4. Military
Coups and Territorial Losses
Many of
the military coups that took place in the past 200 years bear the hidden marks
of British deep state intervention. This dark structure changes administrations
by means of coups, which it considers a quick, cheap and covert way to further
its policies.
Coup
plotters are arrogant and usually impressionable people who are not held to
account for their actions. They fall for the games of the British deep state
for their personal petty gains. They never deserve the positions they gain
through coups, as it is only violence and guns and definitely not their
knowledge, talents, expertise or experience that brings them to such positions.
As such administrations are only transitional regimes, the true names behind
the decisions made during those times remain usually unknown and the corruption
and problems are usually blamed on a few. This way, the true perpetrators, most
notably the British deep state, are kept away from public eyes.
This was
the case with the Ottoman Empire too. When her fall began, she was in
possession of an impressive 500-year-old experience in running an empire. She
had powerful, well-functioning systems in the military, the economy, and
education, among other aspects of life. For this reason, the British deep state
was in need of a transitional regime because that was the only way to control
this powerful Empire. Such intermediate regimes, laden with corruption and
misconducts with no visible culprit, gave these elusive powers the opportunity
they needed to bring the Empire closer to destruction. For this reason, it is
important to carefully analyze the driving power behind the coups in the
Ottoman Empire: the British deep state, just as in many other coups around the
world.
The Origin of All Coups: The Coup of 1876
The first
modern coup in Turkish history is usually considered the one that saw the
deposition of Sultan Abdülaziz in 1876. The coup plotters, i.e., Midhat Pasha
(head of the Committee of the New Ottomans), Hüseyin Avni Pasha (Chief of
Staff), and Süleyman Pasha (Minister of War), deposed the Sultan and brought
Murat V to power instead. As would be the case throughout the Republican period,
military students were used for the coup. Ten days later, Sultan Abdülaziz was
martyred, which was clumsily made to look like a suicide.
As the
British deep state spread the lie that the Ottoman Empire was losing its
influence and became a 'sick man', the Empire was in truth enjoying one of its
powerful eras under the leadership of Sultan Abdülaziz.
In 1876,
the Ottoman Empire was the world's most powerful fourth state; it had the
world's fourth biggest army and the third biggest fleet. In 1876, it encompassed
a territory of 12 million sq. km with a total population of 64 million people.
The 1876 territory of the Ottoman Empire included what are today 35 different
countries. During those days, Istanbul was the world's fifth biggest city.
Sultan
Abdülaziz was a brave sultan that took a clear stance against the British deep
state. He didn't allow the spread of Darwinism, and removed the British deep
state spies from his immediate circle. He removed Hüseyin Avni Pasha from his
duties for being a Darwinist and for his pro-British stance, who would in
return act as one of the plotters of the coup against Sultan Abdülaziz. Hüseyin
Avni Pasha prepared the assassination plan against the Sultan.
Abdülaziz
also immediately shut down Mecmua-i Fünûn (Journal of Sciences) as it
started Darwinist propaganda. His order to dismiss pro-British Ahmed Midhat,
one of the most fervent Darwinist propagandists in the Ottoman Empire, was as
follows:
From
now on, no printing house will ever print anything about Midhat Efendi's monkeys.130
Sultan
Abdülaziz was a devout Muslim, who desired a united Islamic world. During his
rule, he made the Ottoman Army a formidable power with the state-of-art
weapons, which included 25 ironclads and 175 regular warships. As soon as he
ascended to the throne, he tripled the length of the previously 450 km
railways. The last Caliph of Islam Abdulmejid II described his father Abdülaziz
with the following words in the booklet he wrote in 1920s:
Thank
God, my father Abdülaziz Khan was not addicted to any moral weaknesses. In
fact, not only did he never drink any alcohol throughout his life, but also he
didn't smoke. Even coffee was something he drank only on rare occasions. That's
why he had a very strong build. He never got ill during his fifteen-year rule.
However, he was martyred after facing the disaster of being deposed because he
didn't have a single person that could help him with the great works he
initiated.131
The
plotters of this vile coup tried to slander Abdülaziz Khan with claims that he
committed suicide. However, the examination of his body revealed that both of
his wrists had been slit, one side of his beard had been completely ripped off,
his teeth had been knocked out and there was a large bruise on his chest.
Hüseyin
Avni Pasha, the instigator of the murder, went to the Palace to see how his
murder plan went. When he saw that Abdülaziz Khan was still alive after the
scuffle, he ordered that the Sultan be taken to kitchen of the police station
on palace grounds. This is why medical help was delayed for the Sultan, and why
he bled to martyrdom.
To conceal
the traces of a fight, Hüseyin Avni Pasha tore off the curtains in the station
and covered the Sultan's body with the exception of his arms. He asked
physician Marko Pasha, the director of the Military School of Medicine, to
examine his wrists only and write a report of suicide. However, Marko Pasha
declined. Then another military doctor, Colonel Dr. Ömer Bey, was summoned, but
when he refused to sign the report as well, his medals were ripped off his
uniform on the spot and he was exiled to Libya.
Sultan
Abdülaziz was buried hastily the same day in the Sultan Mahmud II Shrine at
Divanyolu.
