RT | A Turkish prosecutor has claimed that the CIA and FBI provided
training for the followers of powerful US-based Turkish cleric Fethullah
Gulen, whom Ankara blames for the coup attempt earlier this month.
The indictment, prepared
by the Edirne Public Prosecutor’s office and accepted by the local
Second Heavy Penal Court, seeks the harshest possible punishment for 43
suspects that have allegedly been linked to the failed coup attempt on
July 15, including the coup’s supposed mastermind, Fethullah Gulen, the
arch-nemesis of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The prosecutor said on Thursday that members of what it describes as “the Fethullah Terrorist Organization” were trained by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
“The
CIA and FBI provided training in several subjects to the cadre raised
in the culture centers belonging to the Gulen movement. The operations
carried out by prosecutors and security officials during the Dec. 17
process can be taken as a good example of this,” the document says,
referring to a high profile corruption probe that targeted senior
government officials between December 17 and December 25 of 2013, as
reported by the Turkish Hurriyet daily.
The investigation affected
many officials linked to the Turkish Cabinet, which was headed by Recep
Tayyip Erdogan at that time. Erdogan, who is now Turkey’s president,
called it “a judicial coup” attempt, while accusing Gulen and his movement of orchestrating it with the help of some “foreign forces.”
The indictment states that Gulen loyalists received US training and infiltrated judicial and security institutions.
“This
[failed coup] attempt aimed to weaken the state with all its
institutions by getting rid of the government completely. Those in the
Gulen movement who work in the judicial and security institutions and
who received the aforementioned training, took on this task and moved
into action,” the document says, as quoted by the Anadolu news agency.
It adds that some other foreign secret services were also involved in
training the coup plotters, according to the Turkish Yeni Safak
newspaper.
Relations between Washington and Ankara soured
following the foiled coup attempt on July 15. Some Turkish media and
even government officials, including the labor minister, have claimed
that the US was somehow involved, despite an outright denial from the
US.
Immediately after the failed coup attempt, the Turkish
government criticized the US for providing safe haven for Gulen, saying
that a country that harbors “the coup planner” is “no friend”
to Turkey. Ankara has also repeatedly demanded that the US extradite
Gulen to Turkey, while Washington has maintained that Turkey must first
file a formal extradition request and provide solid proof of his
involvement in the coup.
0 comments:
Post a Comment