Özgür Mumcu
30 Mayıs 2015 Cumartesi
Cumhuriyet
TIR’lardaki cephane nereden geldi?
MİT TIR’larındaki silahlar nereye gidiyordu? Önce TIR’larla Türkmenlere insani yardım gönderildiği iddia edildi. Suriye Türkmen Meclisi başkan yardımcısı bunu yalanladı. Daha sonra Ahmet Şık’ın eriştiği bir dava dosyasında, aralarında konuşan Bayır Bucak Tugay Komutanı ile bazı Türkmen dernek yetkililerinin, TIR’ların kendilerine gelmediğini söylediği ortaya çıktı. Dosyadaki Türkmenler, TIR’ların Ansar el İslam örgütüne gittiğini söylüyordu.
Dün, Cumhuriyet’te yayımlanan haberde Adana’da durdurulan TIR’ların içinde bolca askeri malzeme olduğu görüntüleriyle ortaya kondu.Habere göre, bazı sandıkların üzerinde Tripoli yani Trablus yazıyor ve cephaneler Rus malı.
O vakit, MİT TIR’larındaki silahların nereye gittiği kadar nereden geldikleri sorusu da önem kazanıyor.Sandıkların üzerinde Tripoli yazdığına ve malzemeler Rus malı olduğuna göre, akla haliyle Libya geliyor. Kaddafi rejimi çökeli beri Libya’nın cihatçılar için bir cephane ve insan kaynağı olduğu biliniyor.
2012 Eylülü’nde The Times’da, bir Libya gemisinin 400 ton ağırlığında, içinde omuzdan atılan Rus SA-7 füzelerinin de bulunduğu cephaneyi bir Türk limanına getirdiğini iddia eden bir haber yayımlanmıştı.
Kasım 2011’de The Telegraph’ta çıkan bir başka haber ise Abdülhakim Belhadj’ın İstanbul ve Suriye sınırında Özgür Suriye Ordusu yetkilileriyle cephane tedarik etmek üzere görüştüğü ileri sürülmüştü.
Abdülhakim Belhadj, eski bir cihatçı. Taliban’a katılmış, El Kaide’yle bağlantılı olduğu iddiaları var. CIA tarafından Malezya’da yakalanmış. Libya’ya iade edilmiş. Serbest bırakıldıktan sonra “Arap Baharı”nda savaşmış. O geminin geldiği ve Türkiye’de temaslarda bulunduğu sırada Trablus Askeri Konseyi’nin başkanı.
2012’de Bussinesinsider sitesinde yer alan bir analizde Abdülhakim Belhadj ile temas kurmak üzere ABD büyükelçisi Chris Stevens’ın görevlendirildiği yazıyordu.
Chris Stevens daha sonra 2012’nin Eylül ayında Bingazi’de öldürüldü.Foxnews’a konuşan bir kaynak, Stevens’ın Bingazi’ye gitme sebebinin cephanenin yanlış ellere geçmesinin engellenmesi olduğunu açıkladı.Bussinesinsider’da yer alan bir haber ise Stevens’ın son görüşmesinin bir Türk diplomatla olduğunu aktarıyor.
Yani, Stevens’ın Abdülhakim Belhadj’la ilişkisi var. Belhadj, iddialara göre İskenderun Limanı’na 400 ton cephane gönderdi. Bu cephanenin istenmeyen muhaliflerin eline geçmemesine çalışan Stevens, Bingazi’de bazı temaslarda bulundu. Geminin limana varmasından beş gün sonra ise uğradığı saldırıda öldürüldü.
İddialar böyle.
O gemi tek miydi? Libya’dan Suriye’ye Türkiye üzerinden bir cephane transferi mi var? Bu bir ABD-Türkiye operasyonu muydu? Böyle bir operasyon varsa sonradan kontrolden mi çıktı?
Dünkü Cumhuriyet’te çıkan haberde cephane sandıklarının üzerindeki “Trablus” damgasına yakından bakmakta fayda var.
DIŞ BASINDA KONUYA İLİŞKİN 3 HABER
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Libyan Weapons, Turkey, Syria, and the Strange Death of Chris Stevens
Was the death of US Ambassador Chris Stevens in Benghazi related to the running of Libyan weapons stockpiles through Turkey to Syrian freedom fighters? Circumstantial evidence makes it a strong possibility. Here’s what I’ve found so far.
