Turkish Chief Of Millitary Ilker Basbug Is Jewish
Turkish Chief Of Millitary Ilker Basbug Is Jewish:
The detention of a number of resigned army generals as well as other high-ranking army officers in Turkey provoked a great scandal. A similar effect had the three photographs of general Ikler Basbug, published first in Vakit newspaper, June 12, and then in the rest of th newspapers.
In august expires the office term of army general Yasar Buyukanit, the head of the armed forces of Turkey. Buyukanit is most likely o be succeeded by Basbug.
In this circumstances the photographs, featuring Basbug leaning with both hands on the Wall of Weeping in Jerusalem, become sensational.
The authorities of Turkey make no comment of the photos and Vakit, an islamist newspaper, encouraged by this fact, addressed to Basbug with the following question, "You are the person in the photographs. Have you have a secret meeting with Vice-President of the Constitutional Court Osman Paksut, which considers closing Prime Minister Erdogan’s Jusitce and Prosperity party? What business do you have in that foreign lobby?"
The newspaper also asks whether Basbug went to Jerusalem on a tourist visit or in order to pray to his god. Then it the newspaper answers its own question, "a high ranking Turkish army officer, being on an official visit to Israel prayed in Jerusalem, leaning with both hands on the wall, sacred to Jewish believers".
As of the "foreign lobby" phrasing, the Vakit newspaper hinted at the "East" club, founded in 1882 by British diplomat Alfred Sandison. The newspaper insists that Basbug is a member of that club, alongside with president of mason lodge Pasaka, ex-director of the Turkish Military Academy Ozden, ex-Minister Mogultay, etc. In the meanwhile, the military legislation of Turkey forbids army officers to be involved in any kind of social, political or other organizations.
Basbug neglected this publication, maybe because the copy of his certificate for membership in the club was published together with the photos.
The matter are not the questions or the photos, published by Vakit. That newspaper only discloses the sabataist (in turkey this way are called the Jews who fictionally adopted Islam) origin of the general. The most interesting part of this story is that El Aziz, another islamist newspaper, On June 18 wrote that general Buyukanit is also a sabataist. "It is no surprise that Buyukanit and Basbug are sabataists. Turncoat Jews have found the Republic of Turkey."
The detention of a number of resigned army generals as well as other high-ranking army officers in Turkey provoked a great scandal. A similar effect had the three photographs of general Ikler Basbug, published first in Vakit newspaper, June 12, and then in the rest of th newspapers.
In august expires the office term of army general Yasar Buyukanit, the head of the armed forces of Turkey. Buyukanit is most likely o be succeeded by Basbug.
In this circumstances the photographs, featuring Basbug leaning with both hands on the Wall of Weeping in Jerusalem, become sensational.
The authorities of Turkey make no comment of the photos and Vakit, an islamist newspaper, encouraged by this fact, addressed to Basbug with the following question, "You are the person in the photographs. Have you have a secret meeting with Vice-President of the Constitutional Court Osman Paksut, which considers closing Prime Minister Erdogan’s Jusitce and Prosperity party? What business do you have in that foreign lobby?"
The newspaper also asks whether Basbug went to Jerusalem on a tourist visit or in order to pray to his god. Then it the newspaper answers its own question, "a high ranking Turkish army officer, being on an official visit to Israel prayed in Jerusalem, leaning with both hands on the wall, sacred to Jewish believers".
As of the "foreign lobby" phrasing, the Vakit newspaper hinted at the "East" club, founded in 1882 by British diplomat Alfred Sandison. The newspaper insists that Basbug is a member of that club, alongside with president of mason lodge Pasaka, ex-director of the Turkish Military Academy Ozden, ex-Minister Mogultay, etc. In the meanwhile, the military legislation of Turkey forbids army officers to be involved in any kind of social, political or other organizations.
Basbug neglected this publication, maybe because the copy of his certificate for membership in the club was published together with the photos.
The matter are not the questions or the photos, published by Vakit. That newspaper only discloses the sabataist (in turkey this way are called the Jews who fictionally adopted Islam) origin of the general. The most interesting part of this story is that El Aziz, another islamist newspaper, On June 18 wrote that general Buyukanit is also a sabataist. "It is no surprise that Buyukanit and Basbug are sabataists. Turncoat Jews have found the Republic of Turkey."