Turkey, Pakistan, Malaysia and Qatar form troubling new alliance

Ashwin

Agent_47
Staff member
Administrator
Nov 30, 2017
8,423
15,350
Bangalore
The name of fugitive Indian Salafi Islamist preacher Zakir Naik is little known in the West. Naik, founder of the Mumbai-based Islamic Research Foundation, is currently being pursued by the Indian authorities on charges of money laundering and hate speech.

Naik is a popular Islamist preacher in his native country. He has been referred to as “perhaps the most influential Salafi ideologue in India” and “the world’s leading Salafi evangelist.” His views on subjects such as homosexuality, apostasy and the Jews are as might be expected (the first two deserve the death penalty, the third “control America”).


The Indian authorities note evidence that two of the seven terrorists who carried out a deadly attack at a café in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on July 1, 2016, claimed inspiration from his teachings.

In himself, the fugitive preacher is of only passing interest. Naik’s activities are worthy of further note, however, because the list of his supporters and their activities on his behalf cast light on an emergent nexus in the Islamic world deserving of greater attention. This crystallizing alliance looks set to be of considerable consequence in the period opening up, not least for Israel and some of its partners in the region and beyond.

Fleeing from the Indian authorities, Naik has been the lucky recipient of permanent resident status in Malaysia. There, his case has become something of a cause célèbre. The Malaysian Islamic Party, which has four ministers in the current government, is vociferously opposed to acceding to Indian calls for his extradition.

Reports in a number of Indian media outlets claim that the (unusual) granting of permanent residency to the fugitive preacher came as a result of a request from the government of Pakistan. The reports further suggest that “Pakistan is also using its relations with... Turkey and Qatar to provide funding to Zakir Naik.”

Naik, for his part, has offered fulsome praise for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Speaking to an Islamist group, headed by Bilal Erdogan, in 2017, the Indian preacher referred to the Turkish leader as “one of the few Muslim leaders who has the guts to support Islam openly,” adding: “Oh Muslim world, wake up.... May Erdogan be the next leader of the Muslim world.”


THE DISPUTE around Naik casts light on the currently burgeoning relations between three significant Muslim countries – Turkey, Pakistan and Malaysia. This emergent alliance is a reflection of a shift in power in the Islamic world away from its traditional Arab center.

Ankara, Islamabad and Kuala Lumpur, with Qatar as an additional partner, today constitute an emergent power nexus, built around a common orientation toward a conservative, Sunni political Islam. This nexus is united as much by common enmities as by common affections. Its enemies, are India, Israel and (at the rhetorical level) the Christian West.

Its rivals within the diplomacy of the Islamic world, meanwhile, are Saudi Arabia, which has traditionally dominated the Organization of the Islamic Conference, the main pan-Islamic diplomatic body, and the UAE.

The crystallization of this new alliance has been apparent for some time. In late September 2019, Erdogan, Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad and Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan met at the sidelines of the 74th United Nations General Assembly in New York. The three agreed at that meeting to establish an English-language TV channel to combat ‘Islamophobia’ in the West.

Mahathir then sought to convene a summit in Kuala Lumpur, in December 2019, to identify, according to a press release announcing the summit, “what has gone wrong – with a view to eventually reclaiming the Muslim world’s fame and glory of yore.” Briefing the media in Putrajaya, Malaysia, on the summit, Mahathir suggested that “maybe, it can be regarded as the first step towards rebuilding the great Muslim civilization.”

The countries invited to the Kuala Lumpur summit were Turkey, Pakistan, Qatar and Indonesia. Mahathir described the invited countries as “a few people who have the same perception of Islam and the problems faced by Muslims.”

Subsequent Saudi pressure on Pakistan prevented its attendance at the KL summit. The joint diplomatic activities of the countries invited, however, have continued apace. So far, these efforts have largely been directed at India, with the focus on the issue of the disputed territory of Kashmir.

Kashmir appears to be a matter of particular interest to the Turkish president, in his effort to cast himself as a pan-Islamic leader, and in his desire to draw closer to Pakistan.

Turkey held an international conference on the subject on November 21, 2019. A Pakistani senator, Sherry Rehmen, participated in this gathering. During Erdogan’s visit to Pakistan in early 2020, the Turkish president mentioned Kashmir six times during a 25-minute speech to a joint session of the Pakistani parliament.

