiding Islamic State to destroy or occupy Rojava. The first accusation probably isn’t true, but the second is accurate in the sense that sealing the border is all the help the Islamic State needs to achieve its goal.

    –- The fall of Kobani won’t end the crisis. There are two much larger parts of Rojava remaining. The first, Cizre, contains some of Syria’s most productive oil fields. These are much smaller than those in Iraq, but would be important to Islamic State. The vast majority of Iraq’s oil is on territory populated by Kurds and Shiites, and the Sunni areas held by Islamic State are mostly devoid of energy resources. A Caliphate without oil revenue probably wouldn’t be glorious for long:

    (...)

    • ha ha ! trop drôle :) Bloomberg source « El Mundo » une de mes cartes parue dans le Diplo il y a environ 5 ou 6 ans (la première que tu affiches ici d’ailleurs).

      Bon, c’est pas grave, l’essentiel est qu’elle soit vue...

  • #turkey fires into #syria after shelling damages mosque
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/turkey-fires-syria-after-shelling-damages-mosque

    The Turkish military fired back into Syria on Monday in retaliation for mortar shells and a rocket from over the border that hit a mosque in the town of Yayladagi, the provincial governor’s office and local media said. Three mortar rounds landed on Turkish soil, fired during fighting between the Islamist rebels in Syria and government forces for control of the Armenian Christian village of Kessab, Turkey’s Dogan News Agency said. read more

    #Latakia #Top_News

  • Two Spanish #journalists abducted in #syria released
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/two-spanish-journalists-abducted-syria-released

    Two Spanish journalists taken hostage by an al-Qaeda-linked group last year have been freed, the Spanish daily El Mundo reported Sunday. “At 21:27 (Spanish time 2027 GMT Saturday) veteran El Mundo Middle East correspondent Javier Espinosa called the paper’s newsroom and said they had been released and handed over to the Turkish military,” the newspaper said on its website. read more

    #ISIS #kidnapped #Top_News

  • #turkey says Syrian air defense systems “harassing” its war jets
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/turkey-says-syrian-air-defense-systems-harassing-its-war-jets

    Syrian air defense systems have “harassed” Turkish F-16 fighter jets patrolling their own airspace by repeatedly putting them under “radar lock,” suggesting they were about to be fired at, the Turkish military said on Thursday. The incident, which took place on Wednesday, comes only days after Turkey downed a Syrian warplane that Ankara said had violated its airspace, in an area where Syrian rebels have been battling government forces. read more

    #syria #Top_News

  • Syrian rebels say Turkey is arming and training them - Michael Weiss
    http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/michaelweiss/100159613/syrian-rebels-say-turkey-is-arming-and-training-them

    Rebel sources in Hatay told me last night that not only is Turkey supplying light arms to select battalion commanders, it is also training Syrians in Istanbul. Men from the unit I was embedded with were vetted and called up by Turkish intelligence in the last few days and large consignments of AK-47s are being delivered by the Turkish military to the Syrian-Turkish border. No one knows where the guns came from originally, but no one much cares.

    This news, which has provided a much-needed morale boost to Syria’s embattled opposition, does appear to corroborate a recent report by the Washington Post that the United States has been facilitating the transfer of Gulf-purchased weapons to the rebels.