Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Fantastic Tale: Turkey, Drugs, Faustian Alliances & Sibel Edmonds

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Fantastic Tale: Turkey, Drugs, Faustian Alliances & Sibel Edmonds

    Dissident Voice, CA
    June 29 2004


    A Fantastic Tale
    Turkey, Drugs, Faustian Alliances & Sibel Edmonds
    by John Stanton
    www.dissidentvoice.org
    June 29, 2004

    Taking Turkey as the focal point and with a start date of 1998, it
    is easy to speculate why Sibel Edmonds indicated that there was a
    convergence of US and foreign counter-narcotics, counter-terrorism
    and US national security and economic interests all of which were too
    preoccupied to surface critical information warning Americans of the
    attacks of September 11, 2001. After all, who would have believed
    drug runners operating in Central Asia? And besides, President
    Clinton was promoting Turkey, one of the world's top drug transit
    points, as a model for Muslim-Western cooperation and a country
    necessary to reshape the Middle East.

    The FBI's Office of International Operations, in conjunction with the
    CIA and the US State Department counter-narcotics section, the United
    Kingdom's MI6, Israel's Mossad, Pakistan's ISI, the US DEA, Turkey's
    MIT, and the governments and intelligence agencies of dozens of
    nations, were in one way or another involved in the illicit drug
    trade either trying to stop it or benefit from it. What can be
    surmised from the public record is that from 1998 to September 10,
    2001, the War on Drugs kept bumping into the nascent War on Terror
    and new directions in US foreign policy.

    It's easy to imagine the thousands of drug couriers, middlemen,
    financiers and lab technicians moving back and forth between Pakistan
    and Turkey, and over to Western Europe and the United States, and the
    tidbits of information they gleaned from their sponsors as they
    traveled. As information gathering assets for the intelligence
    agencies of the world, they must have been invaluable. And given the
    dozens of foreign intelligence services working the in the
    counter-narcotics/terrorism fields, the `chatter' that just dozens of
    well-placed operatives may have overheard about attacks against
    Western targets must have found its way into the US intelligence
    apparatus. But, again, who could believe the audacity of non-state
    actors organizing a domestic attack against the supreme power of the
    day, the USA? Implementing a new strategic direction and business
    deals may have overcome the wacky warnings from the counter-narcotics
    folks.

    Back in the late 1990's and early 2000, who would have believed the
    rants of a drug courier from Afghanistan saying that some guy named
    Bin Laden was going to attack America, particularly if it involved
    America's newest friend, Turkey? Or that a grand design to reshape
    Central Asia and the Middle East with Turkey and Israel as pivot
    points was being pushed by the Clinton Administration as a matter of
    national policy.

    The historical record shows that the US War on Drugs and the nascent
    War on Terror kept colliding with not only within the US
    intelligence, policy and business apparatus, but also with European
    strategic and business interests. Turkey continues its push for entry
    into the European Union and the USA wants that to happen as the June
    2004 meeting of NATO, and President Bush's attendance under dangerous
    circumstances, in Turkey demonstrates. Turkey is one of the USA's and
    Europe's top arms buyers and is located near what could be some of
    the biggest oil and natural gas fields in the world. At this point
    it's worth noting that the one of the FBI's tasks is to counter
    industrial espionage and to engage in it. Where big arms sales pit
    the US against its European competitors--as is the case in Turkey
    (particularly starting in 1998)--the FBI is busy making sure the US
    gets the edge over its competition. Allies are friends only so far.

    Did warnings foretelling of an attack on American soil by Bin Laden's
    crew get lost in the War on Drugs or the US national and economic
    interest in troublesome Turkey? It seems only Ms Edmonds knows.

    Turkey Cold to UK and USA Concerns

    In 1998, the US Department of State (DOS) was finally forced to admit
    that Turkey was a major refining and transit point for the flow of
    heroin from Southwest Asia to Western Europe, with small quantities
    of the stuff finding its way to the streets of the USA. In that same
    year, Kendal Nezan, writing for Le Monde Diplomatique, reported that
    MIT, and the Turkish National Police force were actively supporting
    the trade in illicit drugs not only for fun and profit, but out of
    desperation.