Erdogan likened Kashmir to the Turkish struggle for Gallipoli against the British and French in World War I. “It was Canakkale yesterday, and it is Kashmir today. There is no difference,” he asserted, in remarks that led India to issue a formal démarche to the Turkish ambassador in New Delhi, against interference in its internal affairs.

Malaysia also adopted a new and vociferously critical tone on the issue. Mahathir, shortly before his resignation in late 2019, said that India had “invaded and occupied” Kashmir and was “taking action to deprive some Muslims of their citizenship.”

It is worth noting that by contrast to this diplomatic activism, Saudi Arabia and the UAE maintain that Kashmir remains an internal Indian matter.

This reflects the growing closeness between Riyadh and New Delhi, expressed also in the major investments in India announced by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during his visit to India in 2019.

The emergent alliance between Turkey, Pakistan, Malaysia and Qatar makes both strategic and ideological sense from the point of view of its members.

It reflects the repositioning currently under way across Asia, in the wake of the receding post-Cold War US hegemony. These countries are united by a similar core outlook, and have some common emergent adversaries.

Turkey and Qatar, indeed, have been engaged in a de facto partnership over the last decade, based on common opposition to Saudi Arabia and the UAE. They are also united in support for Sunni political Islam across the region in its Muslim Brotherhood form, and not least in its Palestinian iteration – the Hamas movement. Pakistan and Malaysia are natural recruits for this emergent bloc. India appears currently to be its main diplomatic target.

This alliance also shares a deep enmity to the Jewish state. Its adversaries – India and the UAE – are Jerusalem’s emergent strategic partners. Zakir Naik, nestled in Malaysia, with Qatari bank accounts and the diplomatic muscle of Pakistan and Turkey guarding him, breathing fire and brimstone against apostates, homosexuals and Jews, is its appropriate symbol.

 
  • Like
Reactions: ni8mare
Turkey’s tentacles in India go deeper than thought, says new intel warning
The Turkish foreign ministry on Wednesday criticised India’s decision to revoke Jammu and Kashmir’s special status in August last year, asserting that it did not contribute to peace and stability in the region. India had, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government in Ankara said, “further complicated the situation in Jammu and Kashmir and not served peace and stability in the region”. It also called for dialogue between India and Pakistan.

The Turkish statement has been seen to have been issued in coordination with Imran Khan’s government in Pakistan, the only country other than Xi Jinping’s China to have put out a statement on the first anniversary of Jammu and Kashmir’s new status in the Indian constitution. Erdoğan’s government did not make any reference to Pakistan’s new map that had been issued just hours earlier that counts Indian territories as its own.

New Delhi isn’t surprised. In the past, Erdoğan has gone out of his way to echo Imran Khan on Kashmir. Like in February this year, Erdoğan’s speech in the Pakistan National Assembly during his visit to Islamabad compared the “struggle of Kashmiris” with the Ottoman Empire’s fight during World War I.

But this isn’t all that Ankara has been doing. An intelligence report on the role played by fronts for the Turkish government last month accused Ankara of efforts to radicalise Indian Muslims and recruit fundamentalists. Turkey had emerged as the “the hub of anti-India activities” next only to Pakistan.

A second report handed over to national security planners over the past week said fronts for the Turkish government or the outfits it supports - some of them directly linked to Erdogan and his family - appeared to have made deeper inroads in India than assessed earlier. Much of this effort is directed via three sectors: Turkish state media, educational institutes and the nonprofit sector, or NGOs.

The intelligence assessment identified individuals and groups, some of them also suspected to be in touch with Pakistan’s ISI, who had been lured to work with entities in Turkey that had strong links with the Erdogan regime.

In particular, the report listed organisations that had started accelerating what it described as “lucrative scholarships” to Indians to study in Turkey.

Turkey has been providing lucrative scholarships and running exchange programmes for Indian Kashmiri and Muslim students to study in Turkey through state-sponsored NGOs. Once the students land in Turkey, they are approached and taken over by the Pakistan proxies operating there,” the report said.

The list of outfits that sponsor the scholarships is long, the report said. It includes Turkey Youth Foundation (TUGVA), Presidency of Turks Abroad and Related Communities (YTB), Turkish Airlines, Yunnus Emre Institute (YEI), Turkey’s Diyanet Foundation (TDF) and Turkist Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA).

“Most of these organisations have direct connections with the Turkish government, President Erdogan or his family,” a counter-terror official said.

