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'l'r" Ma
sM I
'm
--m Turkey - A Strategic Centrepiece
One can alvvays count on
Richard Perle the US assistant
Secretary of Defence for interna-tional
security toenthuse over
the most bellicose aspects of
American foreign policy Not
long ago he made some reveal-in- g observations concerning US
attitudes to its NATO ally Turkey
US relations wilh that country Mr Perle
said are "the largest most productive
and least understood programme inSou-ther- n
Lurope" He was referring to Tur-key
's maintanance of the largest military
force of any NATO ally and it's 1 00 per
cent increase in military spending during
tlie Iast 14 years
The military build-u-p in Turkey rarely
makes headline news yet US military
sources quoted in last Octobers Bulletin
ofAtornic Scicntists (BAS) state that the
nuclear vveapon programme in Turkey
"is in an aggressive grovvth stage" The
Bulletin aso quotes a May 1983 article in
Air Force Magazine that says Turkey will
"resume its role as a NATO alert base"
This means aircraft loaded vvith nuclear
bombs vvill be placed on alert ready to
attack targets in the USSR
Of the 500 nuclear vvarheads
deployed by the US in Turkey 300 are on
bombs for aircraft and are stored at four
Turkish bases A fifth base at Incirlik is a
US combat base the most forvvard
deployed base for US tactical forces in
the Middle East According to the BAS:
"Operations at Incirlik have increased sig-nifican- tly
since the signing of the 1980
Defence and Economic Cooperation
Agreement betvveen the United States
and Turkey allovving an increase in the
number of aircraft assigned to Incirlik
from 18 to 36"
Extradition Babenko
Soviet of
of and Slovyansk
During of
their of killed
Germany hard active
iiiiian blood water
The degeneration of Babenko and
that matter
nazi stooges had long be-for- e
the var Babenko
service in the Red
his to the in
the first days of occupation
The renegade displayed savage
nature town ot VasylKivKa
Dnipropetrovsk Region Here he
a submachine gun in hand
the men's against
house of Yevhenia Bunchuk
vhere two partisans at the
time When failed the
butchers set the house on
Soon after other members of
the detachment were
and executed in ali 42
This traitor carried on
work zeal was
and nazis appointed
him chief of the police in
of Prelesne Region
Here he put his activities
a broad footing
Nina Soleynyk vorker at the
locomotive shed at Slovyansk
railroad station "The
nazi stooges perpetrated unspeak-abl- e
they par-tisans
sent young men women
for hard labor plundered Ba-benko
stood out among the others
His appearance alone caused re-pulsio- n"
Maria Kovalenko a senior citizen
participated in the
tells: the of 1943 we
at our risk to put graves
of Soviet in order
about this Babenko
to the on follovving
day Togelher with his assistant
a turncoat like they
torturing us — struck us a
whip drove nails into our heels
our fingers the door
the collapsed from
— f[ ( Black Sea )
~l N--- & — j
C-i- C? — A Izmit ( o Jy "" jv N £7 v
of y-- Murted n
C— ►- - ►£- - Erzurum J A
S ACakmakli JXCigli Iran
CCvo_ Jvj Izmir &-- Erhac-Malat- ya £K BaMtmuasn l(
? AOrtakoy V
~c fz -- k SrV Incirlik JS
"0 f Iraq
n
'
SyMa J
3 7 Mediterranean ~Cr ~ Nuclear Airbases A Army Nuclear VVeapons Siles
Y J~ 1 Contingency Airbases Q Site
v--"' ) I 1
is perhaps most overlooked NA with US nuclear deployed on its soil Not only is il adjacent to Soviet
Union but it is aIso the military Iin k to the Middle East From Incirlik on the south coast US F-1- 6 aircraft armed ivith nuclear can
Fcoov?er tGheloebnatilreLinks inDispeArsraml sbaRseasceinbeyasWterMn Arkin aanrde cRrWucial for attacks DonalltihnegeSrov1i9e8t 5Union or for intervention in the Gulf region
Otlier changes in the
in vvill see tlie production of 140