    `After the Gulf War in 1991, Turkey found itself deprived of the
    all-important Iraqi market and, since it lacked significant oil
    reserves of its own, it decided to make up for the loss by turning
    more massively to drugs. The trafficking increased in intensity with
    the arrival of the hawks in power, after the death in suspicious
    circumstances of President Turgut Özal in April 1993. According to
    the minister of interior, the war in Kurdistan had cost the Turkish
    exchequer upwards of $12.5 billion. According to the daily Hürriyet,
    Turkey's heroin trafficking brought in $25 billion in 1995 and $37.5
    billion in 1996...Only criminal networks working in close cooperation
    with the police and the army could possibly organize trafficking on
    such a scale. Drug barons have stated publicly, on Turkish television
    and in the West, that they have been working under the protection of
    the Turkish government and to its financial benefit. The traffickers
    themselves travel on diplomatic passports...the drugs are even
    transported by military helicopter from the Iranian border.'

    Nowhere is the pain of Turkey's role in the heroin trade felt more
    horribly than in the United Kingdom. According to London's Letter
    written by a Member of Parliament, `The war against drugs and drug
    trafficking in Britain is huge. Turkish heroin in particular is a top
    priority for the MI6 and the Foreign Ministry. During his visit to
    the British Embassy in Ankara, the head of the Foreign Office's
    Turkey Department was clear about this. He reassured an English
    journalist that the heroin trade was more important than billions of
    pounds worth off trade capacity and weapons selling. When the
    journalist in question told me about this, I was reminded of my
    teacher's words at university in Ankara ten years ago. He was also
    working for the Turkish Foreign Ministry. The topic of a lecture
    discussion was about Turkey's Economy and I still remember his words
    today,

    `50 billion dollars worth of foreign debt is nothing, it is two lorry
    loads of heroin...'

    Afghanistan: Top Opiate Producer and America's Friend

    Both the DOS and the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) described in
    detail the transit routes and countries involved in getting the goods
    to Turkey. Intelligence organizations here and abroad must have
    sanctioned the role that they, and Turkey and Afghanistan, played in
    the process. `Afghanistan is the original source of most of the
    opiates reaching Turkey. Afghan opiates, and also hashish, are
    stockpiled at storage and staging areas in Pakistan, from where a ton
    or larger quantities are smuggled by overland vehicles to Turkey via
    Iran. Multi-ton quantities of opiates and hashish also are moved to
    coastal areas of Pakistan and Iran, where the drugs are loaded on
    ships waiting off-shore, which then smuggle the contraband to points
    in Turkey along the Mediterranean, Aegean, and/or Marmara seas.
    Opiates and hashish also are smuggled overland from Afghanistan via
    Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, and Georgia to Turkey.

    Turkish-based traffickers and brokers operate directly and in
    conjunction with narcotic suppliers, smugglers, transporters,
    laboratory operators, drug distributors, money collectors, and money
    launderers in and outside Turkey. Traffickers in Turkey illegally
    acquire the precursor chemical acetic anhydride, which is used in the
    production of heroin, from sources in Western Europe, the Balkans,
    and Russia. During the 27-month period from July 1, 1999 to September
    30, 2001, over 56 metric tons of illicit acetic anhydride were seized
    in or destined for Turkey.'

    The Ankara Pact

    The Middle East Report concluded in 1998 that probably the greatest
    strategic move in the Clinton post-Cold War years is what could be
    called "The Ankara Pact" -- an alliance between the U.S., Turkey, and
    Israel that essentially circumvents and bottles up the Arab
    countries. Earlier in 1997, Turkish Prime Minister Yilmaz visited
    with Bill Clinton to ensure him that Turkey would attempt to improve
    its human rights record by slaughtering less Kurds, but also
    mentioned that if the US pushed too hard on that subject or if the US
    Congress adopted an Armenian Genocide Resolution, Turkey might award
    a billion dollar contract for attack helicopters to a Europe or maybe
    even Russia.

    During this timeframe, and with approval from the USA, Turkey began
    to let contracts to Israel to upgrade its F-4, F-5 and F-16 aircraft.
    Pemra Hazbay, writing in the May 2004 issue of Peace Watch, reported
    that total Israeli arms sales to Turkey had exceeded $1 billion since
    2000. `In December 1996, Israel won a deal worth $630 million to
    upgrade Turkey's fleet of fifty-four F-4 Phantom fighter jets. In
    1998, Turkey awarded a $75 million contract to upgrade its fleet of
    48 F-5 fighter jets to Israel Aircraft Industries' Lahav division,
    beating out strong French competition. In 2002, Turkey ratified its
    largest military deal with Israel, a $700 million contract for the
    renovation of Turkish tanks.' But that pales in comparison to the $20
    billion in US arms exports and military aid dealt to Turkey over the
    last 24 years.

