While Putin was shelling the terrorists on Thanksgiving, president Barack Obama signed the Pentagon funding bill which allows $500 million in aid to the very terrorists in Syria that Putin is frying. Obama couldn’t find a better time to sign the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) of 2015 except on the eve of Thanksgiving.
So while Obama funds terrorists on Thanksgiving to aid his ‘Turkey’ friend, Putin slaughters her little chicklings at Turkmen Mountain in Syria. On the 25th, Russia also destroyed Turkish convoy crossing the borders into Syria at Azaz which is a hub, where Turkish aid (weapons, ammunition, drugs etc) are dumped off. Then with all his “help” they begin to disperse it to other cities under terrorist control.
The U.S. aiding terror while Russia fights it, nothing makes any sense anymore and I am always asked: are we at the end yet? Is it around the corner?
Trying to predict the future by monitoring why the West does what it does is rather very confusing; but predicting the Muslim world for me is as easy as pie.
I knew that sooner or later, like a vengeful Mafia, that Recep Tayyip Erdoğan would spark a war. When he shot down a Russian plane he nudged the Middle East a step closer to an all-out war. Now Russia had spread sophisticated S-400 that would bring down any Turkish jets within 150 mile radius.
As it seems, the destiny of the world is dependent on two world leaders: Erdogan and Putin. Neither is going away any time soon.
When Turkey’s AKP Muslim party lost in a first round of elections on June 1, the analysts said that it was all over for Erdogan. We said otherwise. Erdogan turned things around and regained the parliamentary majority it had previously lost. And now Erdogan hopes to secure enough support for his controversial ambitions to expand his role into what they term “a powerful US-style presidency” which, in reality, is a “powerful Islamic style Caliphate”.
That we have been monitoring for a while and is going like clock-work.
Now the analysts say that the balance of power in Turkey remains fickle since Erdogan failed to gain the two-thirds majority needed to make any changes to the constitution, such as introducing an executive presidency, without support from other parties or a public referendum. But this is not difficult to do since Erdogan can bribe and buy cabinet members.
Erdogan never ceases to amaze the doubting analysts. Now that his party won, the announcement of the anxiously awaited new Turkish Cabinet revealed the identity of the government that has been much debated. Analysts thought that the government would be a coalition between the president and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. Yet following the announcement of the new Cabinet, it is clear that the 64th government of the Republic of Turkey is the government of Erdogan and not Davutoglu.
The cabinet presented by Davutoglu includes several people who have always been Erdogan’s loyalists – including his son-in-law, Berat Albayrak, who was appointed energy and natural resources minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, who was reappointed to the post of foreign minister, and newly appointed Deputy Prime Minister Mehmet Simsek, who had previously served as finance minister and Binali Yildirim as transport minister.
All these are Erdogan’s sycophants.
When it came to the cabinet for former deputy premier Ali Babacan, who had started an ambitious reform agenda in Turkey there was no post for him. Babacan was replaced by another Erdogan sycophant, Mehemet Simsek.
All this is clear indication that Erdogan retains full influence and full power over Turkey’s government.
The hopefuls were dead wrong.
And when it came to Turkish-Russian relations, analysts for decades were optimistic after the dissolution of the Soviet Union when relations between the two nations dramatically and strongly improved when on May 25, 1992, a visit to Moscow by Turkish Prime Minister Süleyman Demirel saw the signing of a Russian-Turkish treaty on the foundations of their relations.
The media was positive when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan flew to Sochi, Russia for a 16 May 2009 working visit with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.
In May 2010, many were hopeful when a high level visit by the Russian President to Turkey saw the signing of numerous deals such as the lifting of visa requirements and increasing trade value from 38 billion to 100 billion dollars within the next five years. That including Turkey and Russia’s first multi-billion dollar foreign nuclear power plant. And while the analysts and media spoke of all the trade boosting and strengthening of ties, we spoke of the coming fall within months before it happened.
Then on 24 November 2015, all the false prophets of peace, were shattered when religion ruled over all these false-hopes. Turkish F-16 combat aircraft shot down a Russian Su-24 to ease the pressure on the Muslim Turkmen in Syria who were bombarded by Russian jets.
Erdogan could not keep his deception going on when he needed the Islamists in Syria to remove Assad which was necessary to establish Erdogan’s Ottoman dreams.
But such dreams were not without cost. All hopes between Russia and Turkey were shattered with Putin saying that Erdogan delivered a “stab in the back by [Turkey] the accomplices of terrorists” and he further stated that “today’s tragic events will have significant consequences including for relations between Russia and Turkey”.
One pilot’s life did it all. Russia is now preparing sanctions on Turkey of more than $30 billion in trade ties and police in Russia began seizing Turkish products and deporting Turkish businessmen while deploying state-of-the-art S-400 missile systems to the Russian Hemeimeem air base near Latakia, Syria. There will be travel warning advising Russian citizens against visiting Turkey and all Russian travel agencies announced they withdraw their business in Turkey. This is a huge economy. There are 3.3 million Russian tourists who visit Turkey yearly.
And to add to the moral argument, Russian parliament proposed a five-year jail term for anyone who denies the Armenian genocide while exposing the cause: the Turkish Ottoman rule in 1915.
We have two men, Putin on the one hand is recognizing Erdogan’s plan for reviving the Ottoman Empire. Whether he reads it in the Bible, or if he is advised by someone, the man is definitely on the right track. Then we have Erdogan, an evil man and the Bible says that a showdown between these two spheres is imminent.
EVERYTHING IS CHANGING
The threat to Antichrist (Turkey) from the north (Russia) is an important sign. Today the political shifts happen in lightening speed as fast as the weather is changing.