A few initial short thoughts on the murder of the Russian Ambassador to
Ankara
Thesaker.is
December
20, 2016
Okay, so tonight we have the name of the assassin, it is Mevlut Mert Aydintas, a
22 year old policeman who had been recently fired following the anti-Gulenist
crackdown of Erdogan against the forces which had attempted to overthrow him
recently. We also have a very useful video of the murder.
That video of the attack also shows something very important:
the only shots fired are those fired by the assassin.
What this means is one of two things:
Version 1: there was nobody in charge of security at this
exhibition
Version 2: the room where this murder happened was considered
‘safe/sterile’ because it was inside an outer security perimeter which we don’t
see in this video.
I find version 2 far more likely. That would also explain
why and how Mevlut Mert Aydintas so easily got it: he simply flashed his police
ID and was let through.
When such an event occurs it is also important to ask cui bono – whom does it benefit?
Erdogan?
No.
I see absolutely no imaginable reason why Erdogan would want the
Russian Ambassador murdered in Ankara, but I can easily imagine a long list of
reasons why he would not want that to happen at all. Some will correctly
say that the fall of Aleppo is a humiliating defeat for Turkey and Erdogan, and
I agree. But I would remind everybody that Erdogan clearly had a deal
going with the Russians and the Iranians when he moved his forces across the
border and occupied northern Syria. There is *no way* he would have
risked such a move against the will of Moscow and Tehran. So what was
this deal? We will probably never know, but it clearly included a
provision which limited Turkey’s actions to a narrow strip in the north.
If that hypothesis is correct, then Aleppo would have to be considered outside
the “Turkish sphere of interest” in Syria, at least by the tripartite
Turkish-Iranian-Russian understanding. Did Erdogan know that Aleppo would
fall and would fall so fast? Probably not. It appears that Erdogan
got outmaneuvered by the Russians and the Iranians. But he most
definitely had better options to retaliate against the liberation of Aleppo than
to have the Russian Ambassador murdered in Ankara. The fact is that the
Turks did precious little when Aleppo was liberated, at most they helped the
Russian evacuate part of the “good terrorists”.
Even if Erdogan is a lunatic, he is smart enough to understand
that if he has the Russian Ambassador murdered in Ankara NATO will do nothing
to protect him and that the Russians can fire a cruise missile right into his
bedroom window. Erdogan might be crazy, but he is clearly not *that*
crazy.
Finally, let’s remember the disastrous consequences for Turkey
following the shooting down of the Russian SU-24 and the fact that, by numerous
corroborated accounts, the Russian intelligences services saved Erdogan,
probably literally, by warning him of the coup against him.
So, for all these reasons, Erdogan is not on my current list of
suspects. Never say never, new facts might come to light, especially with
a maniac like Erdogan, but right now I will assume that he has nothing to do
with what happened.
Daesh
& Co? Maybe.
Well, it is rather obvious that the Daesh & Co. had an
extremely long list of reasons to want to kill a high profile Russian
official. So yes, they sure had the motive. Considering how
successful radical Islamist extremists have been at penetrating the Turkish
deep (and not so deep) state, Daesh and Co. also had the means. As for
the opportunity, the video above clearly shows that not only did Mevlut Mert
Aydintas have the time to shoot the Russian Ambassador many times (I counted 9
shots), but after that he still had the time to just stand there and scream all
sorts of slogans about Syria, Aleppo and God. While we don’t know all the
details yet, this is already very strong evidence that security at this event
was dismal.
Gulen, the CIA, Obama & Co? Maybe.
Yes, they are also on my list of suspects. The Gulenists
have nothing to lose, the CIA has gone crazy with anger and fear at the
election of Trump, and the Obama Administration is full of angry, offended,
deeply vindicative and otherwise plain nasty characters who would love to
trigger a new crisis between Russia and Turkey or make the Russian pay in some
way for humiliating the AngloZionist Empire in Aleppo. Keep in mind that
this is exactly how the CIA always kills foreign dignitaries: by subcontracting
the murder to a local fanatic so as to preserve what they call “plausible
deniability”.
During the Cold War the Soviets and the Americans had an
unwritten understanding that “we don’t kill each other”. It was never
formally mentioned or otherwise acknowledged, but I assure you that it was
real: neither side wanted an open ended escalation of assassinations and
counter-assassinations. But today’s CIA is a pathetic joke compared to
the CIA of the Cold War, and with hodge-podge of mediocre dimwits now in the
Executive branch I would not put it past some idiot in Langley to approve of
the murder of a Russian Ambassador. Besides, if the Americans were crazy
and reckless enough to attempt to overthrow Erdogan, why would they not try to
murder a Russian Ambassador?
