ABDULAZIZ
1861-1876
The world’s fourth biggest army
The world’s third biggest fleet
12 Million sq. km
64 Million
ABDUL HAMID II
1876-1909
Army collapsed spiritually due to Darwinism
The fleet perished in 20 years
1,6 Million sq. km lost
23 Million
FLEET
LAND
POPULATION
DARWINIST EDUCATION
Strongly opposed to Darwinism
Darwinist publications not allowed but banned
Hundreds of thousands of Darwinist books distributed everywhere by ships and trains
The Ottoman Empire lost 1,592,896 sq. km of territory during the reign of Abdul Hamid II. This is twice the current size of modern Turkey.
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As a result of the Janissary revolt in 1808, Selim III was deposed. It was the Mahmut Raif Pasha, also known as the 'British' Mahmut Raif Pasha, who provoked the rebellion.
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(Top) Rioters captured after the 31 March Incident
(Bottom) The Movement Army in Taksim
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(Top) January 23, 1913. People gathered in front of the main Sublime Porte building after the news of the coup came out.
(Bottom) Nazım Pasha, the Minister of the Navy, who was martyred during the coup
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The British deep state has always been the secret power behind all the coups that took place in the Ottoman Empire.
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(Top) The Ottoman Navy left to rot in the Golden Horn.
(Bottom) Submarines became useless after they were withdrawn to the Golden Horn and left to rot there. As a result, the Ottoman Empire had to join WWI without a single submarine.
(Right) The ironclad Mesudiye became a part of the Ottoman Navy during the reign of Sultan Abdülaziz. However, it was left to rot during the reign of Abdul Hamid II.
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British archeologist/spy Gertrude Bell at a picnic with Emir Faisal. In a couple of years, Gertrude would break Iraq away from the Ottoman Empire and Faisal would be its king.
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(Top) From left to right, Wyndham Deedes, Emir Abdullah, Herbert Samuel, Gertrude Bell
(Left) T. E. Lawrence hand in hand with Emir Abdullah
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The Cairo Conference held secretly in 1921, with Winston Churchill as the chairman. The picture shows spies Bell and Lawrence.
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Mediterranean
Lebanon
Syria
Golan Heights
Iraq
Jordan River
West Bank
Gaza Strip
Dead Sea
AMMAN
Israel
Egypt
Saudi Arabia
The concave section in the Jordan-Saudi Arabia border, pointing towards Amman, is called Winston's Hiccup.
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Ármin Vámbéry became a spy for the British deep state after he gained the trust of Abdul Hamid II and earned a residence in the Palace.
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General Sebastiani and French officers as they are showing Sultan Selim and senior officers defense plans for Istanbul.
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Midhat Pasha, the Grand Vizier
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'English' Said Pasha
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Abdullah Cevdet
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Kamil Pasha
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Kamil Pasha, known as English Kamil, is visiting the King of the UK George V and Queen Mary before they travel to India.
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Damad Ferid Pasha
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk warned pro-British Damad Ferid on many occasions and made it clear that British mandate would not be accepted.
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A poster of the Young Turks, who were used by the British deep state.
A picture from the 1st Young Turks Congress held in Paris.
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(Right) Dervish Vahdeti
(Top) The 31 March Movement Army
(Left) People gathered in front of the Palace during the 31 March Incident
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The 31 March Incident was co-planned by Dervish Vahdeti and the British deep state.
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(Top) The Society of the Friends of England– 1919, Istanbul Founders and Executives: Memduh Pasha, Former Minister of Internal Affairs, Şehremini Cemil Pasha, Ahmet Zülüfkül Pasha, Ali Rüştü Efendi
(Right) Membership card for the Society of the Friends of England
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Boris Johnson, the incumbent UK Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, is the great-grandson of Ali Kemal.
(Bottom) Ali Kemal and his Anglo-Swiss wife Winifred Brun
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A painting that depicts Greeks' revolt against the Ottomans. (1820)
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A serene scene from the Ottoman Empire when there were no riots.
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(Left) The homosexual British poet Lord Byron took it upon himself to lead the Greek troops during the Greek insurgency.
(Below) A painting that depicts the assault of Greek soldiers on the common Ottoman people
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Bulgarian rebels in the Ottoman Empire in 1800s. The banner in the back represents the Bulgarian rebels.