The TUGVA, which functions under Erdogan’s son Bilal’s patronage, has developed strong links within India by establishing connections with Islamic outfits in India including Jamaat-e-Islamic Organisation’s student wing, Student Islamic Organisation, the report said.

The intel report also accused the Turkish Embassy in Delhi of forging alliances with Indian NGOs, pointing that Indian activists who serve Ankara’s agenda are increasingly being sent to Turkey on exposure trips and encouraged to speak against India. Some of the Turkish organisations that have been used to launch coordinated attacks on India are its International Humanitarian Relief Foundation, the TDF (which also funds scholarships) and Pak-Turkey Cultural Association.

The TDF is part of the religious directorate of Turkey, now deployed with Erdogan supporters, and tasked to build Erdogan’s image as the tallest leader of the Muslim community by championing the Islamic cause where it suits Erdogan’’s ambitions.

And Turkey’s authoritarian leader for 18 years has many.

The most prominent has been to lead the Muslim world, building on Turkey’s imperial Ottoman past. The Ottoman sultans doubled as the caliphs of the Muslim world. Erdogan and his supporters believe they can revive the Ottoman Empire’s former glory that collapsed nearly a century back, and its peak in the 1500s ruled over much of Southeastern Europe, west Asia, and North Africa’s coastal strip.

Erdogan’s effort to expand its influence among South Asian Muslims comes against the backdrop of his pitch to challenge Saudi Arabia’s dominance in the Islamic world and offering a conservative Turkey with Ottoman traditions as a model for Islamic nations to follow.

It is a narrative that works well for Imran Khan in the Indian subcontinent, particularly given India’s recent success in deepening its ties with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. In April, Pakistan’s public broadcaster started airing Turkey’s television series, Ertugrul Gazi, which is loosely based on the story of the 13th century Muslim Oghuz Turk leader Ertugrul, whose son Osman Ghazi is considered to be the founder of the Ottoman Empire.

The series dubbed in Urdu, promoted by Imran Khan in Pakistan just as it was supported by Erdogan in Turkey, depicts the bravery of Muslim Oghuz Turks fighting the Mongol, Christians and Byzantines, glorifies the Ottoman Empire and is seen as a key part of Turkey’s “soft power” influence in the Muslim world.
 
  • Like
Reactions: AbRaj
Turkey hiring Kashmiri separatists in Turkish media to tarnish India's image globally
September 16, 2020

Turkey hiring Kashmiri separatists in Turkish media to tarnish India's image globally


New Delhi: On August 15, 2019 an article published in Turkish media by Ruwa Shah, daughter of separatist leader Altaf Ahmad Shah, wrote about how she feels for her allegedly besieged home while staying thousands of miles away in Turkey. While sharing her views she also mentioned that children in Kashmir never had a normal life.

Altaf Shah is an accused of terror funding in a case registered in 2017 by India's central probe agency National Investigation Agency (NIA). As per the NIA investigation, separatist leader Altaf Shah was found to be involved in receiving and collecting funds through illegal means, including hawala for causing disruption in Kashmir Valley by way of pelting stones on security forces, burning schools, damaging public property and waging war against India.

The article, published by Ruwa Shah in Turkish media, is part of a well-planned conspiracy to malign India's image internationally. The propaganda against India in the Turkish media is part of a larger conspiracy. Not only Kashmiri separatists, but it has been seen in the last few years that a large number of Pakistani journalists have been hired by Turkish media on the instruction of Erdogan government, to capitalize on extremism in the domestic politics and to advance the wagon of political Islam to the world, Turkey has employed a large number of Pakistani nationals with extremist inclinations in the Turkish media, especially in the two most prominent global news platforms.

As per some analysts, "Anadolu Agency and TRT of Turkish media, previously, these two news agencies preferred Americans and British to hire as journalists. However, as Erdogan began to promote radicalism at domestic front and push political Islam internationally, the Turkish press went on a rapid spree of hiring Pakistani journalists, who believe in radical Islam and could be further used as soldiers to materialize Erdogan’s global aspirations through political Islam.”

Currently, out of 11 copy editors in Anadolu Agency, five posts have been occupied by the Pakistani nationals. The number is constantly increasing as more and more Pakistanis are joining the news organisation. Similarly, the Diplomatic Editor of the TRT — Mohsin, is also a Pakistani origin individual. It is believed that he has been tasked to ensure common interests of Pakistan and Turkey together in coverage and promote the common agenda of both the countries at international platforms. Besides these journalists, Turkish media has also hired a number of separatist elements from Jammu and Kashmir.

