That's the question that has been
avoided so far in the latest terrorist attack on a peaceful
demonstration in Turkey. But anyone familiar with modern Turkish
history would be dishonest to evade a serious consideration of it.
What NPR, for example, dismisses as
”conspiracy theory” on the part of presumably paranoid Turks, is
in fact reasonable theorizing about the crime. [1]
The Turkish regime of autocrat Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will only admit to 97 deaths, whereas the true number is apparently 128 or more, according to the rally organizers. Another 250 people or so were wounded in the suicide bombings. The bombings occurred at the start of a peace march including Kurds.
Some bodies were blasted beyond recognition.
The vicious attack was cunningly planned. After the first bomb went off, people ran into the second explosion timed for seconds later, and apparently placed with murderous precalculation.
Police then immediately
attacked the survivors with tear gas. And the
Turkish media was banned from
reporting the event.
The editor of the main English-language
Turkish journal was arrested the same day for "insulting"
Erdogan in a tweet. One man interviewed said his friend died when
police prevented him from taking his friend to a hospital. The police
blocked ambulances from reaching the scene for 45 minutes. [2]
These facts, together with the
political context, throw the gravest suspicion on the Erdogan regime.
Many think the government allowed the
attacks to occur, or at a minimum were negligent. Given the violent
assault on the survivors, and the repression imposed simultaneously,
at the very least there seems to be government foreknowledge.
Turkish governments have a long history
of domestic terrorism and alliances with gangsters. For a time a
major fascist organization, the Grey Wolves, was used to murder large
numbers of progressives and suppress their organizing, with the
complicity of the secret police and military. (As always with
right-wing terror states, the U.S. looked kindly on these events, and
generously supplied the Turkish military with arms and ordnance. The
CIA played its usual malign role.)
So far Erdoğan
and his minions have been blaming both the Kurds and
ISIS. (This obvious contradiction doesn't seem to faze them. It can't
be both, of course, plus the Kurds and ISIS are in a war to the death
with each other in Syria and Iraq, which would rule out a cooperative
terrorist plot.)
The bombings occurred three weeks
before new parliamentary elections Erdoğan
imposed because he's a sore “loser.” He expected to win a
super-majority in the parliamemtary elections that were held in June,
but the opposition and heavily-Kurdish People's Democratic Party
(HDP) won 13%, depriving him of a Hitler-Reichstag style legislature
that would rubber-stamp new dictatorial powers he seeks by mutilating
the Turkish constitution. The HDP organized the peace march that was
just bombed before it could even get underway.
This terrorism on Turkish soil is
occurring in the context of Erdoğan
renewing war against the armed Kurdish Workers' Party, long the bête
noire of the Turkish state which caused the guerrilla movement by
its decades of oppression of Kurds, including even outlawing the
Kurdish language. The PKK is deemed a “terrorist” organization by
Turkey's allies, the U.S. and the ducks that reliably line up behind
the U.S. on international political matters, the Europeans. (The U.S.
has dominated Europe since World War II, and that has even increased
since the Soviet Union suddenly shattered into pieces.) Erdoğan
used the cover of claiming to attack ISIS in Syria to launch aerial
bombing attacks against Kurdish camps there. In response, a Kurdish
peace rally on the Syria border was organized, which also was
terror-bombed. Somebody's been busy! Cui bono? Who
benefits from suppressing rallies against Erdoğan's
renewed warfare against the Kurdish PKK? Who stands to gain if
peacniks are terrorized from the streets? Why, Erdoğan
does!
This type of terror fits the classic
pattern of the so-called “strategy of tension,” whereby hidden
and malign political forces seek to create a crisis atmosphere in
society. We saw it in Europe under the Gladio program, for example.
The aim there and in some other cases is for fascist forces within
the state to grab more power. It occurred in the U.S. on September
11, 2001. The fact that the Erdoğan
regime has barred journalists from even reporting on the terror
attack, much less trying to investigate, can only constitute damning
evidence against him and his regime as plausible if not probable
culprits in this latest atrocity against those who want peace.
1] NPR being the U.S. government
domestic radio propaganda network. It goes without saying that the
U.S. corporate media is completely disinterested in investigating and
exposing the possible role of the Turkish government. In fact they
won't even report the police attacks on the survivors, and very
little about media repression in Turkey. This should be no surprise.
The U.S. media is always only interested in repression in
enemy states, such as Russia and Iran.
2] “Shock & Panic in Turkey: Deadliest Terrorist Attack in Country’s History Leaves as Many as 128 Dead,” Democracy Now!, October 12, 2015.
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