Αυτά που αποκαλύπτουμε εδώ και χρόνια, τώρα σε άρθρο από τον Robert Kaplan
Από το 1870, η Γερμανία θεωρεί την Οθωμανική αυτοκρατορία ως τον ισχυρότερο σύμμαχο της! Οι ίδιοι οι Τούρκοι ομολογούν την σύνδεση των σφαγών σε Βοσνία, Κόσοβο εως και την ισλαμιστική γενοκτονία γνωστή ως “αραβική άνοιξη”!…
Πως η Γερμανία συνεχίζει σήμερα αυτό που επεδίωξε και στους δύο παγκόσμιους πολέμους! Ο “αφανής” της ρόλος και η “βρώμικη δουλειά” από αχυρανθρωπους στην Αμερική. Η Γερμανία τωρα τεχνηέντως κρύβει τον ηγετικό της ρόλο και βάζει μπροστά τις ΗΠΑ.
Η αποκάλυψη της “μυστικής στήριξης” στους ισλαμοφασίστες της Συρίας.
Απο την διάλυση της Γιουγκοσλαβίας, την σφαγή των Σέρβων σε Βοσνία και Κοσσυφοπέδιο, μέχρι την “Αραβική άνοιξη”.
ΜΚΟ, “ανθρωπιστικές οργανώσεις”, λομπίστες οργανώνουν ένα εφιαλτικό μέλλον με πρόσχημα τον ανθρωπισμό. Το χιτλερικό όραμα φαίνεται να υλοποιείται τον 21ο αιώνα με την βοήθεια της Αμερικής των λομπιστων και της συμμορίας Κλίντον.
Each of these United States military interventions occurred in an area that had been part of the Ottoman Empire, and where a secular regime was replaced by an Islamist one. So far, the German policy of keeping hidden its leadership role in its attempt to reconstitute the Ottoman Empire has succeeded.
Since the mid-1990s the United States has intervened militarily in several internal armed conflicts in Europe and the Middle East: bombing Serbs and Serbia in support of Izetbegovic’s Moslem Regime in Bosnia in 1995, bombing Serbs and Serbia in support of KLA Moslems of Kosovo in 1999, bombing Libya’s Gaddafi regime in support of rebels in 2010.
Other reasons for these interventions were also offered: to gain for the United States a strategic foothold in the Balkans, to defeat communism in Yugoslavia, to demonstrate to the world’s Moslems that the United States is not anti-Moslem, to redefine the role of NATO in the post-Cold War era, among others.
Each of these United States military interventions occurred in an area that had been part of the Ottoman Empire. In each, a secular regime was ultimately replaced by an Islamist one favoring sharia law and the creation of a world-wide Caliphate.
In the United States most discussions of the military conflicts of the 1990s in the Balkans and the “Arab Spring” of the 2010s do not mention that the areas involved had been part of the Ottoman Empire; these included Turkey, the Moslem-populated areas around the Mediterranean, Iraq, the coastal regions of the Arabian Peninsula and parts of the Balkans.
Turkish leaders do make the connection between the conflicts in the Bosnia, the “Arab Spring” and the Ottoman Empire. Harold Rhode, an American expert on Turkey, has reported:
President of Turkey Erdogan’s recent 2011 electoral victory speech puts his true intentions regarding Turkey’s foreign policy goals in perspective.
In saying that this victory is as important in all of these former Ottoman cities, Erdogan apparently sees himself as trying to reclaim Turkey’s full Ottoman past.
The occurrence that since 1990 each European and Middle Eastern country that experienced American military intervention in an internal military conflict or an “Arab Spring” has ended up with a government dominated by Islamists of the Moslem Brotherhood or al-Qaeda variety fits nicely with the idea that these events represent a return to Ottoman rule.
Just as the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s and the “Arab Spring” of the 2010s considered in historical perspective suggests that Turkey might be attempting to recreate its former empire, consideration of the Turkish Empire in historical perspective suggests the possible partnership of Germany with Turkey in the project given that, from its creation in 1870, Germany viewed Turkey with its empire as a most valuable client and ally.
Yet in the 50-odd articles collected in an exploration of the awareness on the part of Americans of a possible Turkish connection with the “Arab Spring,” I found not a single mention of “Germany.” Only from a link in one of those articles – to an article on the International Criminal Court (ICC) which, with its indictment of Muammar Gaddafi and issue of a warrant for his arrest, provided the “legal” basis legitimizing NATO’s bombing of Libya — which gave the rebels their victory and ended the Gaddafi regime – did I find mention of Germany.
Later, I did come across an explicit reference to Germany’s role in it — specifically in the war against the Assad regime in Syria — in John Rosenthal’s article “German Intelligence: al-Qaeda all over Syria” in the online Asia Times — which reports that the German government supports the rebels and their political arm, the Syrian National Council (SNC), against Assad; that the German government classified made secret “by reason of national interest” the contents of several BND (German foreign intelligence) reports that the May 25, 2012 massacre of civilians in the Syrian town of Houla, for which Assad has been blamed, was in fact perpetrated by rebel forces; and that “the German foreign office is working with representatives of the Syrian opposition to develop ‘concrete plans’ for a ‘political transition’ in Syria after the fall of Assad.” So far the German policy of keeping hidden its leadership role in the attempt to reconstitute the Ottoman Empire seems to have succeeded.
Each U. S. military action in Europe and the Middle East since 1990, however, with the exception of Iraq, has followed an overt pattern: First there is an armed conflict within the country where the intervention will take place. American news media heavily report this conflict.
Why the government of the United States would actively promote German aims — the destruction of Yugoslavia (both World Wars I and II saw Germany invade Serbia) and the re-creation of the Ottoman Empire — is a question that needs to be answered.
Robert E. Kaplan is an historian, doctorate from Cornell University, specializing in modern Europe.