Foreign policy observers argue that “A number of Pakistani journalists working with these news outlets have been placed by the Pakistani ISI in the Turkish media to strengthen Pakistan’s position in Turkey as well as to use Turkey and allied elements to an advantage for taking on India, however, the biggest damage inflicted by Pakistani journalists with extremist thoughts has been on the syncretic culture of Turkey, which was based on Sufi thoughts. Individuals working in Turkish media are also working towards replacing the liberal form of Islam being practiced in Turkey with the radical Pakistani-Deobandi Islam.”

Many believe, sooner or later, the Turkish society will have to wake up to the damage caused by the radicalization efforts of Erdogan government with Pakistan's help as besides providing geopolitical mileage to Erdogan, the radical Pakistani journalists have also been responsible for pushing extremist content domestically in Turkey and manufacturing consent amongst the common public in Erdogan’s favour.

Turkish President Erdogan has pulled off another Hagia Sophia. After the conversion of two UNESCO World Heritage Sites - Hagia Sophia and Kariye Church, Heybeliada is his next target and many others might be in the line. His government plans to convert the Heybeliada Sanatorium — a hospital built in 200 acres of land on one of ‘Princes’ Islands’, to a religious school for radicalising the youngsters. The land has been taken from the Health Ministry and handed over to Diyanet — the Directorate of Religious Affairs.

Besides being a significant development, it is a more symbolic one. Heybeliada previously had a religious school which was shut down in 1971 by the government. Hence, through this move Erdogan wants to communicate to the Muslim Ummah that he is on a mission of re-establishing Islamic institutions and reinforcing Islamic symbols.

This is believed to be a primary step of the process of handing over the religious education from the control of the Ministry of National Education's General Directorate of Religious Education to the Diyanet. Currently,uncountable numbers of schools are being run to radicalize the Turkish youth by training them in radical Islamic theology, raising up as clerics, and later sending on a mission to radicalize the Turkish population and preach political Islam elsewhere in the world. Another idea is to raise the upcoming generations as a herd of non-critical, non-inquisitive, and non-inventive individuals who could be easily lured to accept the supremacy of Erdogan and can fight for his interests.

Erdogan and his party have been focusing on weaker students as well as those coming from the marginalized societies. On failing to secure admissions in better schools due to poor academic performance, academically weaker students are left with no option except joining religious schools. Further, the education structure in Turkey is highly fragmented on the basis of class division. The affluent families send their kids to private schools and the middle-class families send their children to public schools. Whereas, underprivileged families usually send their wards to religious Islamic clergy schools or Madrassas, where they fall victim to the radicalization agenda of Erdogan.

Under Erdogan’s regime, the Diyanet has become all-pervasive and one of the most powerful institutions in Turkey. The Diyanet is also lavishly spending on printing religious calendars for children of Turkey. The Diyanet has recently issued a receipt of 10.6 million Turkish Liras for designing and printing calendars for the year 2021. It plans to publish around 3.42 million calendars in different formats and contents, including those for children. The power consolidation by the Diyanet and its growing expenditure highlights the kind of prominence it has gained during Erdogan's regime.

Besides instigating radical feelings, another potential threat is of triggering sectarian violence in Turkey as the country houses at least 30 major Islamic sects, divided in hundreds of divisions.

It is quite possible that Pakistani journalists could replicate the efforts of Pakistan that it took to fragment societies in areas like Sindh, Gilgiit-Baltistan, and PoJK to ensure the marginalization of Sufi culture. Hence, Turkish society will have to take a cautious approach in order to dodge the upcoming threat to their pluralistic society and take the content published by Pakistani journalists with a pinch of salt.

=========================================================================
Source: Zee News
=========================================================================

I think we should see Turkey's antagonism towards India as a tactic to woo Pakistan away from Saudi influence. Reallignment and fracturing of the Islamic world's hierarchy has emboldened Turkey into throwing its hat into the ring in creating its own axis. The major contenders are the Saudi/GCC/Egypt axis, Iran and it's primarily Shia allies, and Turkey/Qatar/Pakistan/Malyasia axis consisting of illiberal Islamic Republics. The Saudi team is alligning with Israel and the West, while the other two play a balancing act with Russia and China and even cooperate with each other to an extent in order to combat Saudi influence.
 
