Erdogan Has A Warm Spot For The Taliban – One Brotherhood Mafia Hand Extended To Another! Meanwhile …

By Adina Kutnicki

THE more things change, the more they stay the same, a/k/a, plus ça change. And whereas this well-worn aphorism certainly fits this moment in time, historically, its truth couldn’t be more self-evident.

YES, while red-aligned monsters from yesteryear killed millions, those who have taken their place are on track to do the same. How can this be? See above.

BUT let’s not leave it at that. As attributed to Einstein: “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” Such is the case with die-hard ideologues, many of whom are more than richly rewarded for their staying power. Read: unadulterated greed. Whores.

ENTER the green-aligned Islamic jihadi barbarians into the already blood-soaked geo-political landscape.

IN this regard, how many realize, and understand, the inextricable alliance (like pigs to their shit) between Turkey’s Erdogan and the likes of the Taliban, for starters, never mind the veneer and cover provided via NATO’s umbrella? If not, it is past time to catch up to speed! After all, countless innocent lives depend upon peeling back the Brotherhood Mafia (Turkish) onion. 

AS such, the following global interview is offered up as a gift, of sorts, to the free world. It took place in November 2017.

The Muslim Brotherhood’s Quest For Global Dominance – An Interview With Adina Kutnicki

REST assured, there is no pussyfooting around within.
 
 
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ISRAEL NATIONAL NEWS | By Giulio Meotti | August 18, 2021

Mohammad Yaqoob, son of the founder of the Taliban Mullah Omar, wants to establish “close relations” with Turkey. “We perceive Turkey as our ally,” said Yaqoob, who oversees the Islamic group’s military operations, on the day of the capture of Kabul. Turkish President Erdogan, four days before the conquest of Afghanistan, announced that he wanted to meet the leader of the Taliban. Then there is the announcement of the Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, who greets the “positive messages” of the Taliban.
 

“Will Turkey work with the Taliban in Kabul?”, Newsweek now asks.

At the end of July, the Turkish president had already said that Turkey “has nothing against the convictions of the Taliban”, a reference to Islam. Then there are Erdogan’s ties with Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, leader of Hezb-e-Islami, an ultra-fundamentalist group close to the Taliban. Erdogan had himself photographed kneeling in front of Hekmetyar, nicknamed the “butcher of Kabul”.

At the end of July, as jihadist fighters took control of dozens of districts in Afghanistan, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid gave an interview to the Turkish newspaper Istiklal, in which he said: “The Islamic Emirate has no differences with Turkey. Erdogan is a very illustrious leader for us and for the Islamic world”. The Turkish newspaper Ahval writes that, “as the de facto leader of political Islam, Erdogan could see himself in a new role as the de facto patron of the Taliban.”

In mid-July, the al-Arabiya broadcaster reported that the Muslim Brotherhood was moving its leaders from Turkey to Afghanistan, a rumor that, at least for the moment, has not yet found official confirmation. When General Al Sisi deposed the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, the Taliban immediately sided with the latter.

Then there is the recent war against the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh. Hekmatyar, the Afghan guerrilla linked to Erdogan, has sent Afghan refugees from Iran to join the fighting alongside the Azeris in Nagorno-Karabakh, where the Turkish army has been very active in favor of Azerbaijan. “A considerable number of our mujahedin went there and achieved numerous victories,” Hekmatyar said at a mosque in Kabul. Humayun Jarir,

Hekmatyar’s son-in-law and leader of Hezb-e Islami in Afghanistan, revealed that 70 Afghans were killed in the fighting against the Armenians. Already in 1993, at the time of the first Armenian-Azerbaijani war, Afghan mujahideen had gone to fight alongside the Azeris. On October 12, 2020, the Russian magazine Ogoniok published a lengthy report, entitled “Jihad for Karabakh.” In it it explains that Pakistani and Afghan fighters close to the Taliban have left to fight the Armenians.

Turkey, Qatar and Pakistan (and China) are the four countries on which the Taliban are counting in building their new Islamic Emirate. Turkey, Qatar and Pakistan are the triad of the new Sunni Islamic power, but also of the link with Beijing. Last week there was a flash visit by Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar to Pakistan. And the talks between the Americans and the Talina for the de facto surrender of Kabul took place in Doha, Qatar, which has very strong ties with Erdogan.

Finally, it is certainly no coincidence that Erdogan has offered to take charge of the security of the Kabul airport and that the only embassy of a NATO member country left open in Kabul in these terrible hours is the Turkish one.

There is a snake within NATO that, from Kabul to the Armenian hills, projects its Islamic hegemony.

Adina Kutnicki

Adina Kutnicki

America's Civil War Rising (ACWR) is a grassroots educational and public benefits organization. All views and opinions expressed by third-party contributors and authors that are posted and contained on our website herein are solely their own and do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of ACWR, its founding members, volunteers, and/or supporters. ACWR strives to ensure the accuracy and credibility of all news and information but makes no claim as to the veracity or accuracy of any of the views or opinions expressed by third-party authors herein.

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