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US VS. PKK – TURKEY VS. EL-KAIDE

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From: Erju Ackman <eackman@gmail.com>
erju ackman Date: 2010/11/28
Subject: Haberler basladi… Amerikanin Kurtleri destegi var…Turkerin El kaide destegi (henuz) yok.

Der Spiegel’s  says US diplomats doubt Turkey’s dependability as an
ally. Its leadership “divided.
ABD elbette kendi cikari icin Turklerin kara kasina kara gozune
bakmazdi efendiler. Ne demisler ‘Sec seni seveni hak ile yeksan (yerle
bir) etse de, sevme seni sevmeyeni Misir’a sultan etse de.’

Bekleyelim biraz daha.

Merhaba agam. Deeeeeh…..cuuuuus.

EA

——————-

New Europe

Around the world, US embassies are sending warnings to their allies
about the upcoming release of sensitive information by Wikileaks. The
documents are said to contain evidence that the United States
government has supported the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which
they themselves have labeled as a terrorist group.

First published online in January 2007, Wikileaks believes that
“publishing improves transparency, and this transparency creates a
better society for all people.” Past releases include information on
Guantanamo Bay procedures, internet censorship lists of different
countries, and documents on the Iraq War.

Recently (22nd October), Wikileaks released 391,832 reports about the
war in Iraq, which are called “The Iraq War Logs.” Containing the
words of soldiers themselves, they give the details of 109,032 deaths
– 60% of these civilian deaths. The approaching leak is said to be
seven times larger than the Iraq War Logs.

According to State Department spokesman PJ Crowley, “These revelations
are harmful to the United States and our interests… They are going
to create tension in relationships between our diplomats and our
friends around the world.”

If the allegations about the PPK are proven to be true, the United
States may have difficulty explaining their actions to the Turkish
government… not to mention the EU, of which Turkey may soon become a
member.

——————-
HAARETZ

Classified American communiqués revealed Sunday by the WikiLeaks
website reportedly brand Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as
being like Hitler and claim Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai is
“driven by paranoia.”

The New York Times reported Sunday that the WikiLeaks documents showed
Saudi donors to be the main financiers of terror groups, including
Al-Qaida, and the U.S. State Department allegedly called Saudi Arabia
“worst in the region” for their record of fighting terrorism.

The documents also revealed a nuclear standoff between the Pakistan
and the U.S., claim both the New York Times and the Guardian. The U.S.
has reportedly been trying for the past three years to remove highly
enriched uranium from a Pakistani research reactor amidst a fear that
it would be used in a weapon. According to the documents, they have
yet to succeed in their efforts.

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was reportedly extremely upset over not
being allowed to set up his tent in Manhattan for the United Nations
session in 2009. According to the Wikileaks documents, he was
reportedly so distraught that he turned his back on a promise to
return enriched uranium to Russia.

Meanwhile, the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet quoted Turkish Foreign
Ministry officials on Friday as denying allegations that Turkey
supported Al-Qaida cells in Iraq.

The denial came in the wake of an Al-Hayat report that claimed that
information held by WikiLeaks hints at a link between Ankara and the
international terror organization.

“Turkey has never given support to any terrorist organization.
Fighting against terror is our priority and we don’t make
differentiations between terrorist organizations. Turkey has launched
many operations against al-Qaida,” an official told Turkish newspaper
Hurriyet.

Asked about other allegations that the U.S. helped the outlawed
Kurdish separatist PKK, the same official said, “Turkey and the U.S.
are carrying out an efficient cooperation in the fight against the
PKK.”

Hurriyet also quoted Deborah Guido, spokeswoman for the U.S. embassy
in Ankara, as saying that U.S. government’s policy “has never been nor
will ever be in support of the PKK. Anything that implies otherwise is
nonsense.”


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