  • Like
Reactions: _Anonymous_
Ankara, Islamabad and Kuala Lumpur, with Qatar as an additional partner, today constitute an emergent power nexus, built around a common orientation toward a conservative, Sunni political Islam. This nexus is united as much by common enmities as by common affections. Its enemies, are India, Israel and (at the rhetorical level) the Christian West.
So the enemies of sunni islam are the Jews, Christians and the Dharmic religions!

baki duniya mein bacha kya?

These sunni islamists are basically against the whole world including other sects within islam. Their 1400 years of history tells the story that they are a bunch of narcissistic psychopathic pillagers, rapists and murderers.
 
  • Like
Reactions: JustCurious

Turkish president dares US to impose economic sanctions​

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan challenged the United States to impose sanctions against his country while also launching a second personal attack Sunday on French President Emmanuel Macron.

Speaking a day after he suggested Macron needed mental health treatment because of his views on Islam and radical Muslims, Erdogan expanded his range to take aim at foreign critics.

“Whatever your sanctions are, don’t be late,” Erdogan said, referring to US warnings for Turkey not to get directly involved in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, where Ankara supports Azerbaijan against ethnic Armenian forces.

The Turkish leader also mentioned Washington’s threat of sanctions after Turkey tested the Russian-made S-400 air defense system. The purchase has already seen Turkey kicked off the F-35 stealth fighter program.

“We stepped in for the F-35, you threatened us,” Erdogan told a televised ruling party congress in the eastern city of Malatya. “You said, ‘Send the S-400s back to Russia.’ We are not a tribal state. We are Turkey.”

The dispute over the S-400s, which NATO says pose a threat to the military alliance and particularly endanger the technical secrets of the F-35, is among a number of recent disputes between Turkey and some of its NATO allies.

These include gas exploration in the eastern Mediterranean that has threatened a confrontation with Greece, as well as Turkey’s stance in Syria, where it has targeted America’s Kurdish allies.

For months, the U.S. warned Ankara that it risked sanctions under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act if the S-400 system were activated. President Donald Trump, however, has held back on implementing the sanctions amid hopes Erdogan will not go ahead with activating the missiles.

Erdogan also returned to personal insults of Macron, who has been a vocal critic of Turkish foreign policy in recent months.

“The person in charge of France has lost his way,” Erdogan said. “He goes on about Erdogan while in bed and while awake. Look at yourself first and where you’re going. I said yesterday in Kayseri, he is a case and he really must be examined.” Erdogan also turned his ire to Dutch anti-Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders, whose tweet describing Erdogan as a “terrorist” was given prominence by several senior members of Turkey’s government and ruling party on Sunday.

The president said Turks had been made “targets for uncovering rising racism in Europe.”

He added: “Fascism is not in our book, it is in your book. Nazism happened in your countries.”

Three years ago, Erdogan sparked controversy when he called the Dutch government “Nazi remnants and fascists” over blocks on campaigning among the Netherlands’ Turkish diaspora ahead of a Turkish referendum on enlarging his powers.
 

Greece Rushes to Establish Military Alliance With India As Turkey, Pakistan Develop Close Defence Collaboration​

India and Greece recently had a security briefing about the current situation in the eastern Mediterranean region. The Foreign Ministers of the two countries held virtual talks on October 29 about a range of regional and multilateral issues.
The situation in the eastern Mediterranean has been tense with Turkey and Greece involved in a dispute over energy exploration rights and maritime boundaries in the area. The two neighbours have been wrangling over military games in the region despite both being part of the NATO alliance.

Complicating the matters have been Erdogan’s plans to install the high-end Russian S-400 air defence system in the country, which has left even Washington worried. Greece’s Minister of Defense Nikos Panagiotopoulos was quoted by a news agency as saying the decision was enough to prove that potentially Turkey, whether it wanted to or inadvertently, would prove to be a source of “undermining NATO’s cohesion from within.”