F-1- 6 planes for deploy-me- nt
in 1988 Under an agreement
in 1982 the is allovved to use
1 6 air bases in and is upgrading
tvvo more and building a third Surveil-lanc- e
of the region was in 1 983
by the stationing of NATO AWACS
(Airborne Warning and Control Sys-tem)
In addition the US defence
of var criminal Vasyl who now resides in Ca-nada
to jurisdiction was at a meeting residents
of the villages Prelesne Maidan Petrivka District
Donetsk on the territory this the
nazis and hireiings — traitors the Ukrainian
3496 civilians including 430 children and sent 5000 to Hitlerite
for labor V Babenko took an part in the mass
actions
is no
for the majority of
begun
evaded
Army and of-ferr- ed
services nazis
the
his
in the
led
polizei assault
the
stayed
the assault
fire
the
partisan cap-ture- d
—
patriots
his bloody
Vasyl Babenko's
noticed the
the vil-lag- e
Donetsk
criminal
on
the
atrocities: executed
and
and
who meeting
'In spring
decided
soldiers Learn-in- g
summon-e- d
us police the
himself began
with
pressed with
until people
12
Bulgaria _A - USSR
Yenisehir
Balikesir Eskisehir
j
f
Cl 1
Command
Tuikey the TO member iveapons the
iveapons
region Turkey
the Fieldhouse
military build-u- p
Turkey
signed US
Turkey
enhanced
budget
demanded
Region the war district
people —
people
punitive
testifies:
pain Inen tney poured cold vater
over them and continued the tor-tur- es
The same was also done to
collective farmer V Bilychenko
and teacher O Shevchenko: the
former was 'guilty' of burying
dead Soviet soldiers the latter had
refused to repair the road used by
the nazis for transporting ammuni-tio- n
and equipment"
Here are other vvitnesses' accounts
"Our house was next to the police
station and I often heard cries and
groans come from the room where
Babenko carried on interroga-tions- "
says L Nahorna "At the
end of the spring of 1943 early in
the morning he led the polizei men
to the Sukhy Torets river where
partisans vere hiding in the reeds
Later on we found six dead peo-ple
there They were Mykhailo
Bondar Ivan Holosny Leonid
Zhytnyk Ivan Krainyk Olexiy
Yaroshenko and Taisia Voloshyna"
His servility to the Hitlerites vvon
Babenko a nazi award Nadia
Vinnyk a teacher of the local
school remembers vell that day
Ali villagers — women children
old people — were driven together
on the square The strains of bra-vur- a
music could be heard and a
German photographer was clicking
his camera Babenko torturing the
Ukrainian language by affecting
a German accent said: "Receiving
this high award I pledge to fight
against the partisans communists
and the Jews to the last I thank
the German command and Adolf
Hitler for the honor done to me"
The traitor did not know then that
the photos taken during that Jarce
vvould become documentary eviden-c- e
After the expulsion of the
invaders these photos would be
among the documents captured by
advancing Soviet troops
The present address of the traitor
who managed to flee is the city
Gateway to the Third World
Merzifon~rv-~'"""'"''"- ~"
DÄSä
VW
nuclear-capabl- e
provides Turkey vvith just under $1 1 bil-lio- n
a year for the modemisation of its
armed forces
Despite Turkish and US assertions that
the nuclear bases are not related to the
development of the US Rapid Deploy-me- nt
Force and the Central Command
the military build-u- p in Turkey has a clear
significance outside NATO's sphere of
concerns Planes stationed at the Mus air
base currently under construction
of Toronto Canada It is here that
he has found shelter and protec-tio- n
Meanwhile the declaration on
the responsibility of the war cri-mina- ls that was signed by the
Allied countries in October 1943
stated that those who had not yet
stained their hands vvith the
blood of the innocent should be
on notice not to find themselves
among the perpetrators for the