What
about the lone gunman hypothesis?
Well, it is impossible to prove a negative. Mevlut Mert Aydintas
did lose his job in a recent purge, he did have police credentials and his
actions on the video seem to be a textbook example of the kind of fanatical behavior
a lone nutcase would display. So yes, it is possible that Mevlut Mert
Aydintas acted alone. After all, all he needed was a gun and a police
ID. Let’s see what the Turks, and the Russians, find out about him.
Still, I doubt it. That kind of personality is usually identified by
state sponsoring terrorism and then activated when needed. My gut tells
me that he did not just act alone. Somebody probably used Mevlut Mert
Aydintas.
Painful
questions
Here I really hope that I am wrong, but if I want to be honest I
have to admit that I am completely unable to find an excuse of the lax security
around Ambassador Andrey Karlov. And I am not referring to the Turks
here, I am referring to the Russian security services. Here is why.
Even if we assume that the Turks had told the Russians that they
had established a ‘safe/sterile’ perimeter around the exhibit and that the
general public would not be let in, the footage shows what appears to be only a
few guests, there is no excuse for the Russian not to have at least one
bodyguard in the immediate proximity to the Ambassador. Turkey is not
only a country at war, but Russia is a party to that war, the Takfiris have
made a very long list of threats against Russia and, finally, Turkey is a
country which has suffered from terrorism for years and which has just suffered
a bloody attempted coup. In a country like that a top official like an
Ambassador should have been protected by an entire group of bodyguards, but in
this case there was clearly nobody. Oh sure, the Russian can blame the
Turks for having set up a crappy perimeter, but as professionals they should
know that the Turks are already having extreme difficulties in dealing with
their own terrorists and that following the massive purges the security
services are in a state of chaos. Would one bodyguard have made a
difference?
Yes, possibly. Probably in fact.
From the video it appears that Mevlut Mert Aydintas was standing
about 5 meter behind Ambassador Karlov when he opened fire. Apparently,
not a single of the shots hit the Ambassador’s head. If Ambassador Karlov
had been wearing a flack jacket or any other type of body armor he would have
probably survived that first volley of bullets (unless one hit the
cervicals). One single bodyguard could then have easily killed Mevlut
Mert Aydintas and evacuated the ambassador to safety. Evidently Karlov
was not wearing any kind of body armor that day. Why? He did not
have a single bodyguard next to him. Why? No Russian voices are
heard on the video, so there appears to have been no Russian security anywhere
near the ambassador. Why?
Normally, ambassadors are a very easy target. Everybody
knows them, their routine is public and, contrary to what many seem to think,
most of them have no security detail. I am absolutely amazed that more
ambassadors are not killed regularly. In high risk countries, however,
ambassadors are normally protected, especially ambassadors representing
countries involved in a war or who are likely targets of terrorist
attacks. True, as a rule, the Russians, including diplomats, tend to be
more brave/reckless (pick the term) than their western counterparts: they don’t
scare easy and they like to show that they are not afraid. But that kind
of attitude needs to be kept in check by professionals.
Frankly, it makes me angry to see how many Russians have been
killed by that lax attitude towards personal risk and security. Yes, it
is very noble to be courageous, but to die killed by a manic is also plain
dumb. I would feel much better if Russian officials and politicians would
be a little less courageous and a little more careful. Because what
happened today begs the question: who will it be the next time?
Conclusions
What happened today is a tragedy made twice as painful by the
fact that it could probably have been avoided. The Turkish security
services will probably arrest overnight pretty much anybody and everybody
Mevlut Mert Aydintas has ever met, and they will get lots of confessions.
I am pretty sure that they will share a lot of that data with the Russians, if
only to show how sorry they are. Alas, both the Turks and the Russians
have an long tradition of secrecy and we might never find out who, if anybody,
really was behind Mevlut Mert Aydintas.
The only thing I am sure of is that Putin will do nothing harsh
regardless of who is behind this murder. If it is the Takfiris, then the
people involved will die in the next couple of years. If the CIA is
involved, however, the Russians will be much more careful and might chose to
act in a very different way, possibly through the next Administration.
The murder of Ambassador Karlov will not succeed in derailing the Russian and
Iranian efforts at getting some kind of a regional solution to the war in
Syria, nor will it change the Russian determination to prevent the AngloZionst
Empire of turning Syrian into yet another Takfiristan.
As for Russia and Turkey, as long as Erdogan remains in power
they will continue to try to collaborate against the odds and in spite of deep
and fundamental differences. Neither Russia nor Turkey, which have fought
each other in twelve wars, have any other option.
The Saker
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