He added that if nothing was done, then Turkey’s leaders have all the right to believe that “they can go on uninhibited, demonstrating that type of hostile and confrontational behaviour that threatens stability in the whole region.” He said that deployment of the Russian system will be “too much of an aggressive move” on part of Turkey.
However, there was a pause in the exchange of heated words between the countries after a 7-intensity earthquake hit both the countries doing considerable damage. The leaders of the two countries expressed solidarity on social media, pledging to help each other while sidelining existing differences.
India, Greece Virtual Meeting. Via: Twitter

With Turkey’s increased bonhomie with its iron brother Pakistan in recent times, Greece is exploring an alliance of its own. Although supported by many European nations in its maritime disputes with Turkey, Greece is reaching out to a new player in the new global power tussle – India.

India can serve as a valuable partner for Greece, with the emerging South Asian country’s immense economic and military clout, and most importantly, its historic animosity with Pakistan – makes it a match made in heaven.

India’s relations with Turkey too have been undermined after Ankara criticized Modi’s Kashmir policy at the UN. The two nations were subsequently embroiled in a war of words over the issue.

Turkey is gaining increased support from Pakistan’s political and military counterparts, which has worried Greece, who has, therefore, been forced to look in all directions to help bolster its military infrastructure.
Greece-India-pic-e1604201047827.jpg

India too, on the other hand, has been eager to enhance bilateral relations with Greece, and the two countries have even talked of establishing military relations, reportedly, in light of the recent events.

After the virtual talks between the two countries, Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias tweeted, “In a video conference with India FM Dr S Jaishankar. Strengthening Greek, India relations & developments in Eastern Mediterranean & South Asia in focus.”

Although there is a renewed focus on enhancing bilateral relations, the two countries share common approaches to many international issues, such as UN reforms and Cyprus.

Greece has consistently supported India’s core foreign policy objectives. Greece participated with India in the 6th National Delhi Declaration on Nuclear Disarmament in 1985.

After his recent visit to the Indian embassy, the Greek Defense Minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos is reported to have tweeted, “Meeting with the Ambassador of India to Greece, Amrit Lugun, in the context of his ceremonial visit today to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

We discussed issues of further deepening our bilateral relations in the defence sector and promoting cooperation between the defence industries of our two countries.”

The security analysts quickly drew upon the importance of the military relations between India and Greece, and how such cooperation would ultimately confront the Turkish-Pakistani defence axis in the future.

They argue that it will be difficult for Ankara to confront a militarily strong alliance, backed by major powers since Turkey is facing an acute economic and financial crisis at the moment.

Some Greek experts believe that India and Greece could also open up to the possibility of holding joint naval exercises since Turkey and Pakistan have already been holding such exercises in the past.

They suggest that Indo-Greek exercises could be kicked off in the strategically important Aegean Sea or even the eastern Mediterranean.

As the new geopolitical developments divide the world into two power blocs, the East Mediterranean conflict will create further divisions in the opposing fronts, forcing more nations to join the two opposing blocs, led by the US and China.

With the US and Russia coming to rival each other in the Greece-Turkey conflict over the S-400 sale, the Mediterranean conflict is surely going to reinforce the existing two-bloc world order, with India and China siding with opposing fronts.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Gautam

Greece Rushes to Establish Military Alliance With India As Turkey, Pakistan Develop Close Defence Collaboration​

India and Greece recently had a security briefing about the current situation in the eastern Mediterranean region. The Foreign Ministers of the two countries held virtual talks on October 29 about a range of regional and multilateral issues.
The situation in the eastern Mediterranean has been tense with Turkey and Greece involved in a dispute over energy exploration rights and maritime boundaries in the area. The two neighbours have been wrangling over military games in the region despite both being part of the NATO alliance.

Complicating the matters have been Erdogan’s plans to install the high-end Russian S-400 air defence system in the country, which has left even Washington worried. Greece’s Minister of Defense Nikos Panagiotopoulos was quoted by a news agency as saying the decision was enough to prove that potentially Turkey, whether it wanted to or inadvertently, would prove to be a source of “undermining NATO’s cohesion from within.”

He added that if nothing was done, then Turkey’s leaders have all the right to believe that “they can go on uninhibited, demonstrating that type of hostile and confrontational behaviour that threatens stability in the whole region.” He said that deployment of the Russian system will be “too much of an aggressive move” on part of Turkey.
However, there was a pause in the exchange of heated words between the countries after a 7-intensity earthquake hit both the countries doing considerable damage. The leaders of the two countries expressed solidarity on social media, pledging to help each other while sidelining existing differences.
India, Greece Virtual Meeting. Via: Twitter

With Turkey’s increased bonhomie with its iron brother Pakistan in recent times, Greece is exploring an alliance of its own. Although supported by many European nations in its maritime disputes with Turkey, Greece is reaching out to a new player in the new global power tussle – India.

