Turkey’s “Information Troops” Are Being Trained and Ordered Around by CIA

 

We are finally able to distinguish Washington’s plans behind the disinformation smokescreen that the corporate media sources have set around the creation of the so-called Turkish “Information Troops.” There’s no doubt that American special services are planning to use those to their full extent now against Russia, since Turkey is widely regarded in NATO as a bridgehead for the conflict with Russia.

 

military

 

The primary working tool of Turkey’s new “information special forces” has become the so-called Onion Router, that was developed by the Center for High Assurance Computer Systems (CHACS) of the Office of Naval Research (ONR) within the framework of the Free Haven framework. The project was brought into life with the extensive assistance provided by the Defense Advanced Research projects Agency (DARPA), in accordance with the demand of the federal government.

 

This project was developed with an extensive amount of financial assistance provided by the US Ministry of Defense and the Department of State. The thinking behind it is that it must serve as an alternative to the official “controlled Internet” to ensure anonymity to users, including those who are engaged in disinformation campaigns in specific states that NATO considers non-friendly.

 

Starting with the training a little over 50 Turkish cyberspace commandos in Ukraine last June, instructor from the Pentagon and the CIA have managed to pass American experience in information warfare to those recruits. Now Turkey’s “Information Troops.” are going to take advantage of this experience to provoke certain Turkish Internet communities, transforming users into a reliable source of disinformation, that would be spreading ideological sentiments favorable to the Turkish authorities. The “test run” was executed by those cyberspace commandos in the preparation of the failed military coup in Turkey, along with the use of the local population as cannon fodder by urging it to take to the streets.

 

Then, according to the plan drafted in Washington, those commandos launched “a wave of people’s fury” against the alleged masterminds behind the coup. This allowed Tayyip Erdogan to redraw various layers of the Turkish society, arresting representatives of the military elite, intellectuals, teachers, judges and even diplomats in one quick sweep.

 

It’s doesn’t take a genius to establish that Erdogan was so quick to identify external and internal enemies that quickly only due to the fact that his actions were preplanned in such a way to strike his political opponents in the very heart. It’s no secret that all supporters and even sympathizers of the self-exiled cleric Fethullah Gülen were subjected to bitter harassment and harsh repressions. Erodgan has already fired 1.7 thousand servicemen, including 149 generals and admirals, put over 40 media sources to a closure, and forced 88 diplomats to resign, including two ambassadors. According to the Turkish news agencyAnadolu, at a briefing in Ankara on July 28, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Çavuşoglu announced that there can be other “supporters of Gülen” in the Ministry, so new resignations may be quick to follow. One of the diplomats that was employed in the Turkish consulate in Kazan has even fled to Japan.

 

Thousands of arrests have not scared Turkey’s President,since the Pentagon and the CIA have clearly demonstrated him the speed and efficiency with which they can train new cyberspace commandos in Ukraine, therefore Erodgan is convinced that he’ll be able to prepare a sufficient number of new managers and military commanders with relative ease.

 

There’s an ever increasing number of curious details we are not able to learn about the so-called Turkish “Information Troops.” In particular, the top priority for those cyberspace commandos has been selected by Washington and it’s opposing Russia by all possible means. Those troops, like Turkey itself, are under NATO’s command after all, and the North Atlantic Alliance considers Russia to be a primary threat. Therefore, its the Turkish military and not journalists or bloggers that will be determined which information deserves the attention of various electronic media and social network groups. Turkish cyberspace commandos have also been trained to collect personal data of Russian soldiers deployed in in Syria, forming the so-called list of “international crimes of the Russian army,” etc… All this will be done under the pretext of carrying out volunteer job that is benefits Turkey’ society.

 

It is therefore not surprising that the Senior Defense Official and Defense Attaché – Colonel Carol along with Canada’s Attaché to Kiev, who is a well-know expert on information warfare Colonel Ron Ubbens are engaged in the “learning process” of Turkish cyberspace commandos in Ukraine to provide them with the idea on how Russia should be hated. Since the political prospects of Turkey are pretty uncertain, Turkish “Information Troops” are being tasked with confronting Moscow to prevent any attempts for rapprochement that Erdogan may take.

 

Under these circumstances, Erdogan’s recent desire to “rebuild bridges of friendship with Moscow” and go on a trip to Russia in early August for a personal meeting with President Vladimir Putin, looks at least strange. After all, if you really Erdogan intends to establish friendly relations with Moscow, why he does he carry on supporting the anti-Russian training program in Ukraine? And, what’s even more important, does Moscow need a duplicitous partner?

 

Martin Berger