three Allied countries shall find
them even at the world's end
and bring them to justice
The Nuremberg Trials the 40th
anniversary of which is marked by
mankind brought the major war
criminals to justice but part of the
war criminals found shelter and
protection in a number of capita-lis- t
countries Those countries'
reactionary quarters do their ut-mo- st
to diminish the responsibi-lity
of the Hitlerite butchers and
their lackeys for the crimes per-petrated
during WWII The CIA
and ali kinds of associations
"fraternities" and "voices" spon-sore- d
by it have taken various
turnocoats under their wing
War criminal Ivan Dik who corn-mitte- d
atrocities in the miners'
town of Selidove still lives in the
West Another renegade Fedir
Dmytriev former burgomaster of
Olexandrivka District also goes
scot-fre- e The meetings of residents
that have been held in these parts
this year urged Canadian Prime
Minister Brian Mulroney to extra-dit- e
those culprits
The demand of Soviet people hai
met with no response overseas
though This position of the Ca-nadian
Government and the go-vernmen- ts
of other Western coun-tries
where nazi collaborationists
nide from punishment runs coun-te- r
to the universally recognized
international norms and agree-ment- s
and is an outrage upon the
memory of the victims of nazism
Residents of the villages of Pre-lesne
Maidan and Petrivka in
Slovyansk District have again filed
an appeal to the Canadian authori-tie- s
demanding the extradition of
war criminal Vasyl Babenko Hu-ma- n
memory demands retribution
For spilled human blood is no
water
S HASAN and M STOLYAROV
RATAU correspondents
A delegation the of Tampere has Kiev its
tvvin city at the invitation of the City Executive Committee
Head of delegation of Tampere Jarmo Rantanen
intervievved by NFU
Profound and serious contacts
"Among the traditional
friendly contacts Tampere
maintains contacts vvith Kiev
cover the longest time and are
perhaps most fruitful" said
Jarmo Rantanen "Our friends-hi- p
has been testcd by time and
by good business relations
Year in year out it becomes
stronger and assumes ever
forms We started vvith the ex-changi- ng
of exhibitions sports
dclcgations performcrs and
tourist groups present our
contcts have a more profound
and serious character They
include long-ter- m exchanges of
students and instructors bet-vveen
the universities in Kiev
and Tampere the mutually
beneficial exchange of expe-rienc- e
various munici-pa- l
services such as housing
construction trade landscape
gardening etc"
What do you think about the
future of these relations?
"New opportunitics are
opening up primarily in the
sphere of economic techno-logic- al
and Scientific exchange
The chief aim of our visit is to
discuss the future of these
contacts
"I think that our contacts
and cooperation convincingly
confirm the fact that people vvho
live in countries with different
political and social systems can
be true friends and do much for
the strengthening of mutual un- -
vvould be only 500 miles from Tehran
and 700 miles from the Gulf The BAS
quoted the director of the US Air Force
military construction as telling Congress
in 1983 that the strategic value of US
bases in Turkey vvould cover "contingen-cies- "
other than the southern flank of
NATO Efforts by the US to enhance its
military presence in other areas of the
Middle East can only be assisted by its
military build-u- p in Turkey
from Finnish city visited
Kiev
the Mayor vvas
new
At
betvveen
derstanding and the preser-vatio- n
of peace on earth'"
We know well that the Fin-nish
people favor the creation of
a nuclear weapons free zone in
the north of Europe The Soviet
Union supports this initiative
What do the Finns think of the
Soviet proposals on complete
elimination of nuclear arms up
to the end of the 20th century?
