Judge’s order to seize COSMIC documents sends Turkey’s `Deep State’
into crisis
08.01.2010 14:50 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey’s `Deep State’ of military, intelligence, and
law enforcement officers, linked to the CIA and Israel’s Mossad
through the Ergenekon network of spies and `false flag’ operatives,
has been shaken over the decision of Ankara Judge Kadir Kayan to order
NATO COSMIC Top Secret rooms at the Turkish Special Forces Command’s
Tactical Mobilization Group in Ankara to be searched by civilian
prosecutors and police, Wayne Madsen Report (WMC) says.
According to WMC, `COSMIC’ is a NATO classification and the
investigation of the shadowy Ergenekon network has turned up evidence
that COSMIC documents may contain proof that Turkey’s Special
Operations forces were planning to assassinate top Turkish political
leaders, including Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc.
Some of the seized NATO COSMIC Top Secret documents involve the
operations of Gendarmarie Intelligence and Counter-Terrorism
Organization (JITEM), which was composed of Turkish special operations
forces and police who carried out assassinations of academics, Kurdish
politicians, and even fellow military personnel in terrorist attacks
that were blamed on the Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK), deemed a
`terrorist’ organization by Turkey and the United States.
The documents seized by prosecutors and police may also show that the
CIA’s `Gladio’ networks, so-called `stay behind networks’ established
in NATO and neutral countries during the Cold War to coordinate
sabotage in the event of a Soviet invasion and occupation, may have
continued in Turkey and serves as the core component of Ergenekon.
WMR has also learned that some of the COSMIC Top Secret documents
seized in Turkey point to an American `Deep State’ Pentagon
counterpart to the Turkish Ergenekon network. Former FBI Turkish
translator Sibel Edmonds spoke of this network being uncovered by
wiretaps of U.S. political leaders and Turkish lobbyists in the United
States.
Ergenekon is clandestine, Kemalist ultra-nationalist organization in
Turkey with ties to members of the country’s military and security
forces. The group is accused of terrorism in Turkey. It is named after
Ergenekon, a mythical place located in the inaccessible valleys of the
Altay Mountains. Some experts believe there are links between
Ergenekon and numerous militant organizations, such as the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK), the extreme-left Revolutionary People’s
Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C), the Islamist organization Hizbullah,
the ultranationalist Turkish Revenge Brigades (TÄ°T), the Turkish
Workers’ and Peasants’ Liberation Army (TÄ°KKO), the Marxist-Leninist
Communist Party(MLKP) and the Hizb ut-Tahrir (Party of Liberation), an
extreme group wishing to reinstate the Islamic Caliphate. Alleged
members have been indicted on charges of plotting to foment unrest by
assassinating intellectuals, politicians, judges, military staff, and
religious leaders, with the ultimate goal of toppling the pro-Western
incumbent government. They are also believed to have plotted the
assassination of Hrant Dink, Editor-in-Chief of Agos Turkish Armenian
newspaper.