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The gunboat SMS Panther that the Germans sent to Agadir, causing a crisis
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(Above) The Strait of Gibraltar by the end of the 1800s
(Left) A castle with a British flag on Gibraltar
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Arab riots were one of the driving forces behind the fall of the Ottoman Empire.
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Occupation of Egypt by the British in 1882
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Egypt after it was invaded by Britain in 1882.
The pictures below show Europeans drinking wine out of historical artifacts.
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The people of the Ottoman Empire were strong and coated with patriotic and spiritual values. Knowing this, the British deep state played an insidious game and made the Ottomans suffer a moral decline by utilizing Darwinist propaganda.
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An example of black propaganda against the Ottoman Empire. Pictures showing the Ottoman flag trampled under feet after the Balkan War.
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(Top) Edward Augustus Freeman
(Bottom) Freeman's student Arthur Evans
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Charles Dickens
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Cardinal Newman
Charles Darwin
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Edwin Pears
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William John Hamilton's Researches in Asia Minor, Pontus, and Armenia
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Stratford Canning
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Richard Cobden
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The insidious plans of the British deep state have never been successful on the Anatolian soil. The number of Muslims on this soil has increased day by day, the sound of the call for prayer has never ceased; and it never will.
Hagia Sophia Mosque in 1854
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Winston Churchill was a member of the British deep state and had a clear stance against Islam. Churchill is pictured with Joseph Stalin and Harry Truman.
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Lord Cromer
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Istanbul in 1900s
(Above) Tophane Mosque
(Bottom) Valide Sultan Mosque
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Augustus Charles Hobart-Hampden
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Arnold Burrowes Kemball
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Valentine Baker
Hugh Pigot Williams
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Baldwin Walker
Felix Woods
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A Greek woman from Istanbul in 1902
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(Top and middle) Heroic Turkish people carrying supplies to the battlefield
(Bottom) Eastern Front during the Turkish War of Independence
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Turkish War of Independence, under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's leadership, was an epic story of heroism that unfolded before the eyes of the world.
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Turkish heroes at the War of Independence are praying at the front.
God gave a glorious victory to this pious army.
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TURKEY
ARMENIA
AZERBAIJAN
IRAN
SYRIA
IRAQ
The British deep state has always had its eyes on Turkish lands and carried out many sinister plots to tear away Southeastern Anatolia in particular. However, they failed to appreciate the bravery of the Turkish nation that fought an epic fight like the Turkish War of Independence. We will never allow a Stalinist Kurdistan to happen.
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The Ottoman Empire was a safe haven for various ethnic groups like Turks, Kurds, Circassians, Arabs among others for 600 years. These communities harmoniously co-existed for centuries.
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(Left) An affluent Ottoman Armenian lady
(Bottom) An Armenian football team in Istanbul
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For centuries, Armenians and Turks lived together in harmony and peace. They are two fraternal peoples of these lands.
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A Muslim scholar is seen together with Patriarchs of Cyprus and Armenians in the 19th century. The British deep state sought to disrupt this union.
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Guns the Armenian gangs used. These gangs were provoked by the British deep state into rebelling against the Ottoman Empire.
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A Cyprus coin from 1890 with Queen Victoria's picture on it
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Armenians of Tomarza, Kayseri, as they are being trained at Cyprus, Monagra Armenian Legion Camp
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Armenians in Cyprus (1878)
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A view from Cyprus in 1800s
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This magnificent Neo-Baroque mosque sits at Ortaköy, Istanbul. It was commissioned by Sultan Abdulmejid and was designed by Armenian architect Nigoğos Balyan in 1853.
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Armenians and Turks lived peacefully side by side for centuries.
(Bottom) Kayseri Talas Armenian Pre-school – June 15, 1911
(Top) Ottoman Armenians engaged in art and craft.
(Left) An Armenian school training artists
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Surp Boğos Armenian Catholic Church opened during the Ottoman Empire still exists and welcomes our Armenian brothers and sisters even today.
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Some of our Armenian brothers, with whom we have lived peacefully together for centuries, participated in the riots against the Ottoman Empire upon the sedition of the British deep state.
(Left) A painting in a French magazine depicting the Armenian riot in the Ottoman Empire
(Right) An Armenian Church built in the Ottoman era in Izmir (1915)
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