"Finns highly appreciate
the goodwill of the Soviet Union
which has twice prolonged its
moratorium on nuclear tests
It is clear that the elimi-nation
of nuclear arms meets
the interests of ali people Every
sober-minde- d person must un-dersta- nd
the necessity of imme-diat- e
solution of this problem
The vvhole world sees that the
Soviet Union is ready for honest
talks vvith the United States
that it is prepared for decisive
steps to get the talks on nuclear
disarmament out of the dead-loc- k
of futile debates We would
like to see an equally serious
and businesslike approach to
the most important problems of
today on the part of the US
Administration At present un-fortuna- tely
its position is an
obstacle in the way of ali man-kind
desire to live in peace and
friendship"
Interviewed by Oleh Manko
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Viikkosanomat, July 28, 1986 |
| Language | fi |
| Subject | Finland -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Finland; Finnish Canadians Newspapers |
| Date | 1986-07-28 |
| Type | application/pdf |
| Format | text |
| Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
| Identifier | VikkoD7000508 |
Description
| Title | 000906 |
| OCR text | 'l'r" Ma sM I 'm --m Turkey - A Strategic Centrepiece One can alvvays count on Richard Perle the US assistant Secretary of Defence for interna-tional security toenthuse over the most bellicose aspects of American foreign policy Not long ago he made some reveal-in- g observations concerning US attitudes to its NATO ally Turkey US relations wilh that country Mr Perle said are "the largest most productive and least understood programme inSou-ther- n Lurope" He was referring to Tur-key 's maintanance of the largest military force of any NATO ally and it's 1 00 per cent increase in military spending during tlie Iast 14 years The military build-u-p in Turkey rarely makes headline news yet US military sources quoted in last Octobers Bulletin ofAtornic Scicntists (BAS) state that the nuclear vveapon programme in Turkey "is in an aggressive grovvth stage" The Bulletin aso quotes a May 1983 article in Air Force Magazine that says Turkey will "resume its role as a NATO alert base" This means aircraft loaded vvith nuclear bombs vvill be placed on alert ready to attack targets in the USSR Of the 500 nuclear vvarheads deployed by the US in Turkey 300 are on bombs for aircraft and are stored at four Turkish bases A fifth base at Incirlik is a US combat base the most forvvard deployed base for US tactical forces in the Middle East According to the BAS: "Operations at Incirlik have increased sig-nifican- tly since the signing of the 1980 Defence and Economic Cooperation Agreement betvveen the United States and Turkey allovving an increase in the number of aircraft assigned to Incirlik from 18 to 36" Extradition Babenko Soviet of of and Slovyansk During of their of killed Germany hard active iiiiian blood water The degeneration of Babenko and that matter nazi stooges had long be-for- e the var Babenko service in the Red his to the in the first days of occupation The renegade displayed savage nature town ot VasylKivKa Dnipropetrovsk Region Here he a submachine gun in hand the men's against house of Yevhenia Bunchuk vhere two partisans at the time When failed the butchers set the house on Soon after other members of the detachment were and executed in ali 42 This traitor carried on work zeal was and nazis appointed him chief of the police in of Prelesne Region Here he put his activities a broad footing Nina Soleynyk vorker at the locomotive shed at Slovyansk railroad station "The nazi stooges perpetrated unspeak-abl- e they par-tisans sent young men women for hard labor plundered Ba-benko stood out among the others His appearance alone caused re-pulsio- n" Maria Kovalenko a senior citizen participated in the tells: the of 1943 we at our risk to put graves of Soviet in order about this Babenko to the on follovving day Togelher with his assistant a turncoat like they torturing us — struck us a whip drove nails into our heels our fingers the door the collapsed from — f[ ( Black Sea ) ~l N--- & — j C-i- C? — A Izmit ( o Jy "" jv N £7 v of y-- Murted n C— ►- - ►£- - Erzurum J A S ACakmakli JXCigli Iran CCvo_ Jvj Izmir &-- Erhac-Malat- ya £K BaMtmuasn l( ? AOrtakoy V ~c fz -- k SrV Incirlik JS "0 f Iraq n ' SyMa J 3 7 Mediterranean ~Cr ~ Nuclear Airbases A Army Nuclear VVeapons Siles Y J~ 1 Contingency Airbases Q Site v--"' ) I 1 