26-07-2016, 10:02 PM
Turkey's Failed Coup: The Players, the History, and the Geopolitical Chessboard
Published on Jul 26, 2016
Eric Draitser of http://StopImperialism.org provides his analysis (July 24, 2016) of the failed coup in Turkey, and the implications both for Turkish society and on the international scene. Draitser explains the relaitonship between the CIA and Turkish military coups in the past, the connections between US-NATO intelligence and the Gulenist network, and the broader strategy for the region. He also places the latest developments in the context of a shifting political landscape where Turkey's loyalties to the West and NATO are increasingly in question. All this and more in this in depth conversation.
[video=youtube_share;KWKXBFT_9yA]http://youtu.be/KWKXBFT_9yA[/video]
Published on Jul 26, 2016
Eric Draitser of http://StopImperialism.org provides his analysis (July 24, 2016) of the failed coup in Turkey, and the implications both for Turkish society and on the international scene. Draitser explains the relaitonship between the CIA and Turkish military coups in the past, the connections between US-NATO intelligence and the Gulenist network, and the broader strategy for the region. He also places the latest developments in the context of a shifting political landscape where Turkey's loyalties to the West and NATO are increasingly in question. All this and more in this in depth conversation.
[video=youtube_share;KWKXBFT_9yA]http://youtu.be/KWKXBFT_9yA[/video]
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"
Joseph Fouche
Joseph Fouche