Pirate: Erdogan steals oil of Syria and Iraq, has his eye on Mediterranean gas
The first part of this series dealt with violations of
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's regime and its theft of Turks’
contributions and refugee money provided by the European Union. This part looks
at Turkey’s attempts to steal oil and gas in the Mediterranean after Erdogan
decided to play the role of a pirate.
Erdogan's biggest crisis is that Turkey’s borders on the
Mediterranean coast are free from gas and oil. Although these rich coasts
contain a strategic treasure of gas initially estimated at 170 trillion cubic
feet of gas, according to a satellite survey conducted by a US geological
mission in 1974, Turkey has no share.
Turkey has found itself completely isolated in the Eastern
Mediterranean, especially as it bought expensive exploration equipment with the
aim of drilling in the Mediterranean, which it tried more than once. But
European warnings of harsh sanctions against Ankara have not stopped. When
Turkey could not find a solution, it sought to impose a new reality in the
Mediterranean by signing a security and border agreement with the Government of
National Accord (GNA) in Libya to demarcate the maritime borders between the
two countries.
Through this agreement, Turkey sought to change the map of
existing alliances, as it wishes to become a terminal for exporting Israeli gas
to Europe. However, Turkish relations with the European Union have been
strained because of the collapse of human rights values and freedoms within
Turkey, the Turkish military operations against the Kurdish minority in Syria
and Iraq, and the Turkish government’s extortion of Europe by means of the
Syrian refugee paper and the constant threat of opening the doors to enter
Europe, which has deprived Ankara of the support it desires.
Turkey’s main goal of interfering in Libya is to prospect
for wealth, as Ankara seeks to obtain a piece of the Mediterranean cake,
especially since Turkey imports more than 70% of oil and petroleum products
from abroad. This means that if Ankara fails to obtain permission from the
European Union to explore on its borders, then it will explore on the borders
of Libya with the blessing of the Libyan Brotherhood, represented by the GNA in
Tripoli.
Meanwhile, Cyprus previously accused Turkey of piracy, after
Ankara announced new plans to explore for oil and gas in the maritime areas of
the divided island using the Yavuz drilling and exploration ship.
Erdogan was previously accused of stealing Iraqi and Syrian
oil in 2014 after ISIS took control of cities in the two countries. He made
deals with the terrorist organization to pillage oil in exchange for
facilitating the transit of militants through Turkish territory.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad also explicitly described
the Turkish president as a thief, saying, “Erdogan is a thief; he has stolen
factories, wheat and oil, and today he is stealing land,” after Erdogan has
announced that he was launching a military operation on Syrian soil,
particularly in Idlib.
This was not denied by the Turkish president, who announced
his true goals and objectives regarding the establishment of a safe zone in
Syria during a speech at the UN Global Refugee Forum in Geneva, Switzerland on
December 17, 2019, as he made an appeal to world powers to extract Syrian oil
and spend its revenues for the refugees who will be resettled in northern
Syria.
"Let us extract oil together from the wells that are
controlled by terrorists in Syria, and let us build housing units, schools and
hospitals in the areas liberated from terrorists, where the refugees can
reside," Erdogan said at the time.
The Turkish President confirmed these ambitions to reporters
while returning from Brussels in early March 2020. “I offered to [Russian
President Vladimir] Putin that if he provides economic support, we can build
the infrastructure, and through the oil extracted there, we can help destroyed
Syria get back on its feet.”
Erdogan said that Putin is studying the offer, adding that
he could make a similar offer to US President Donald Trump.
These statements outwardly appear to be a form of mercy, but
their essence carries the flames of torment, as Erdogan has not found a
solution to get out of his country’s economic crises except by pirating Syria’s
oil.
While the Turkish regime is claiming that it wants to create
a safe zone in northern Syria for the return of Syrian refugees, Erdogan's
forces have been committing executions and confiscating homes in areas they
control. Human Rights Watch has criticized the conditions there, calling for
the United Nations to investigate human rights violations and possible war
crimes in the region, which extends 30 km deep into Syrian territory.
In a recent report, Human Rights Watch stressed that
executions, looting of property and preventing the return of displaced persons
to their homes serve as compelling evidence that Turkey’s proposed safe zones
are not be safe. This confirms that Erdogan's statements about establishing
safe zones are lies, which he only reiterates in order to achieve his malicious
plans of controlling Syrian oil sources, especially since the pipeline transit
fees add billions of dollars to the Turkish treasury annually. Implementing the
safe zone places the vast majority of Syrian oil resources in the interest of
Ankara, which is a kiss of life for its collapsed economy.