is perhaps most overlooked NA with US nuclear deployed on its soil Not only is il adjacent to Soviet Union but it is aIso the military Iin k to the Middle East From Incirlik on the south coast US F-1- 6 aircraft armed ivith nuclear can Fcoov?er tGheloebnatilreLinks inDispeArsraml sbaRseasceinbeyasWterMn Arkin aanrde cRrWucial for attacks DonalltihnegeSrov1i9e8t 5Union or for intervention in the Gulf region Otlier changes in the in vvill see tlie production of 140 F-1- 6 planes for deploy-me- nt in 1988 Under an agreement in 1982 the is allovved to use 1 6 air bases in and is upgrading tvvo more and building a third Surveil-lanc- e of the region was in 1 983 by the stationing of NATO AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control Sys-tem) In addition the US defence of var criminal Vasyl who now resides in Ca-nada to jurisdiction was at a meeting residents of the villages Prelesne Maidan Petrivka District Donetsk on the territory this the nazis and hireiings — traitors the Ukrainian 3496 civilians including 430 children and sent 5000 to Hitlerite for labor V Babenko took an part in the mass actions is no for the majority of begun evaded Army and of-ferr- ed services nazis the his in the led polizei assault the stayed the assault fire the partisan cap-ture- d — patriots his bloody Vasyl Babenko's noticed the the vil-lag- e Donetsk criminal on the atrocities: executed and and who meeting 'In spring decided soldiers Learn-in- g summon-e- d us police the himself began with pressed with until people 12 Bulgaria _A - USSR Yenisehir Balikesir Eskisehir j f Cl 1 Command Tuikey the TO member iveapons the iveapons region Turkey the Fieldhouse military build-u- p Turkey signed US Turkey enhanced budget demanded Region the war district people — people punitive testifies: pain Inen tney poured cold vater over them and continued the tor-tur- es The same was also done to collective farmer V Bilychenko and teacher O Shevchenko: the former was 'guilty' of burying dead Soviet soldiers the latter had refused to repair the road used by the nazis for transporting ammuni-tio- n and equipment" Here are other vvitnesses' accounts "Our house was next to the police station and I often heard cries and groans come from the room where Babenko carried on interroga-tions- " says L Nahorna "At the end of the spring of 1943 early in the morning he led the polizei men to the Sukhy Torets river where partisans vere hiding in the reeds Later on we found six dead peo-ple there They were Mykhailo Bondar Ivan Holosny Leonid Zhytnyk Ivan Krainyk Olexiy Yaroshenko and Taisia Voloshyna" His servility to the Hitlerites vvon Babenko a nazi award Nadia Vinnyk a teacher of the local school remembers vell that day Ali villagers — women children old people — were driven together on the square The strains of bra-vur- a music could be heard and a German photographer was clicking his camera Babenko torturing the Ukrainian language by affecting a German accent said: "Receiving this high award I pledge to fight against the partisans communists and the Jews to the last I thank the German command and Adolf Hitler for the honor done to me" The traitor did not know then that the photos taken during that Jarce vvould become documentary eviden-c- e After the expulsion of the invaders these photos would be among the documents captured by advancing Soviet troops The present address of the traitor who managed to flee is the city Gateway to the Third World Merzifon~rv-~'"""'"''"- ~" DÄSä VW nuclear-capabl- e provides Turkey vvith just under $1 1 bil-lio- n a year for the modemisation of its armed forces Despite Turkish and US assertions that the nuclear bases are not related to the development of the US Rapid Deploy-me- nt Force and the Central Command the military build-u- p in Turkey has a clear significance outside NATO's sphere of concerns Planes stationed at the Mus air base currently under construction of Toronto Canada It is here that he has found shelter and protec-tio- n Meanwhile the declaration on the responsibility of the war cri-mina- ls that was signed by the Allied countries in October 1943 stated that those who had not yet stained their hands vvith the blood of the innocent should be on notice not to find themselves among the perpetrators for the three Allied countries shall find them even at the world's end and bring them to justice The Nuremberg Trials the 40th anniversary of which is marked by mankind brought the major war criminals