Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Turkey runs special covert operations in Western Europe, US and Canada, secret document reveals

February 1, 2023
A A
Turkish intelligence’s vast network of surveillance in Europe, Americas, Africa, Asia exposed in secret files
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Abdullah Bozkurt/Stockholm

 

The Islamist regime of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has sanctioned a covert operation in a number of Western countries in Europe and North America, aiming to locate former police chiefs who had in the past investigated wrongdoing in the government.

According to a secret government document obtained by Nordic Monitor, the Erdoğan regime has been running highly classified, intelligence-gathering operations in nine Western countries that were tasked with a specific goal to accomplish.

The operations, kept strictly confidential, were launched to locate former police chiefs who had investigated and gathered incriminating evidence in cases involving pervasive corruption in the administration, sophisticated Iran sanctions-busting schemes, the government’s aiding and abetting of armed jihadist groups and its links to organized crime syndicates.

The document, dated September 28, 2022 and distributed by the Security General Directorate (Emniyet), Turkey’s main law enforcement agency, shows that 55 police chiefs are located in the US, Canada, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, Belgium and Norway.

 

Secret Security General Directorate document reveals spying operations in nine Western countries by Turkish intelligence: 

 

While sharing the information with provincial police departments to further investigate the profiled police chiefs, the Security General Directorate warned that the information passed from abroad must be treated on a “need-to-know” basis and was “not to be shared with unauthorized people/institutions.” The warning is a measure to avoid a diplomatic backlash and problems at the bilateral level with these nine countries in the event that the unlawful spying activities on foreign soil are exposed.

The intelligence-gathering operations in these countries were directed by agents who use Turkish embassies as their base of operations. The document refers to “Institution V” as the original source of the intelligence, which is a way of indicating the Foreign Ministry Security and Research Directorate (otherwise known as the intelligence section, or Araştırma ve Güvenlik İşleri Genel Müdürlüğü in Turkish), a secretive spy section of the Turkish Foreign Ministry.

 

Zarrab (C) is seen being escorted by police after a medical screening in İstanbul in this December 17, 2013 file photo.

President Erdoğan has unlawfully and summarily purged tens of thousands of police officers including most veteran police chiefs since December 2013, when corruption cases were made public and incriminated him, his family members and his business and political associates in illegal schemes that helped Iran launder money using Turkish banks.

Apparently Erdoğan and his cronies fear that the police chiefs who managed to escape from wrongful imprisonment in Turkey and sought asylum in Western countries may create headaches for him and his inner circle in the future. Many of these police chiefs are believed to possess critical information and evidence that may very well help build legal cases abroad against Erdoğan and his close associates.

In fact, one of those police chiefs, Huseyin Korkmaz, turned up as a government witness in a federal case in New York in which US attorneys indicted a Turkish state bank official, a former minister and an Iranian operative named Reza Zarrab, who laundered Iranian government funds using the Turkish state-owned Halkbank in order to avoid US sanctions.

Testifying in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York during the 2017 trial, Korkmaz detailed how the bribery scheme worked to facilitate money transfers between Turkey and Iran in violation of US sanctions based on a 2013 probe for which he was part of the investigation team. Although Erdoğan managed to kill the 2013 corruption case by removing police chiefs, prosecutors and judges in Turkey, he could not prevent US prosecutors from pursuing a similar case in New York.

Although Erdoğan and his ministers had lobbied both the Obama and Trump administrations to derail the case, they failed in their efforts. Zarrab, saved from the Turkish case by Erdoğan, who helped secure his release, turned into a US government witness after his arrest in Miami and submitted submitted damning evidence about how he had bribed Turkish government officials and testified about the money he distributed to Erdoğan family foundations as well as ministers to get the money laundering scheme going through Turkey.

 

The police chiefs and the countries that were subject to spying activities by Turkish agents in the West (the names and identifying information were redacted by Nordic Monitor): 

 

The US case resulted in the conviction of Halkbank deputy general manager Mehmet Hakan Atilla, who served time in the US and was later released to Turkey. A separate indictment was filed in the US against Halkbank, which was the focal point in laundering funds for Iran. The case is still pending at the US Supreme Court over the Erdoğan government’s claim that the bank has immunity from prosecution.

The document does not state exactly what the ultimate goal for spying activities on exiled Turkish police chiefs in Western countries was but mentions that the information was shared in confidence to allow Turkish authorities make use of it in their own work.