Turkish
historian İsmail Hami Danişmend, in his five-volume İzahlı Osmanlı Tarihi
Kronolojisi (A Detailed Chronology of Ottoman History), listed thirty one
pieces of evidence proving why the Sultan did not commit suicide. The physician
of the British Embassy also said that no one would be able to cut one's wrists
like that, after seeing the body himself.132
The
account of Nazime Sultan, Sultan Abdülaziz's daughter, leaves no room to doubt
as to what happened:
Any
claims that my father committed suicide are deceitful. I saw it with my own
eyes that they murdered my father.133
No one
believed the suicide lie, because one of the wrestlers that committed the
murder confessed after a while:
Fahri
Bey went from behind and held back his [Sultan Abdülaziz's] arms. Haji Mehmet
and Algerian Mustafa sat on his knees. And I cut his veins in his left arm as
deep as I could with a pocketknife. I even pierced his right arm at several
places with the knife …134
When an
investigation was launched after the bloody attack, anglophile Midhat Pasha
sought refuge in the British Consulate, predicting how events could unfold
against him.
Historians
report that prior to the coup, Midhat Pasha was constantly over-praised by the
European media, most notably by the British papers. Indeed, during his first
term as grand vizier before the coup, which lasted eighty days, Midhat Pasha
allowed Egypt and Tunisia to borrow independently, which caused Egypt to come
under British - and Tunisia under French - rule. After the coup, he was again
appointed grand vizier and he convened the 'Constantinople Conference' (aka the
Shipyard Conference), together with the participation of British officials.
This conference was a milestone because Midhat Pasha, primed by the British
deep state, decided to drag the Ottomans into war with the Russians, which
played a big part in the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.
Territorial Losses after the 1876 Coup
The rule
of Sultan Abdul Hamid II, who was brought into power under pressure from the
British deep state after the 1876 coup, saw the biggest territorial losses in
the Ottoman Empire's history. A total of 1,592,896 sq. km were surrendered in
only thirty-three years, that was the Abdul Hamid II rule.135 The Empire also lost 5 million of
its 24 million population as a result.136 Tunisia, Egypt, Somalia, Serbia, Montenegro,
Bulgaria, Kars, Ardahan, Batum, Thessaly, Cyprus were only some of the lands
surrendered during this time.
Below is
the chronological order of the losses of 1.6 million sq. km Ottoman territory
during this time:
1878 –
Montenegro and Serbia declared independence after the Treaty of Berlin.
1878 –
Bulgaria became an autonomous principality after the Russo-Turkish War of
1877-78, and came largely under German and Austro-Hungarian control.
Bosnia-Herzegovina was granted independence in its domestic affairs. The
territories of Serbia, Montenegro and Romania were expanded. Kars, Ardahan,
Batum and Doğubeyazit were ceded to Russia. Thessaly was ceded to Greece.
1878 –
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Yenipazar were occupied by Austria.
1878 – Abdul
Hamid II gave Cyprus to Britain, in exchange for supposed protection by Britain
against Russia. British troops landed on Cyprus on July 12, 1878, lowered the
Ottoman flag and raised their flags instead.
1881 –
France invaded Tunisia. On June 8, 1883, Tunisia became a French protectorate
after the La Marsa Convention.
1882 –
Britain occupied Egypt.
1884 –
Somalia came under British control.
1885 – The
Ottoman Eyalet of Jeddah and Habesh was invaded by Italy.
1898 – Crete
was granted autonomy.
1899 –
Kuwait was granted autonomy.
1908 –
Bulgaria declared independence.
1908 –
Bosnia-Herzegovina came under the control of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
1908 – Crete
decided to join Greece.
A careful
observation of the developments that took place after this British deep state
coup will reveal how these surrendered lands came either under British control,
or to those of her allies, or turned into small, weak countries that could be
easily controlled. With this treacherous plot, the British deep state not only
broke apart the Ottoman Empire, but also set the stage it needed for its global
rule ambitions.
Other Military Coups
Military
coups and territorial losses of the Ottoman Empire have always been closely
linked. The instability that followed coups largely contributed to the further
weakening of the Empire, as riots broke out across the Empire's lands and major
territories were ceded. Clearly, these were carefully planned incidents by the
British deep state. Let's see what territories the Ottomans lost after coups:
* After the
Janissary Revolt in 1808, Selim III was deposed and was succeeded by Mustafa
IV. It was anglophile Mahmud Raif Pasha, also known as English Mahmud Raif, who
incited this revolt. In the subsequent Russo-Turkish war, Ottomans were
defeated and ceded various areas, while Serbia gained autonomy.
* After
Edward VIII, King of the United Kingdom, and Emperor Nicholas II of Russia
reached a deal on June 9, 1908, the Committee of Union and Progress staged a
bloodless coup and forced Abdul Hamid II to restore the constitutional monarchy
(Second Constitutional Era). Right after this development, the 31 March
Incident and a military coup took place. In fact, spy Gerald Fitzmaurice, who
had been disguised as an interpreter working for the British Embassy, carefully
devised these developments. After the coup, Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia
Herzegovina, and Italy annexed Libya, Rhodes and the Dodecanese islands.
Albania declared independence while Greece annexed Thessaloniki, Crete and
Ioannina, and Bulgaria seized Kavala and Alexandroupoli. This marked the end of
Ottoman rule in Europe.
* On January
23, 1913, Enver Pasha and Talat Pasha of the Committee of Union and Progress
raided the Sublime Porte (central government building of the Ottoman Empire)
and overthrew the government with a coup. This duo plunged the Ottoman Empire
into WWI, which became her death sentence and caused the loss of all Arab
territories.
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