*
A Press conference was organised at the Ministry for Defence of the Russian Federation on the 2nd December 2015 – present were the assistant Minister for Defence, Anatoly Antonov, the head of operations, Lieutenant-General Sergueï Rudskoy, and the commander of operational management, Lieutenant-General Mikhail Mizintsev.
According to the commanders of the Russian army, the main source of finance for the terrorists of the Islamic Emirate* is the illegal sales of petrol products, and the only beneficiary of this petrol smuggling operation is Turkey [1]. According to the Russian generals, the political directors of Turkey, via the family of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, are implicated in the trafficking of contraband by the Islamic Emirate [2].
Every day, more than 8,500 tanker trucks are implicated in the trafficking of petrol by the Islamic Emirate, a long column transporting more than 200,000 tons of petrol into Turkey. The Russian generals presented a map showing the three main routes by which the IE smuggles petrol from Syria and Iraq into Turkey.
The first route, leaving the oil-fields of Raqqa (north-east Syria), passes through western Syria, where the Russian Su-24 was shot down, and where, on 25th November 2015, surveillance satellites photographed 395 tanker trucks waiting to unload Syrian petrol in the port of Dörtyol, and 60 others in the port of Iskenderun. The Russian generals estimate that an oil tanker full of smuggled petrol leaves Turkish ports every 24 hours.
The second route leaves the oil-fields around the city of Deir ez-Zor in eastern Syria, and heads north, along the banks of the Euphrates, to the Turkish refinery in Batman. A satellite image dated the 18th October 2015 shows 1,722 tanker trucks around the city of Deir ez-Zor waiting to upload petrol.
A third route leaves the north of Iraq, crosses the Turkish border at the crossing point at Zakho, and reaches the Turkish pumping station at Cizre. A satellite image, dated the 14th November 2015, shows the presence of 3,220 tanker trucks crossing the border into Turkey via the crossing point at Zakho. The Russian generals presented two satellite images of a portion of the route from the Syrian city of Azaz to the crossing point on the Turko-Syrian border. The first is dated the 13th November 2015, and shows a column of 240 tanker trucks on the Turkish side of the border, and 80 tanker trucks on the Syrian side. The second satellite image is dated the 16th November 2015, and shows a column of 360 tanker trucks near the same Turko-Syrian border point.
Despite the fighting to the north of the province of Aleppo, the circulation in both directions (to and from Syria and Turkey) continues uninterrupted. It can be observed that there is no control by the Turkish border guards for the IE petrol convoys coming from Syria.
Despite the Coalition bombing led by the USA, last year’s earnings by the terrorist organisation were around 3 million dollars per day. For two months, Russian aviation has carried out airstrikes on 32 petrol complexes, 11 refineries, 23 pumping stations and 1,080 tanker trucks transporting petroleum products. The result for the IE is a loss of 1.5 million dollars per day.
However, the terrorist organisations operating in Syria still receive important sums of money, arms and munitions from the exterior. Turkey, as well as other states, widely supports the terrorists of the IE. Perhaps a part of the payment for the petrol delivered to Turkey over the last week has served to send 2,000 combatants, 120 tons of ammunition and 250 combat vehicles to the IE and the al-Nusra Front. The regular deliveries to Turkey have been going on for 3 to 4 years, and there is no indication that Turkey wants them to cease.
Notes
* Islamic Emirate means Islamic State, ISIS
[1] “Behind the anti-terror alibi, the gas war in the Levant”, by Thierry Meyssan, Translation Roger Lagassé, Voltaire Network, 3 October 2014.
[2] “The role of the Erdogan family within Daesh”, Translation Pete Kimberley, Voltaire Network, 5 August 2015.
Translation Pete Kimberley; courtesy Voltairenet.org
http://www.voltairenet.org/article189526.html
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