Αυτά που αποκαλύπτουμε εδώ και χρόνια, τώρα σε άρθρο από τον Robert Kaplan.
Από το 1870, η Γερμανία θεωρεί την Οθωμανική αυτοκρατορία ως τον ισχυρότερο σύμμαχο της! Οι ίδιοι οι Τούρκοι ομολογούν την σύνδεση των σφαγών σε Βοσνία, Κόσοβο εως και την ισλαμιστική γενοκτονία γνωστή ως “αραβική άνοιξη”! Από τον πρώτο παγκόσμιο πόλεμο, η Γερμανία οργάνωνε “τζιχάντ” σε όλες τις χώρες με μουσουλμανικούς πληθυσμούς που βρισκόταν υπό τον έλεγχο των “εχθρών”. Ρωσία, Βρετανία, Σερβία, Γαλλία.
Πως η Γερμανία συνεχίζει σήμερα αυτό που επεδίωξε και στους δύο παγκόσμιους πολέμους! Ο “αφανής” της ρόλος και η “βρώμικη δουλειά” από αχυρανθρωπους στην Αμερική. Η Γερμανία τωρα τεχνηέντως κρύβει τον ηγετικό της ρόλο και βάζει μπροστά τις ΗΠΑ.
Η αποκάλυψη της “μυστικής στήριξης” στους ισλαμοφασίστες της Συρίας.
Απο την διάλυση της Γιουγκοσλαβίας, την σφαγή των Σέρβων σε Βοσνία και Κοσσυφοπέδιο, μέχρι την “Αραβική άνοιξη”.
ΜΚΟ, “ανθρωπιστικές οργανώσεις”, λομπίστες οργανώνουν ένα εφιαλτικό μέλλον με πρόσχημα τον ανθρωπισμό. Το χιτλερικό όραμα φαίνεται να υλοποιείται τον 21ο αιώνα με την βοήθεια της Αμερικής των
λομπιστων και της συμμορίας Κλίντον.
Each of these United States military interventions occurred in an area that had been part of the Ottoman Empire, and where a secular regime was replaced by an Islamist one. So far, the German policy of keeping hidden its leadership role in its attempt to reconstitute the Ottoman Empire has succeeded.
Since the mid-1990s the United States has intervened militarily in several internal armed conflicts in Europe and the Middle East: bombing Serbs and Serbia in support of Izetbegovic’s Moslem Regime in Bosnia in 1995, bombing Serbs and Serbia in support of KLA Moslems of Kosovo in 1999, bombing Libya’s Gaddafi regime in support of rebels in 2010. Each intervention was justified to Americans as motivated by humanitarian concerns: to protect Bosnian Moslems from genocidal Serbs, to protect Kosovo Moslems from genocidal Serbs, and to protect Libyans from their murderous dictator Muammar Gaddafi.
Other reasons for these interventions were also offered: to gain for the United States a strategic foothold in the Balkans, to defeat communism in Yugoslavia, to demonstrate to the world’s Moslems that the United States is not anti-Moslem, to redefine the role of NATO in the post-Cold War era, among others.
Each of these United States military interventions occurred in an area that had been part of the Ottoman Empire. In each, a secular regime was ultimately replaced by an Islamist one favoring sharia law and the creation of a world-wide Caliphate. The countries that experienced the “Arab Spring” of the 2010s without the help of American military intervention, Tunisia and Egypt, had also been part of the Ottoman Empire, and also ended up with Islamist regimes.
In the United States most discussions of the military conflicts of the 1990s in the Balkans and the “Arab Spring” of the 2010s do not mention that the areas involved had been part of the Ottoman Empire; these included Turkey, the Moslem-populated areas around the Mediterranean, Iraq, the coastal regions of the Arabian Peninsula and parts of the Balkans. In the areas that experienced the Arab Spring Turkey’s role in every instance has been to support the rebels and quickly recognize them as the legitimate government of the country in upheaval.
Turkish leaders do make the connection between the conflicts in the Bosnia, the “Arab Spring” and the Ottoman Empire. Harold Rhode, an American expert on Turkey, has reported:
President of Turkey Erdogan’s recent 2011 electoral victory speech puts his true intentions regarding Turkey’s foreign policy goals in perspective. He said that this victory is as important in Ankara as it is in the capital of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sarajevo, under Ottoman times, an important Ottoman city; that his party’s victory was as important in a large Turkish city Izmir, on the Western Anatolian coast, as it is in Damascus, and as important in Istanbul as it is in Jerusalem….
In saying that this victory is as important in all of these former Ottoman cities, Erdogan apparently sees himself as trying to reclaim Turkey’s full Ottoman past.