Russia’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Lavrov pointed out that, “by
shooting down a Russian plane on a counter-terrorist mission of the
Russian Aerospace Force in Syria, and one that did not violate
Turkey’s airspace, the Turkish government has in effect sided with
ISIS.”
It
was in this context when Lavrov added that “Turkey’s actions
appear premeditated, planned, and undertaken with a specific
objective.”
More
importantly, Lavrov pointed to Turkey’s role in the propping up the
terror network through the oil trade.
Others
reaffirmed Lavrov’s stance, such as retired French General
Dominique Trinquand, who said that “Turkey is either not
fighting ISIL at all or very little, and does not interfere with
different types of smuggling that takes place on its border, be it
oil, phosphate, cotton or people,” he said.
The
reason we find this line of questioning fascinating is that just last
week in the aftermath of the French terror attack but long before the
Turkish downing of the Russian jet, we wrote about “The Most
Important Question About ISIS That Nobody Is Asking” in which
we asked who is the one “breaching every known law of funding
terrorism when buying ISIS crude, almost certainly with the tacit
approval by various “western alliance” governments, and why is it
that these governments have allowed said middleman to continue
funding ISIS for as long as it has?”
Precisely
one week later, in even more tragic circumstances, suddenly everyone
is asking this question.
And
while we patiently dig to find who the on and offshore “commodity
trading” middleman are, who cart away ISIS oil to European and
other international markets in exchange for hundreds of millions of
dollars, one name keeps popping up as the primary culprit of regional
demand for the Islamic State’s “terrorist oil” – that of
Turkish president Recep Erdogan’s son: Bilal Erdogan.
Bilal
Erdogan owns several maritime companies. He has allegedly signed
contracts with European operating companies to carry Iraqi stolen oil
to different Asian countries. The Turkish government buys Iraqi
plundered oil which is being produced from the Iraqi seized oil
wells. Bilal Erdogan’s maritime companies own special wharfs in
Beirut and Ceyhan ports that are transporting ISIS’ smuggled crude
oil in Japan-bound oil tankers.
In
addition to son Bilal’s illegal and lucrative oil trading for ISIS,
Sümeyye Erdogan, the daughter of the Turkish President apparently
runs a secret hospital camp inside Turkey just over the Syrian border
where Turkish army trucks daily being in scores of wounded ISIS
Jihadists to be patched up and sent back to wage the bloody Jihad in
Syria, according to the testimony of a nurse who was recruited to
work there until it was discovered she was a member of the Alawite
branch of Islam, the same as Syrian President Bashar al-Assad who
Erdogan seems hell-bent on toppling.
Full
report:
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