to justice but part of the war criminals found shelter and protection in a number of capita-lis- t countries Those countries' reactionary quarters do their ut-mo- st to diminish the responsibi-lity of the Hitlerite butchers and their lackeys for the crimes per-petrated during WWII The CIA and ali kinds of associations "fraternities" and "voices" spon-sore- d by it have taken various turnocoats under their wing War criminal Ivan Dik who corn-mitte- d atrocities in the miners' town of Selidove still lives in the West Another renegade Fedir Dmytriev former burgomaster of Olexandrivka District also goes scot-fre- e The meetings of residents that have been held in these parts this year urged Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney to extra-dit- e those culprits The demand of Soviet people hai met with no response overseas though This position of the Ca-nadian Government and the go-vernmen- ts of other Western coun-tries where nazi collaborationists nide from punishment runs coun-te- r to the universally recognized international norms and agree-ment- s and is an outrage upon the memory of the victims of nazism Residents of the villages of Pre-lesne Maidan and Petrivka in Slovyansk District have again filed an appeal to the Canadian authori-tie- s demanding the extradition of war criminal Vasyl Babenko Hu-ma- n memory demands retribution For spilled human blood is no water S HASAN and M STOLYAROV RATAU correspondents A delegation the of Tampere has Kiev its tvvin city at the invitation of the City Executive Committee Head of delegation of Tampere Jarmo Rantanen intervievved by NFU Profound and serious contacts "Among the traditional friendly contacts Tampere maintains contacts vvith Kiev cover the longest time and are perhaps most fruitful" said Jarmo Rantanen "Our friends-hi- p has been testcd by time and by good business relations Year in year out it becomes stronger and assumes ever forms We started vvith the ex-changi- ng of exhibitions sports dclcgations performcrs and tourist groups present our contcts have a more profound and serious character They include long-ter- m exchanges of students and instructors bet-vveen the universities in Kiev and Tampere the mutually beneficial exchange of expe-rienc- e various munici-pa- l services such as housing construction trade landscape gardening etc" What do you think about the future of these relations? "New opportunitics are opening up primarily in the sphere of economic techno-logic- al and Scientific exchange The chief aim of our visit is to discuss the future of these contacts "I think that our contacts and cooperation convincingly confirm the fact that people vvho live in countries with different political and social systems can be true friends and do much for the strengthening of mutual un- - vvould be only 500 miles from Tehran and 700 miles from the Gulf The BAS quoted the director of the US Air Force military construction as telling Congress in 1983 that the strategic value of US bases in Turkey vvould cover "contingen-cies- " other than the southern flank of NATO Efforts by the US to enhance its military presence in other areas of the Middle East can only be assisted by its military build-u- p in Turkey from Finnish city visited Kiev the Mayor vvas new At betvveen derstanding and the preser-vatio- n of peace on earth'" We know well that the Fin-nish people favor the creation of a nuclear weapons free zone in the north of Europe The Soviet Union supports this initiative What do the Finns think of the Soviet proposals on complete elimination of nuclear arms up to the end of the 20th century? "Finns highly appreciate the goodwill of the Soviet Union which has twice prolonged its moratorium on nuclear tests It is clear that the elimi-nation of nuclear arms meets the interests of ali people Every sober-minde- d person must un-dersta- nd the necessity of imme-diat- e solution of this problem The vvhole world sees that the Soviet Union is ready for honest talks vvith the United States that it is prepared for decisive steps to get the talks on nuclear disarmament out of the dead-loc- k of futile debates We would like to see an equally serious and businesslike approach to the most important problems of today on the part of the US Administration At present un-fortuna- tely its position is an obstacle in the way of ali man-kind desire to live in peace and friendship" Interviewed by Oleh Manko |
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