Friday, August 30, 2013

Mr. Obama; Ask ally Erdogan about 2 kilos of Sarin found with Saudi Al- Nusra group in South Turkey!

Mr. Obama; Ask ally Erdogan about 2 kilos of Sarin found with Saudi Al- Nusra group in South Turkey!
 
US-Israeli False Flag Gas Attack Unravels says William Bowles
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article36028.htm

Some months ago I had read in Turkish media that 2 kg of Sarin gas was found with seven members of Al- Nusra group, supported by Saudi Arabia, in Mersin and Adana in south Turkey (I have visited both these cities many times both in 1970s and 1990s ). I have followed Turkish media since 1967 including during two tenures as diplomat and two years as a journalist (Turkish Daily News ,now Hurriyet Daily News, Zaman online line, Cumhuriyet had used many of my articles, two specimens below)
 
Turkish Daily News - Lebanon: A cedar revolution to counter ...
Turkish Daily News K. GAJENDRA SINGH. ... Analysis by K. Gajendra Singh K....
www.turkishdailynews.com.tr/article.php?enewsid=6984 - 26k - Cached - Similar pages
AB-Türkiye birlikteliği: Bölgenin istikrarı için bir gereklilik
 
The Turkish government tried to kill the sarin story and in fact punished the intelligence agent who made the news public in Rehanly , which is close to the Syrian border ( AlMonitor was Inside FSA Headquarters in Rehanly, Turkey, where US & NATO direct the war against Syria )
 
I've been able to locate the relevant news item from Turkish newspapers of last May, reproduced  below.
 
Also a subsequent news item about Russia waiting for Turkey's explanation on sarin gas link in bomb attack .
 
From this it is quite clear and also it is well known that Al-Nusra and all other sundry Jihadist and criminal elements  who are now fighting inside Syria against the Assad  government have a free run in south and south-east Turkey bordering Syria.
 
Mr Obama ;the United Nations should ask Turkish government led by AKP leader Erdogan what happened to those 2 kg of sarin gas and perhaps more of it and other illegal weapons of mass destruction .United Nations and the international community excluding the usual suspects US UK France and their puppets in the Gulf should ask for international investigation into sari gas floating around Turkey which should be conducted by members of non-aligned movement and other impartial bodies.
 
Amb (Retd) KGajendra Singh 30 August, 2013, Mayur Vihar, Delhi-91
 
Report: Police foil al-Nusra bomb attack planned for Adana
 
30 May 2013 /TODAY'S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL
 
Seven members of Syria's militant al-Nusra group were detained on Wednesday after police found sarin gas, which was reportedly going to be used in a bomb attack, during a search of the suspects' homes, Turkish media have reported.
 
Newspapers claimed on Thursday that two kilograms of sarin gas, which is usually used for making bombs and was banned by the UN in 1991, had been found in the homes of suspects detained in the southern provinces of Adana and Mersin. Twelve suspects were caught by the police on Monday. The reports claimed that the al-Nusra members had been planning a bomb attack for Thursday in Adana but that the attack was averted when the police caught the suspects. Along with the sarin gas, the police seized a number of handguns, grenades, bullets and documents during their search. Five of the suspects were released later on Thursday.
 
In another incident in Adana, the police received intelligence that a bomb-laden vehicle had entered Adana, the bombs being of the same type used in a recent attack in Hatay's Reyhanlı town, the Taraf daily reported on Thursday.
 
Security measures in Adana have been tightened in line with intelligence gathered. The Hatay National Provincial Police Department said that police officers are guarding the roads in and out of the province and are keeping an eye out in the province for the vehicle mentioned in the intelligence.
On May 11, one car bomb exploded outside the town hall while another went off outside a post office in Reyhanlı, a main hub for Syrian refugees and opposition activity in Hatay. Fifty-two people were killed and as many as 100 were injured in the bombings. Turkey blamed the Syrian regime for the attacks but Damascus has denied any role in the bombings.
 
Twelve suspects were arrested in connection with the car bombings. In the aftermath of the attack, claims were raised that the police force and the National Intelligence Organization (MİT) did not fulfill their responsibilities to prevent the bombings from taking place.

