Slanders On Muslims In History


PROPAGANDA POSTERS THAT DO NOT REFLECT THE TRUTH



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PROPAGANDA POSTERS THAT DO NOT REFLECT THE TRUTH

The Armenian issue still highly debated today was first introduced to the world through propaganda posters, illustrations and systematic provocative efforts. The architect of this black propaganda was the British deep state.

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Turks and Armenians have lived together in peace for centuries. They have mixed and become one. The British deep state broke that unity.



(To the side) An Armenian family in the Ottoman Empire

(Below) Armenian doctors in the Ottoman Empire

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Propaganda illustrations that depict the world reign of Uncle Sam and John Bull were frequently used during WWI. The British deep state took the US under its control and managed it as it desired.



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Sir Gilbert Parker

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Joseph Goebbels, Hitler's Propaganda Minister



The British deep state used propaganda as a weapon also during WWII. By means of provocative news, it was able to goad the US into joining the war, which resulted in the victory of Britain.

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The British deep state always claimed to act with the intention of ending barbarism, but brought only more savagery wherever it touched.

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British and Anzacs at the Gallipoli peninsula. These troops, who dug trenches to gain a foothold on shores, weren't allowed to pass through. (1915)

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British and French battleships were sunk or disabled during the naval operations that took place on March 18, 1915.

(Above) Corporal Sayyid, one of the legends of the Battle of Gallipoli

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The Turkish army, despite its 250,000 martyrs, fought hard and didn't open the gates of Dardanelles.



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The child heroes of the Battle of Gallipoli showed the whole world what it meant to be a Turk. The Galatasaray High School didn't have a single graduate in 1915 and 1916 because they were all marytred on the battlefield.

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(Top) The Allied Navy in the Bosphorus and a French plane inspecting the city



(Bottom) The British Navy in the Bosphorus during the occupation of Istanbul.

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(Top) March of the Allied forces on Harbiye-Şişli road in Istanbul

(Middle and left) British soldiers parading in Beyoğlu

(Right) Allied forces on Istiklal Street, Istanbul

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Istanbul in the 1900s…

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(Top) Occupation forces in Taksim

(Bottom) British troops at the Port of Karaköy, Istanbul, during the years of occupation

(Top left) Occupation forces in Istanbul

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Tevfik Pasha, commander of the Seventh Corps in Yemen, was exiled along with other patriot commanders, because he refused to give in to the demands of the British deep state.

(To the side) A Turkish soldier cleaning his shoe before going to the battlefield

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Following the Armistice of Mudros, the Allied Navy anchored in the Bosphorus on November 13, 1918.



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(Top) Louis Franchet d'Espèrey, the commander of French occupation forces, marching from Galata to Şişhane

(Bottom) French commander Louis Franchet d'Espèrey meets British marshall Edmund Allenby in Istanbul port

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(Top) From left to right, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, Italian Prime Minister Vittorio Orlando, French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, and US President Woodrow Wilson at the Paris Peace Conference

(Left) A picture from the Paris Peace Conference

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A painting depicting the Treaty of Versailles signed with Germany. According to many historians, the harsh conditions of the treaty played the biggest role in the rise of the German Nazi Party.



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An illustration depicting Greek ideals during the Greek occupation of Izmir. The British deep state took advantage of the imperialist ambitions of the Greeks. It was too late when the Greeks realized that they were deceived.

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(Left) Occupation forces landing at Izmir



The British deep state promised to give Izmir to Greece.

(Above) Greek army at Izmir port

(Left) The picture shows a parade of Greek soldiers in Izmir, who believed in this promise.

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(Top) The Armistice of Mudros was signed aboard this ship.

(Middle) Allied ships at the Bosphorus after the signing of the Armistice of Mudros

(Bottom) A map that shows the occupied territories after the signing of the Armistice of Mudros

GREECE


BLACK SEA

SOVIET UNION

AEGEAN SEA

MEDITERRANEAN

CYPRUS

SYRIA


IRAQ

Current borders

Lands occupied by Allied Forces

Greek


British

French


Armenian

Georgian


Italian

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Italian soldiers drilling in front of the Dolmabahçe Palace

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Rowdy British soldiers drinking and acting obnoxiously at Marmara shores during the occupation of Istanbul

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(Top) Allied fleet off Dolmabahçe during the years of occupation

(Middle) Allied troops landing at Sarayburnu

(Right) The Saturday Evening Post, published in the US in 1910 depicts Turkish soldiers as savage barbarians. During those years, the US media obtained most of its intelligence about the Middle East through British, which resulted in a horrible perception of 'Turks'. (Turkish nation is above such allegations).

