22-07-2016, 08:46 AM
From The Duran:
Obviously Erdogan responded in the same way Hitler did after the failed attempt on his life at the "Wolf's Lair" in 1944 by officers connected to Col. Claus von Stauffenberg -- in a bloody and vengeful way.
PS: I've just also read the following from IntelNews.org:
Quote:Latest, News, Our Picks, Sections
Russia Warned Erdogan of Incoming Coup
SERGEY GLADYSH24 hours ago 4 463
Hours before the coup attempt in Turkey began, Russia provided President Erdogan with intelligence which saved his regime and quite possibly his life.
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According to Iranian Fars News Agency and Arab media outlets citing diplomatic sources in Ankara * Russia helped prevent a successful military coup d'état in Turkey by intercepting encrypted messages and warning President Erdogan of the incoming attack on his government just hours before the rebel operation got underway.
Intelligence about the planned coup was gathered by the Russian military units in the region. It is believed that officers at the Russian Hmeimim Air Base in northern Syria, which houses modern intercept systems, were able to capture and analyze encrypted radio messages, revealing the plans of the Turkish military to topple the government and capture or kill President Erdogan.
The heads up from Russia gave the Turkish leader just enough time to prepare and adequately respond, evacuating his hotel at the Marmaris resort right before several military helicopters arrived at the scene to capture or assassinate him.
This most recent and groundbreaking revelation, if true, explains why Erdogan phoned Putin on the following day. Certainly, Erdogan must now realize that his apology to Russia about the downing of Su-24 couldn't have come at a better time. Had he stalled with the apology, perhaps Russia would have just stepped back and watched him fail. Then again, maybe the apology and renewed dialogue with Putin was the very reason the coup was given the green light by its masterminds in the West.
Either way, Erdogan came out of the coup more resilient than ever. And he has only Russia to thank for that. The next few weeks and months will show us if Turkey's president actually learned his lesson, and whether it will lead to any significant policy shifts in the region.
Obviously Erdogan responded in the same way Hitler did after the failed attempt on his life at the "Wolf's Lair" in 1944 by officers connected to Col. Claus von Stauffenberg -- in a bloody and vengeful way.
PS: I've just also read the following from IntelNews.org:
Quote:Did Russian intelligence warn Turkish government of impending coup?
JULY 22, 2016 BY IAN ALLEN LEAVE A COMMENT
Russian and Turkish authorities will not confirm or deny reports that the Kremlin warned Turkey's intelligence services about an impending coup on July 15, several hours before tanks appeared on the streets of major Turkish cities. On Wednesday, several Arab and Iranian news outlets claimed that Russian intelligence officials told the government in Ankara that the Turkish military was preparing a coup. The reports cited anonymous Turkish diplomats who said that Turkish intelligence was urgently alerted by the Russians "hours before [the military coup] was initiated on Friday".According to the unconfirmed reports, the secret preparations for the coup first came to the attention of Russian military intelligence. Its radio interceptors captured and were subsequently able to read a series of encoded radio messages exchanged between Turkish commanders in the early hours of July 15. There is no information about the precise circumstances of the alleged interception, though media reports note the significant presence of Russian military intelligence in the northern Syrian province of Latakia, a few miles south of the Turkish border. The reports state that the intercepted messages contained "highly sensitive army exchanges" involving a plan to send army helicopters to the Turkish resort port of Marmaris, where the Turkish President Tayyip ErdoÄŸan was holidaying, in order to kill or capture him. Russian intelligence officials reportedly shared the information with senior members of Turkey's National Intelligence Organization (MÄ°T). The alleged exchange allegedly took place "several hours before the start of the coup" in Turkey.However, government officials in Ankara will not comment on the possibility that Russian intelligence services may have warned the MÄ°T about the coup. On Thursday, Russian government spokesman Dmitri Peskov was asked directly by journalists whether the Kremlin warned Turkish officials of an impending coup by the military. He responded saying "I have no information of that kind and I do not know which sources [the media reports] are citing in making these claims". Russia's TASS news agency interpreted Peskov's comment as a denial. However, the wording in his response shows that he simply denies having personal knowledge of the incident. He does not deny it happened.â–º Author: Ian Allen | Date: 22 July 2016 |
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14