One thing that seems to not be in dispute is that weapons supplied through Libya have turned up in rebel hands in Mali and Algeria. However, this article claims that the US is NOT one of such suppliers. France, reputedly one of the suppliers, sees that it may have been a mistake to facilitate such movements, as Libyan Touareg fighters have joined rebel forces in the other two countries. Only 3 of more than 30 rebels who recently attacked an Algerian natural gas facility were actually Algerians. Unguarded weapons caches apparently exist all over Libya.
This article alleges that while the official US position is not to supply weapons to Syria, that may actually BE related to the reason that Ambassador Chris Stevens was killed there:
In November of 2011, Libya, fresh off winning liberation for its own country, decided that it wanted to help Syria do the same thing. With this in mind, a man named Abdulhakim Belhadj traveled to Syria to meet with rebel leaders. At about the same time, increasing amounts of footage appeared on Youtube encouraging Libyan freedom fighters to join their compatriots in Syria
In March of that year, Chris Stevens had been appointed by the Obama administration to be the liaison with the new Libyan government. At the time, “Clinton said the United States would do more than just provide humanitarian aid, but she did not get into specifics.” It appears that Stevens had been in contact with Belhadj.
Stevens had apparently not been in Libya in nearly a year when he returned just before the 9/11/12 attack that took his life, and that it’s hard to imagine otherwise why only a 5-person skeleton crew was on hand.
This Reuters article points out that the CIA Post in Benghazi was “a base for, among other things, collecting information on the proliferation of weaponry looted from Libyan government arsenals, including surface-to-air missiles.” The last known business of Chris Stevens was a visit with Turkish Consul General Ali Sait Akin, who left the American embassy compound only about one hour before the attack that took Stevens’s life.
Fox news at that time reported that a large Libyan ship, reportedly carrying weapons, docked at a Turkish port on September 6, 2012, just five days before Ambassador Stevens was killed.
Also, “a source told Fox News that Stevens was in Benghazi to negotiate a weapons transfer, an effort to get SA-7 missiles out of the hands of Libya-based extremists.” Fox goes on to say that “A congressional source also cautioned against drawing premature conclusions about the consulate attack and the movement of weapons from Libya to Syria via Turkey — noting they may in fact be two separate and distinct events. But the source acknowledged the timing and the meeting between the Turkish diplomat and Stevens was “unusual.”
In this video of Hillary Clinton’s recent testimony before the Senate, Clinton claims that “it is, from my perspective, less important today, looking backwards, as to why these militants decided to do it than to find them and bring them to justice, and then maybe we’ll figure out what was going on in the meantime.” *1*
Libya Redux: France and al-Qaeda Assist Free Syria Army in Turkey
Kurt Nimmo
PrisonPlanet.com
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
News of France’s effort to arm and train anti-Assad rebels in Turkey is all over the alternative and foreign media, but suspiciously absent in the establishment media
Milliyet, a major Turkish newspaper, reported last week that France has sent its military training forces to Turkey and Lebanon to train the so-called Free Syrian Army (FSA). The FSA is supported by the British intelligence asset the Muslim Brotherhood and the al-Qaeda infested National Transitional Council in Libya. *2*
CIA Asset Joins Islamic State in Libya – Abdelhakim Belhadj Worked with U.S. and NATO to Overthrow Gaddafi
Abdelhakim Belhadj has reportedly joined forces with the Islamic State, according to the journalist Sara Carter. Belhadj is a former al-Qaeda operative who was a key player in the overthrow of Moammar Gaddafi. He worked directly with the U.S. and NATO.
Kyle Shideler writes for The Washington Times:
If Belhadj has gone over to Islamic State, it will represent a major boost to Islamic State’s efforts to co-opt and bring in Libya’s existing jihadist forces under their banner, which now reportedly includes as many as 3,000 fighters. Belhadj’s forces play a significant role in the Islamist “Libyan Dawn” coalition (which includes the Muslim Brotherhood and al Qaeda’s Ansar al-Sharia), which currently holds Tripoli, and which claims to be the rightful government in opposition to the U.N. recognized government of Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni. *3*
DİPÇELER ;
*1* http://frankstaheli.blogspot.com.tr/2013/01/libyan-weapons-turkey-syria-and-strange.html
*1* http://www.prisonplanet.com/libya-redux-france-and-al-qaeda-assist-free-syria-army-in-turkey.html