About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 47. Chapters: Tuncay Guney, Neil Sedaka, History of the Jews in Turkey, Nouriel Roubini, George Blake, Maurice Abravanel, Julius Martov, Uzeyir Garih, Joseph Nasi, Andre Aciman, Caleb Afendopolo, Dario Moreno, Seyla Benhabib, Tcheky Karyo, Joseph Halevy, Umut Guzelses, Solomon ibn Verga, Telman Ismailov, Dani Rodrik, Chaim Nahum, Iran Eory, Gracia Mendes Nasi, Janet Akyuz Mattei, Rober Eryol, Moris Farhi, Abraham Salomon Camondo, Moses Hamon, 1934 Thrace pogroms, Lior Ashkenazi, Daniel Carasso, Shabtai Levy, Miriam Lichtheim, Moise de Camondo, Avraham Ben-Shoshan, Jeffi Medina, Moshe Sardines, Sami Levi, shak Alaton, Joseph ibn Verga, David Asseo, Samuel Shullam, Victoria Kamhi, SuZy, Ishak Haleva, Solomon Kimhi, Albert Karasu, Cem Stamati, Ceki Ben u e. Excerpt: Tuncay Guney (pronounced; born 25 August 1972 in Karg ), code name "Ipek" (silk), is a Turkish citizen of Jewish descent who claims to have infiltrated the Turkish Gendarmerie's intelligence organization JITEM, Ergenekon, the Workers' Party, and the Gulen movement before being outed. He is subordinate to Mehmet Eymur, who was discharged from the National Intelligence Organization (Turkish: , M T). The information Guney has gleaned on these organizations make him a key figure in the ongoing Ergenekon investigation. His statements form the backbone of the 2455-page Ergenekon indictment, which mentions him 492 times and labels him a suspect at large (Turkish: ). He was inducted in 1990 (aged 18; his father was also a spy) by Galip Tu cu, the head of the Istanbul station. Initially operating in the Reactionary Activities Department (Turkish: ) (i.e., countering religious fundamentalism), Guney was transferred to the Iran station in 1992. His assignment was to infiltrate JITEM and Ergenekon. He met Veli Kucuk during this assignment, who provided him (and thus M T) with much...