The ambiguity in the wording suggests the intelligence can be used for various clandestine operations ranging from assassination plots to intimidation campaigns in an attempt to prevent these police chiefs from divulging sensitive information about President Erdoğan’s dirty laundry.

The police department in Turkey has suffered much in the aftermath of the December 2013 corruption investigations. Within two weeks of the exposure of the corruption probe, Erdoğan sacked some 2,000 police officers including veteran chiefs who were investigating major corruption in the government as well as Iran’s Quds Force network, known in Turkish as Selam Tevhid.

The purge quickly turned into a politically motivated revenge operation by the government that targeted the investigators. In the end tens of thousands of police officers including two-thirds of all police chiefs were dismissed from their jobs and/or jailed. Most of them faced prosecution on fabricated charges, some were jailed and some were forced to live in exile to escape wrongful imprisonment.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Erdoğan’s security advisor says it’s time to stop purchasing American weapons and fighter jets

Next Post

Turkey’s foreign ministry turns into Erdoğan’s intelligence arm with neo-Ottoman ambitions

Abdullah Bozkurt

Abdullah Bozkurt

[email protected]

Next Post
Turkey’s foreign ministry turns into Erdoğan’s intelligence arm with neo-Ottoman ambitions

Turkey’s foreign ministry turns into Erdoğan’s intelligence arm with neo-Ottoman ambitions

Turkish police chief who oversaw torture protected by Erdogan gov’t amid crackdown on critics

Turkish police chief who oversaw torture protected by Erdogan gov’t amid crackdown on critics

February 18, 2026
Erdogan targets anonymous users in sweeping social media crackdown

Erdogan targets anonymous users in sweeping social media crackdown

February 17, 2026
Turkish woman’s Silicon Valley fairy tale built on fraud, forgery and identity theft in the US

Turkish woman’s Silicon Valley fairy tale built on fraud, forgery and identity theft in the US

February 16, 2026
A mafia boss in the UAE continues to direct violence in Turkey despite INTERPOL warrant

A mafia boss in the UAE continues to direct violence in Turkey despite INTERPOL warrant

February 11, 2026
Turkey grants citizenship to foreigners wanted by INTERPOL or who face arrest warrants abroad, letter reveals

Turkey grants citizenship to foreigners wanted by INTERPOL or who face arrest warrants abroad, letter reveals

February 9, 2026
Turkey involves Azerbaijan in national fighter jet project with hopes of financial contribution

Ankara seeks Saudi partnership as financing pressures persist in fighter jet program

February 6, 2026
US indicts Turkish contractor over NATO military construction contracts

US indicts Turkish contractor over NATO military construction contracts

February 5, 2026
Turkey set up secret intelligence cell inside embassy in Moscow, documents reveal

Turkey set up secret intelligence cell inside embassy in Moscow, documents reveal

February 4, 2026
Turkey risks losing ground as EU deepens economic ties with new partners

Turkey risks losing ground as EU deepens economic ties with new partners

February 3, 2026
Turkey’s longstanding tolerance of ISIS and state sponsorship raises fears of more bloodshed

Turkey’s longstanding tolerance of ISIS and state sponsorship raises fears of more bloodshed

February 2, 2026

Nordic Monitor

Nordic Monitor is a news web site and tracking site that is run by the Stockholm-based Nordic Research and Monitoring Network. It covers religious, ideological and ethnic extremist movements and radical groups, with a special focus on Turkey.

Tags

al-Qaeda Cyprus Diyanet drug trafficking Egypt Erdogan espionage European Court of Human Rights Germany Greece Gülen Movement Hakan Fidan Hamas Hulusi Akar Ibrahim Kalın Iran IRGC Quds Force ISIL ISIS Isis al-qaida Israel Libya Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu Milli İstihbarat Teşkilatı MIT Muslim Brotherhood NATO organized crime President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Profiling Qatar Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Russia SADAT spying Spying Activities Suleyman Soylu Sweden Syria Torture Turkey Turkish Intelligence Turkish intelligence agency MIT Ukraine United States

Recent News

Turkish police chief who oversaw torture protected by Erdogan gov’t amid crackdown on critics

Turkish police chief who oversaw torture protected by Erdogan gov’t amid crackdown on critics

February 18, 2026
Erdogan targets anonymous users in sweeping social media crackdown

Erdogan targets anonymous users in sweeping social media crackdown

February 17, 2026
Turkish woman’s Silicon Valley fairy tale built on fraud, forgery and identity theft in the US

Turkish woman’s Silicon Valley fairy tale built on fraud, forgery and identity theft in the US

February 16, 2026

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.