 

Russia waiting for Turkey's explanation on sarin gas link in bomb attack

31 May 2013 /TODAY'S ZAMAN, ANKARA
 
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stated on Friday that his country is expecting an official explanation from Ankara over Syrian militant al-Nusra's possession of sarin gas.
 
Seven members of the al-Nusra group were detained on Wednesday after Turkish police found sarin gas, which was reportedly going to be used in a bomb attack, during a search of the suspects' homes, Turkish media have reported.
 
"We look forward to receiving full information from our Turkish colleagues over the matter. The situation is very serious. It seems like the ones who speak about chemical weapons continue to play interesting games. All the details about the matter need to be investigated," said Lavrov while speaking at a press conference in Moscow.
 
Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich has also stated that they are following the matter closely, adding that Russia would never accept the use of chemical weapons in Syria.
"The Syrian government had promised several times that chemical weapons would never be used in internal conflicts. Russia has taken all the necessary guarantees from the Syrian government," said Lukashevich.
 
Newspapers claimed on Thursday that two kilograms of sarin gas, which is usually used for making bombs and was banned by the UN in 1991, had been found in the homes of suspects detained in the southern provinces of Adana and Mersin
 
Twelve suspects were caught by the police on Monday. The reports claimed that the al-Nusra members had been planning a bomb attack in Adana on Thursday but the attack was averted when the police caught the suspects. Along with the sarin gas, the police seized a number of handguns, grenades, bullets and documents during their search. Five of the suspects were released later on Thursday.
 
In another incident in Adana, the police received intelligence that a bomb-laden vehicle had entered Adana, the bombs being the same type used in a recent attack in Hatay's Reyhanlı town, the Taraf daily reported on Thursday.
 

Al-Nusra's Chemical Weapons in Turkey

 
 
Turkish security forces found a 2kg cylinder with sarin gas after searching the homes of Syrian militants from the Al-Qaeda linked Al-Nusra Front who were previously detained, Turkish media reports. The gas was reportedly going to be used in a bomb.
The sarin gas was found in the homes of suspected Syrian Islamists detained in the southern provinces of Adana and Mersia following a search by Turkish police on Wednesday, reports say. The gas was allegedly going to be used to carry out an attack in the southern Turkish city of Adana.
On Monday, Turkish special anti-terror forces arrested 12 suspected members of the Al-Nusra Front, the Al-Qaeda affiliated group which has been dubbed "the most aggressive and successful arm" of the Syrian rebels. The group was designated a terrorist organization by the United States in December.
 
Police also reportedly found a cache of weapons, documents and digital data which will be reviewed by police.
 
Following the searches, five of those detained were released following medical examinations at the Forensic Medicine Institution Adana. Seven suspects remain in custody. Turkish authorities are yet to comment on the arrests.
 
Russia reacted strongly to the incident, calling for a thorough investigation into the detention of Syrian militants in possession of sarin gas. "We are extremely concerned with media reports. Russia believes that the use of any chemical weapons is absolutely inadmissible," Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said on Thursday.
 
 
Rebel fighters rely on the country for support and weapons, but it may no longer be a secure option.
… It has been almost two weeks since the bombings in Reyhanli, Turkey that killed more than 50 people. Clean-up efforts are underway, but the incident added to the increasing tensions in the country, which opposition soldiers hiding out in Turkey say could change the dynamic of their operations.
Turkey may no longer be a secure option for the opposition because the war in Syria seems to have seeped through the border. Rebels escape imminent violence by fleeing, but they do not fully escape the watchful eye of the Syrian regime. An extension of the Syrian war is bubbling up in Turkey.
Over the past two years, the opposition has used Turkey to gather resources to aid its fight inside Syria. But the country no longer acts solely as a pipeline for money, aid, and weapons. It has become a home base for rebel soldiers to coordinate and heal before heading back to fight. It provides space for a complicated web of fractious groups that support various opposition forces in Syria.
It is unclear how many battalions in Syria have groups operating in Turkey. And there is no way of knowing who is affiliated with which opposition group when they cross the border
… Turkish officials in Reyhanli said last week that the people who carried out the bombings were connected with the Syrian mukhabarat. According to news reports, suspects admitted that the initial attack was supposed to take place in Antakya, where the majority of opposition leaders and soldiers live.