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  • Ergenekon: Berlin-Based Think Tank Releases Operation Cage Plan In E

    ERGENEKON: BERLIN-BASED THINK TANK RELEASES OPERATION CAGE PLAN IN ENGLISH TRANSLATION
    by Lou Ann Matossian

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009- 12-16-ergenekon-berlin-based-think-tank-releases-o peration-cage-plan-in-english-translation
    Wednesda y December 16, 2009

    In Turkey: Dink murder trial, apology petition, and curriculum changes

    Minneapolis - Like Watergate and The Gulag Archipelago, the Ergenekon
    investigation challenges "a culture of impunity for crimes committed
    by the state," says the Berlin-based European Stability Initiative
    (ESI) in a news analysis. "Recent weeks have seen the Turkish veil
    of secrecy drawn aside in a spectacular manner."

    Ergenekon is the name of an alleged ultranationalist conspirators
    aiming to overthrow Turkey's Islamist-leaning government.

    Until recently, only Turkish-speakers were able to read the Operation
    Cage Action Plan in horrifying detail. Now, however, an English
    translation available at esiweb.org confirms that the four-stage
    operation was intended to distract the public from the Ergenekon
    investigation by terrorizing "non-Muslims" in Turkey.

    The stated aim of Operation Cage was "to increase both local and
    foreign pressure on the AKP Government, to keep the public pre-occupied
    and to change the agenda, particularly in the Ergenekon case, by
    questioning the safety of non-Muslims' life and property."

    ESI notes that the largest community among the 125,000 "non-Muslims"
    is the Armenian community of some 60,000 people.

    In the preparatory stage, members of the "non-Muslim" population
    would be identified through subscription lists, organizational
    membership rosters, and the names of students, parents, and employees
    of "non-Muslim" schools. Also to be determined were the dates and
    locations of religious festivals and holidays where the targeted
    community would be likely to gather. "Non-Muslim" cemeteries "which
    would be suitable for operations" would be located.

    In the "fear creation stage," Agos subscriber lists would be posted
    on the Internet, particularly at hostile sites, and left out in the
    open at the Princes Islands, an Armenian-inhabited area of Istanbul.

    Subscribers and residents would be threatened in phone calls, letters,
    and graffiti slogans.

    Next, "black propaganda" would mobilize public opinion against the
    "insensitive attitude" of the AK Party. The subscriber lists would
    be planted in press reports, ensuring further publicity. Indignant
    newspaper columns would be commissioned about the issue. False-flag Web
    sites would be set up, purportedly to defend Agos and minority rights.

    In the final "operation stage," bombings would target Agos and the
    Princes Islands while the police were being distracted with bomb
    scares. Leading defenders of minority rights would be assassinated.

    "Non-Muslim" celebrities would be kidnapped. "Sensational operations"
    would attack "non-Muslim" cemeteries. "In regions with a dense
    non-Muslim population, vehicles, houses and workplaces will be set
    on fire at close intervals," the plan states. Similar actions would
    target other provinces with a high population of "non-Muslims,"
    such as Istanbul and Izmir.

    "Responsibility for sabotage, kidnapping and assassination operations
    will be claimed by reactionary organizations," according to the plan.

    Senior Naval Forces Admiral Feyyaz Ogutcu, who organized secret meeting
    places for the generals who were plotting the Ergenekon coup d'etat,
    is listed as the "president" of Operation Cage. Also named in the
    plan are 40 naval officers organized into Marmara, Aegean, Black Sea,
    and Special Operations commands.

    The action plan concludes with a list of weapons, munitions, and
    materials, such as sniper rifles, handguns, machine guns, bombs, and
    related equipment. Colonel Ercan Kirectepe, whose signature appears
    on the Cage plan, was arrested in April during an investigation into
    a hidden arms cache in Istanbul's Poyrazkoy district.

    ESI reports that an electronic copy of the Cage Operation Action
    Plan was seized in the April raid and a signed copy in June during
    the arrests of Turkish military officers suspected of involvement in
    Ergenekon. The Turkish General Staff at first dismissed the documents
    as fakes, but in October, a whistleblower within the General Staff
    sent the original signed copy to a Turkish prosecutor, along with
    further details on the individuals involved. Taraf published the plan
    on Nov. 19.
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