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(Top) A photograph taken during the days when the Nationalist Forces entered Adapazarı

(Bottom) Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and his fellow soldiers during the days of Sivas Congress

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(Left) A 15 or 16 year-old Turkish youngster from the Nationalist Forces, arrested by the British (July 1920)



(Top) Nationalist Forces taken as prisoners by the British

(Bottom) The opening of the Turkish Parliament with prayers. Friday was deliberately chosen for the opening ceremony.

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(Top) A view of the Golden Horn from Galata. Galata Tower was important for the British deep state because it served as a good vantage point for the city.



(Middle) French occupational forces on Galata Bridge

(Bottom) A British submarine deployed in front of Galata Bridge was intended by the British deep state as a display of power.

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Allied forces' military band on Galata Bridge



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A British flag flies over the Galata Tower during the years of occupation as the occupying British troops stand in front of the tower's entry

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(Right) The British post office is right across the British Naval Hospital in Galata. This building was used for intelligence purposes by the British during the years of occupation.



(Left) A British police station on the Galata Tower's street. During the years of occupation, thousands of Turks were blacklisted and tortured in this building, which was used for spying against the Nationalist Forces. Originally built as a British prison, it was later turned into a police station after the British forces occupied Istanbul.

(Right and bottom) The British Naval Hospital. The small tower, situated to the left of Galata Tower, was the observation tower of the British Naval Hospital. During Istanbul's occupation, the British used the tower to spy on the ships that came to Istanbul and gather intelligence.

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(Above) Dervishes at the Galata Mawlawi House



(Left) Hotel Kroecker was used as headquarters by the members of the British deep state. The lower floors of the hotel were used as torture chambers.

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(Right) Galata Mawlavi House Museum

(Bottom) An illustration of the Galata Mawlavi House

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(Top) British marines on Galata Bridge



(Bottom) Occupation forces on Galata Bridge

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A British submarine kept in front of the Galata Bridge with the intent of intimidating people, an effort which failed.

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Allied fleet sailing the waters of Istanbul

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On March 16, 1920, occupying British forces raided the Mızıka Police Station at Şehzadebaşı and martyred four of our soldiers and injured many others.

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(Left) British troops in Galata Tower

(Below) Damat Ferid Pasha, who wanted British mandate for the Ottoman Empire

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Brave Turkish women carrying ammunition to the front on their backs and with ox-driven carts during the Turkish War of Independence



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The British deep state spread ideas as sectarianism and tribalism to create division among Muslims.

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Lloyd George



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Lord Curzon

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Somerset Arthur Gough-Calthorpe



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John Michael de Robeck

George Francis Milne

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(Right) Spies sent by the British deep state to organize riots in the Ottoman Empire: Gertrude Bell and T. E. Lawrence

(Bottom) Bell and Lawrence, seen with Churchill, in Egypt to attend the Cairo Conference

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(Top) Sir Charles Harington Harington



(Middle) İsmet İnönü at the farewell party of Sir Charles Harington Harington, the Commander-in-Chief of the Allied occupation army Istanbul

(Far bottom) Sir James Marshall-Cornwall

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BULGARIA


BLACK SEA

SOVIET UNION

AEGEAN SEA

MEDITERRANEAN

CYPRUS

SYRIA


IRAQ

IRAN


The map of the Republic of Turkey according to the Treaty of Sèvres of 1920. The War of Independence started by Atatürk destroyed this treacherous treaty.

Borders according to the Treaty of Sèvres

The Straits according to the Treaty of Sèvres

Under Greek administration - Treaty of Sèvres

Italian zone of influence - Treaty of Sèvres

British zone of influence - Treaty of Sèvres

French zone of influence - Treaty of Sèvres

Regions to be given to Armenia according to Wilson

Borders according to the Treaty of Lausanne

The Straits according to the Treaty of Lausanne

Demilitarized zone according to the Treaty of Lausanne

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(Top left) The Ottoman delegation that signed the Treaty of Sèvres:

From left to right: Rıza Tevfik, Damat Ferid Pasha, Hadi Pasha, Reşid Halis.

(Top right) Damat Ferid Pasha getting off the train in Sèvres

(Bottom) Parties are signing the Treaty of Sèvres, which essentially delivered the Turkish lands to the Allied Powers.

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200 Miles



International Constantinopolitan State

Turkey


Armenia

Kurdistan or joined to Mesopotamia

Smyrna: semi-autonomous within Turkey

Syria


Mesopotamia

Lebanon: semi-autonomous within Syria

Arabia

BULGARIA


Black Sea

RUSSIA


GEORGIA

ARMENIA


AZERBAIJAN

TURKEY


IRAN

Tigris


Mediterranean Sea

ISRAEL


SYRIA

IRAQ


JORDAN

KUWAIT


Nile

SAUDI ARABIA

Red Sea


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