Displaying items by tag: british intelligence

Monday, 29 November 2021 15:33

Final Notes on British Intelligence Officers-Vll-

One of the most important events affecting Ottoman and Turkish history before the World War I was the assassination of Mahmud Shevket Pasha supported by British intelligence. The aim of this assassination was to deprive the Unionists of their guides and to allow the state to pass under the rule of novice ones. With this assassination, the Ottoman Army lost an experienced commander. When the leading role of the British Embassy in the assassination of Mahmud Shevket Pasha in 1913 was clearly revealed, rogue intelligence agents were declared “persona non grata” and expelled from the country. However, with this assassination, England dragged the Ottoman Empire into a void and made it possible for incompetent men to seize the power to rule.

Friday, 26 November 2021 08:51

English Notes on the War of Intelligence-Vl

MAP: 5 On the map that Wilson drew in 1918, there is no indication that Izmir will be given to Greece. Kurdistan is shown outside the borders of today's Turkey. On this map, the island of Lemnos and Kastellorizo are seen as they belong Turkey. They envision establishing small Christian or small states in places marked in green.

Wednesday, 24 November 2021 15:16

Greater Arabia Project -V-

All the growth projects of the West, more precisely, supported by worldwide Masonic organizations and directed by British intelligence, resulted in destruction and disintegration. It is such an disintegration that it has disintegrated up to its molecules…

If the British intelligence tells you will be sovereign and grown, know that you will be torn to pieces, you will fight each other and you will never prosper. 

While the British intelligence supports the main ideology that represents the great ambition of that society, it also supports ideologies based on its own main target against it. For example, while supporting Panislamism, they encouraged modernism in religion through individuals such as Mohammed Abduh, Jamal al-Din al-Afghani, and also pronounced that the Caliphate would be taken from the Turks and given to the Arabs. It does not let the same people into India because it would harm British authority in India. The interesting thing is that the idea of Panislamism did not come from the Ottoman intellectuals. This concept was first mentioned in an article published in The Times on January 19, 1882, its translation into English as Pan-Islam under the name of the notion of Islamic Union. The French translation of this expression was used by a person named M.G. Charmes in Des Deux Mondes at the end of 1881 and the French writer took this movement until 1870 in the aforementioned article[1]. (5) In other words, the project of unification of Muslims is western-centered. Name and mission that will appeal to Muslims. Today, they are uniting the so-called Muslims, establishing a so-called caliphate, and establishing a so-called Islamic state, as is the case with ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant) and DAESH organizations. (!)