Jewish Organ Harvesters in Valley of the Wolves
Last year the most virulently anti-Jewish, anti-American film was made by our supposed ally Turkey. At first one might imagine this film is payback for the grim portrayal of Turkish prisons in Midnight Express (1978). Actually we need only go back to the start of the Iraq war.
In April 2003, the U.S. Army's 173rd Airborne Brigade caught a dozen Turkish soldiers, dressed in civilian clothes and trailing an aid convoy. U.S. forces suspected that the Turkish team was sent in to inflame local ethnic Turks, who already have tense relations with the city's Kurds and Arabs. The American troops then escorted the Turkish commandos back over the border.
A few months later on July 4, 2003, in Sulaymaniyah, northern Iraq, around a hundred soldiers from the same brigade raided and ransacked a Turkish special forces office, threw hoods over the heads of 11 Turkish special forces officers, and held them in custody for more than two days.
Read more here.
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In April 2003, the U.S. Army's 173rd Airborne Brigade caught a dozen Turkish soldiers, dressed in civilian clothes and trailing an aid convoy. U.S. forces suspected that the Turkish team was sent in to inflame local ethnic Turks, who already have tense relations with the city's Kurds and Arabs. The American troops then escorted the Turkish commandos back over the border.
A few months later on July 4, 2003, in Sulaymaniyah, northern Iraq, around a hundred soldiers from the same brigade raided and ransacked a Turkish special forces office, threw hoods over the heads of 11 Turkish special forces officers, and held them in custody for more than two days.
Read more here.
.
.
.
Labels: 173rd airborne brigade, ethnic turks, iraq war, iraqi insurgents, kirkuk, kurds, midnight express, turkish film, turkish prisons, turkish special forces, valley of the wolves
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