Page 170 - Mastermind: The Truth of the British Deep State Revealed
P. 170

Jon Henley from the Guardian pointed out the irrationality of
                        Churchill's acts in his piece 'Remembering Gallipoli: Honoring the
                        Bravery Amid the Bloody Slaughter' and called Churchill the 'ambitious'

                        conceiver of the 'badly planned and appallingly executed' Gallipoli

                        Campaign. Even if he was right about Churchill's futile ambitions,
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                        Henley must have known that the Gallipoli Campaign resulted in a de-
                        feat for the British, not because it was appallingly executed, but because

                        of the faith and determination of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and the pas-

                        sion of the Turkish people, resulting from their unshakable faith in
                        God.

                             Following the fiasco, Churchill resigned as the person primarily re-

                        sponsible for the loss of the British army in Gallipoli (December 1915).
                        When Lloyd George took over as the Prime Minister in 1917, Churchill

                        was appointed as the Minister of Munitions and continued his politi-
                        cal career despite minor interruptions. It is interesting that, even after

                        the Gallipoli defeat, Churchill could make a come-back on the politi-
                        cal scene. This was possible because he was a loyal –as the British put

                        it– 'British bulldog'. As a matter of fact, during WWII, instigated by
                        the British deep state, Churchill was again on the scene.

                             After the British navy and army sustained a heavy defeat in Gal-

                        lipoli, many criminal investigations were started against Churchill.
                        While before the defeat, he was confident in his skills and made arro-

                        gant remarks saying that he would soon be sitting in the center of Mus-
                        lims, Istanbul, in his navy uniform, he completely changed his tone fol-

                        lowing the defeat, especially in the face of accusations directed at him.
                        One day, backed into a corner by the criticism, he said: "Don't you un-

                        derstand? We didn't fight the Turks at Gallipoli. We fought God and
                        of course we lost." (Certainly Almighty God is above such remarks).
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