False Flags To Be Used To Justify A Massive Ground Invasion Of Syria?
By Michael Snyder - End Of The American Dream Blog February 22, 2016 Share this article:
Throughout history, governments have staged attacks on their own
people in order to place the blame on their enemies. These kinds of
attacks are known as "false flags", and they are often used to justify
military action.
As I will explain below, it appears that we may have just
seen a "false flag" attack in Turkey. The Turks needed justification
for bombarding the Kurds in northern Syria, and right on cue there was a
"terror attack" in Ankara. During the weeks to come, will we see more
"false flag" attacks that will be used to justify a full-blown ground
invasion of Syria?
If you are not familiar with this concept, the following is how Wikipedia defines a "false flag"...
The
contemporary term false flag describes covert operations that are
designed to deceive in such a way that the operations appear as though
they are being carried out by entities, groups, or nations other than
those who actually planned and executed them.
The
bomb attacks that killed 28 people in Ankara last week may have been an
example of just such an attack. It is entirely possible that the PKK
or the Syrian Kurds could have been responsible for the bombing.
However, to me it seems at least as likely that the Turkish government
set up this attack in order to blame the Kurds.
Turkey
had already been mercilessly shelling the Kurds in northern Syria
anyway, and after the bombing in Ankara there is now a lot more support
inside Turkey for further military action against the Kurds. The
following comes from Reuters&
Turkish Prime
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu blamed a Syrian Kurdish militia fighter
working with Kurdish militants inside Turkey for a suicide car bombing
that killed 28 people in the capital Ankara, and he vowed retaliation in
both Syria and Iraq.
A car laden with
explosives detonated next to military buses as they waited at traffic
lights near Turkey s armed forces headquarters, parliament and
government buildings in the administrative heart of Ankara late on
Wednesday.
Davutoglu said the attack was clear
evidence that the YPG, a Syrian Kurdish militia that has been supported
by the United States in the fight against Islamic State in northern
Syria, was a terrorist organization and that Turkey, a NATO member,
expected cooperation from its allies in combating the group.
Prior
to that attack, it would have been difficult for Turkey to justify
sending troops into northern Syria to fight the Kurds. After all, the
Syrian Kurds had not fired a single shot at Turkish forces even though
Turkey relentlessly shelled Kurdish positions all last week.
But
now the president of Turkey says that his nation has all the
justification that it needs to do whatever it wants "to the
terrorists"...
Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said his country has the right to launch operations in Syria
against "terrorist organizations," in remarks that could be viewed as a
shot across the bow at Russian intervention.
"To
fight the threats which it faces, Turkey has the right to launch any
kind of operation, in Syria and wherever else the terrorist
organizations are located," Erdogan said in a speech on Saturday,
according to a Dogan news agency report cited by AFP.
Isn t that convenient?
Everyone
knew that Turkey wanted to do something to stop the advance of the
Kurds in northern Syria, and now this bombing in Ankara gives them the
perfect excuse to take dramatic military action.
But
a bombing blamed on the Kurds is not going to give Turkey, Saudi Arabia
and their allies justification to launch a full-blown ground invasion
of the entire country. In order for that to happen, more false flags
will probably be necessary especially if they want the United States
to be involved.
Right now, the American people
have very little interest in a way in Syria. But if there was some sort
of major terror attack in this country that could be blamed on ISIS,
that would do much to shift public opinion.
Of course since the Russians, the Iranians and Hezbollah
are all already inside Syria helping the Assad regime fight the radical
Sunni militants that are being backed by Saudi Arabia and Turkey, a
full-blown ground invasion could very easily be the spark that begins
World War 3. This would be true even if the United States did not
participate in the ground invasion. The following comes from USA
Today...
A war between Russia and Turkey would
put the United States, and Europe, in an uncomfortable position. Since
Turkey remains a NATO ally (though a shakier one than in the past), war
between Turkey and Russia could easily suck us in. And if Turkey and
Russia went to war while NATO stayed on the sidelines, the NATO alliance
would be weakened. (Yes, the NATO treaty technically doesn t obligate
us to support Turkey in a war that Turkey starts, but a reliance on such
niceties wouldn't make NATO look stronger).
There
had been hope that a cease-fire would bring some stability to the
situation in Syria, but a series of suicide bombings by ISIS on Sunday
has really put a damper on that...
The Islamic
State asserted responsibility for bombings on Sunday that killed dozens
of people in two Syrian government strongholds, casting a shadow over
intensified diplomatic efforts to broker a cease-fire to the civil war.
At
least three explosions struck a suburb south of the capital, Damascus,
leaving 50 people dead near the Sayyida Zeinab shrine that is revered by
Shiite Muslims, according to Syrian state television. The area is a
high-profile target for extremist Sunni groups such as the Islamic
State, which rejects Shiites as apostates.
Bombings
earlier in the day also targeted the city of Homs, killing at least 34
people, according to the area s governor, Talal al-Barazi.
If
the cease-fire had been successful, that would have lessened the
urgency that Saudi Arabia and Turkey feel to get directly involved in
the conflict.
But now that the cease-fire looks
like it is not going to hold, Saudi Arabia and Turkey are going to feel
more pressure to move in and rescue the radical Sunni militants that
they have been backing for the last five years.
In
order to do that, they are probably going to need some sort of "big
event" which will give them justification in the eyes of the world to
conduct a massive ground invasion of Syria.
So will that "big event" be some sort of a false flag attack?
We will just have to wait and see what happens...
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