    Then in 1999 came a news item from a publication known as the Foreign
    Report based in the United Kingdom. That publication indicated that
    `Israeli intelligence, the Mossad, had expanded its base in Turkey
    and opened branches in Turkey for other two departments stationed in
    Tel Aviv. The Mossad carried out several spy operations and plans
    through its elements stationed in Istanbul and Ankara, where it
    received support and full cooperation from the Turkish government.
    According to the military cooperation agreement between the Mossad
    and its Turkish counterpart, the MIT, signed by former Turkish
    Foreign Minister Hekmet Citen during his visit to Israel in 1993, the
    Mossad had provided Turkey with plans aiding it in closing its border
    with Iraq, as well as being involved in the arrest the chairman of
    the PKK, Abdullah Ocalan.' That agreement also included help with
    counter-narcotics.

    Earlier in 1998, Israeli, Turkish and American military forces
    engaged in exercises in the Mediterranean, according to Reuters and
    Agencie France Press. ``[These exercises] signal to the radical
    states in the region that there is a strong alliance between Israel,
    Turkey and the United States which they must fear, Israeli political
    scientist Efraim Inbar said. Defense officials said during last
    month's visit to Ankara that they hoped the Jewish lobby in
    Washington would help Turkey offset Greek and Armenian influence on
    Capitol Hill. That's certainly part of this. They expect us to help
    them and we do help them a bit, said David Ivri, an adviser who
    directs biannual strategy talks with Turkey.' Reports also indicated
    that the CIA and Pentagon intelligence organizations had regularly
    chaired meetings of Turkish and Israeli officers in Tel Aviv for
    years.

    DEA & FBI

    Prior to the US invasion of Afghanistan, the DEA monitored the
    Afghanistan drug trade from its two offices in Pakistan: The
    Islamabad Country Office and the Peshawar Resident Office. In
    addition to Pakistan and Afghanistan, the DEA Islamabad Country
    Office also includes in its area of responsibility Uzbekistan,
    Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, the United Arab Emirates, and
    Oman. Asa Hutchinson, the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
    Administration, testified in October 2001 that DEA intelligence
    confirmed the presence of a linkage between Afghanistan's ruling
    Taliban and international terrorist Osama Bin Laden.

    He went on to say that although DEA had no direct evidence to confirm
    that Bin Laden is involved in the drug trade, the relationship
    between the Taliban and Bin Laden is believed to have flourished in
    large part due to the Taliban's substantial reliance on the opium
    trade as a source of organizational revenue. `While the activities of
    the two entities do not always follow the same trajectory, we know
    that drugs and terror frequently share the common ground of
    geography, money, and violence. In this respect, the very sanctuary
    enjoyed by Bin Laden is based on the existence of the Taliban's
    support for the drug trade. This connection defines the deadly,
    symbiotic relationship between the illicit drug trade and
    international terrorism.'

    Meanwhile, back at the FBI, the Office of International Operations
    oversees the Legal Attaché Program operating at 46 locations around
    the world. The operation maintains contact with Interpol, other US
    federal agencies such as the CIA and military agencies such as the
    Defense Intelligence Agency, and foreign police and security
    officers. Its job is to investigate or counter threats from foreign
    intelligence, terrorists and criminal enterprises that threaten the
    national or economic security of the USA. It coordinates its
    activities with all US and foreign intelligence operations. In 2000,
    it opened offices in Ankara, Turkey and Almaty, Kazhakstan. Since
    1996, it has had offices in Islamabad, Pakistan and Tele Aviv,
    Israel. In 1997 it opened one in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Combined,
    these offices monitor the entire Middle East, Persian Gulf and
    Central Asian threat areas developing thousands of `investigative
    leads'.

    Ms Edmonds has given the American people leads that show that they
    are easily sacrificed for a perceived greater good.

    John Stanton is a Virginia-based writer specializing in national
    security and political matters. He is author of the forthcoming book,
    America 2004: A Power, But Not Super. He can be reached at:
    [email protected].
Working...
X