India can serve as a valuable partner for Greece, with the emerging South Asian country’s immense economic and military clout, and most importantly, its historic animosity with Pakistan – makes it a match made in heaven.

India’s relations with Turkey too have been undermined after Ankara criticized Modi’s Kashmir policy at the UN. The two nations were subsequently embroiled in a war of words over the issue.

Turkey is gaining increased support from Pakistan’s political and military counterparts, which has worried Greece, who has, therefore, been forced to look in all directions to help bolster its military infrastructure.
Greece-India-pic-e1604201047827.jpg

India too, on the other hand, has been eager to enhance bilateral relations with Greece, and the two countries have even talked of establishing military relations, reportedly, in light of the recent events.

After the virtual talks between the two countries, Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias tweeted, “In a video conference with India FM Dr S Jaishankar. Strengthening Greek, India relations & developments in Eastern Mediterranean & South Asia in focus.”

Although there is a renewed focus on enhancing bilateral relations, the two countries share common approaches to many international issues, such as UN reforms and Cyprus.

Greece has consistently supported India’s core foreign policy objectives. Greece participated with India in the 6th National Delhi Declaration on Nuclear Disarmament in 1985.

After his recent visit to the Indian embassy, the Greek Defense Minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos is reported to have tweeted, “Meeting with the Ambassador of India to Greece, Amrit Lugun, in the context of his ceremonial visit today to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

We discussed issues of further deepening our bilateral relations in the defence sector and promoting cooperation between the defence industries of our two countries.”

The security analysts quickly drew upon the importance of the military relations between India and Greece, and how such cooperation would ultimately confront the Turkish-Pakistani defence axis in the future.

They argue that it will be difficult for Ankara to confront a militarily strong alliance, backed by major powers since Turkey is facing an acute economic and financial crisis at the moment.

Some Greek experts believe that India and Greece could also open up to the possibility of holding joint naval exercises since Turkey and Pakistan have already been holding such exercises in the past.

They suggest that Indo-Greek exercises could be kicked off in the strategically important Aegean Sea or even the eastern Mediterranean.

As the new geopolitical developments divide the world into two power blocs, the East Mediterranean conflict will create further divisions in the opposing fronts, forcing more nations to join the two opposing blocs, led by the US and China.

With the US and Russia coming to rival each other in the Greece-Turkey conflict over the S-400 sale, the Mediterranean conflict is surely going to reinforce the existing two-bloc world order, with India and China siding with opposing fronts.

Erdogan sending mercenaries to Kashmir, paying $2,000 to each fighter​

Reports have emerged of Turkey preparing to send its fighters in East Syria to Kashmir. Andreas Mountzouralias, a Greek journalist in his report titled ‘Erdogan sends mercenaries to Kashmir’ on Pentapostagama has detailed the plans of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

According to the report, this is part of Ankara's attempt to extend its influence to Muslims in South Asia amid President Erdogan's ongoing steps to challenge Saudi Arabia's dominance of the Islamic world.

Pakistan was the second country in the plan as Ankara and Islamabad prepare for a permanent presence of surface units and aircraft of the Pakistani Defense Ministry in the Turkish operation ‘Shield of the Mediterranean’, with which Erdogan hopes to plunder Greek lands and plots of land from Greece.

Turkey's Ambassador to New Delhi, akir Özkan Torunlar, told India Today TV that "these reports are baseless and false".

Citing ANF, the Pentapostagama quoted local sources to say that Abu Emsa, who is the head of the brigade of Suleiman Shah, a gang that joined the Syrian National Army (SMO), 5 days ago told its members in Afrin that the Turkish state wishes to strengthen Kashmir.

Abu Emsa said Turkish officers would also ask the commanders of other SMO gangs to state the names of those who would like to go to Kashmir.

Abu Emsa said those leaving his gang would join the list and receive $2,000 in funding. He told members of his gang whom he met in Schiege that Kashmir is as mountainous as Karabakh.

Local sources told the Turkish state that it has been conducting this activity in Ezaz, Gerablus, Bap, Afrin and Idlib for a short time, thus choosing the names of the gangs that will be secretly transferred, according to the reports in ANF.