Archive for the ‘Erdogan’ Category

Erdogan threatens US with ‘Ottoman slap,’ says all NATO …

Washington could soon receive the "Ottoman slap," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned, while also stating that all members of NATO are equal with the US.

While speaking to the ruling Justice and Development (AK) party in Ankara on Tuesday, Erdogan referenced a recent remark by Lt. Gen. Paul E. Funk, the top US commander in the US-led coalition against Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL), who said that Turkey would face a sharp response if it struck Manbij, Syria.

Those who say they will give a sharp response if hit, have clearly never got the Ottoman slap in their lives, Erdogan said, referring to a half-legendary Turkish martial move that involves a potent open-palm hit, resulting in a one-hit knockout or even skull fractures and death.

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Erdogan also addressed the NATO alliance, of which both Turkey and the US are members. "What kind of NATO membership is this? What kind of NATO alliance is this?" he asked. "As president of Turkey, [I say] NATO is not equal to the US, all countries [in the alliance] are equals to the US."

His remarks come at a time of increasingly strained relations between the US and Turkey. On Monday, Ankara sought clarity from the US while threatening to break ties. Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusogli told journalists that his country sought "concrete steps" from Washington, adding that US actions are the reason for "missing trust" between the two NATO allies.

Meanwhile, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Tuesday that Turkey had briefed the alliance about its operations in Syria's Afrin last week. He went on to express hope that such briefings would continue.

"Turkey has briefed NATO on the operation Olive Branch, they did so last week, and I have been in regular contact with the Turkish leadership, including with president Erdogan regarding the situation in Syria and the operation Olive Branch. I expect Turkey to continue to brief allies," Stoltenberg said.

The NATO secretary-general also acknowledged Turkey's "legitimate security concerns," and its right to address those concerns. "But they should do that in a proportionate and measured way," he said.

Turkeys officials, however, do not seem to be satisfied with the ambiguous statements from their NATO allies anymore. On Monday, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has harshly responded to a similar statement on understanding Ankaras legitimate security concerns produced by the US Defence Secretary James Mattis.

Our demands from the US are clear and have already been conveyed. We no longer want to hear about promises; we want to hear about concrete steps. Trust needs to be rebuilt so we can start to talk about some issues, Cavusoglu said on Monday.

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Turkish helicopter shot down by Kurdish militia in Syria’s …

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - A Turkish army helicopter was shot down by Syrian Kurdish YPG fighters near the north Syrian town of Afrin, President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday, and the Turkish military said two soldiers on board the aircraft were killed.

YPG sources separately confirmed the downing of the helicopter.

One of our helicopters was downed just recently, Erdogan told members of his AK Party in Istanbul. These things will happen, we are in a war ... We might lose a helicopter, but theyll pay the price for this.

A statement from the Turkish military did not specify a reason for why the helicopter crashed. It said two soldiers on board were killed and technical crews were investigating the crash.

The downed helicopter was the first officially confirmed loss of a Turkish aircraft over Syria since the start of the countrys long-running civil war.

In another statement, the Turkish military said a total of nine soldiers were killed and 11 wounded on Saturday in clashes with mainly Kurdish forces near Afrin. It said it had killed 39 militants.

Ankara launched an air and ground offensive last month against Kurdish fighters in Syrias Afrin region on its border, opening a new front in the multi-sided Syrian war.

Separately, the Turkish military said on Friday the construction of a fifth military post near Syrias northwestern region of Idlib had begun.

Turkey agreed to set up 12 observation posts in Idlib and neighbouring provinces under a deal reached with Tehran and Moscow to try to reduce fighting between pro-government forces and mainly Islamist insurgents in northwest Syria.

However, the de-escalation in violence they were meant to monitor has collapsed. The Syrian army, alongside Iranian-backed militias and heavy Russian air power, launched a major offensive in December to take territory in Idlib province.

Idlib is one of the last main strongholds of rebels opposed to President Bashar al-Assad, who have been driven from most of their bastions in Syria since Russia joined the war on the side of Assads government in 2015. Turkey has long been one of the main allies of the anti-Assad rebels.

Reporting by Ali Kucukgocmen in ISTANBUL and Lisa Barrington in BEIRUT; Editing by Stephen Powell and Paul Tait

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Erdogan, Pope Form Unholy, Anti-Trump Alliance to Control …

So Esau went unto Ishmael, and took unto the wives that he had Mahalath the daughter of Ishmael Avrahams son, the sister of Nebaioth, to be his wife. Genesis 28:9 (The Israel Bible)

Turkish and Vatican flags (Photo via Shutterstock)

A meeting on Monday between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoan and Pope Francis may have grave implications for Jerusalem as both leaders appear to be building an agenda based upon their joint opposition to US President Donald Trumps recognition of the city as Israels capital.

The meeting, which took place at the Vatican, was already significant in that it was the first visit by a Turkish head of state since diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Turkey were established in 1960. However, a statement released by the Vatican says that both leaders also used the occasion to discuss the the status of Jerusalem, highlighting the need to promote peace and stability in the region (Middle East) through dialogue and negotiation, with respect for human rights and international law.

Both Erdogan and Pope Francis are opposed to U.S. President Donald Trumps decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Erdogan responded to the move by calling for an emergency meeting of the OIC. The summit, held in Istanbul, declared East Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Palestine and called upon all countries to recognize the State of Palestine and East Jerusalem as its occupied capital.

The OIC also declared Trumps decision null and void legally and a deliberate undermining of all peace efforts that would give impetus to extremism and terrorism.

Erdogan, who spoke by phone with the pope at the time expressing his concerns over Jerusalem, called upon the Vatican in Mondays meeting to help Turkey and the Muslim world preserve Jerusalems status.

We need to work together to preserve Jerusalems status, he said to Pope Francis. The messages you will convey to the Catholic world on this are important, Erdogan said, emphasizing that both leaders had agreed to continue joint efforts.

Turkey currently holds the presidency of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), a coalition of 57 Muslim states. Islam is currently the second largest religion in the world with 1.6 billion followers, and an alliance between Catholicism, which has 1.2 billion adherents worldwide could very well make a formidable force for advancing an anti-Israel agenda concerning Jerusalem. Moreover, Though the Vatican has enormous influence internationally, it has no military. This deficiency could be offset by an alliance with Turkey which has the largest military in the region.

Prolific end-of-days author and educator, Rabbi Pinchas Winston noted that an alliance between Catholicism and Islam was predicted as an essential step in the process of Moshiach (Messiah). Rabbi Winston referenced a work that goes into detail on the process of the Messianic Redemption called, Kol Hatur (Cry of the Turtle Dove). It was written in the 18th century by Hillel Rivlin of Shklov, a close disciple of Rabbi Elijah ben Solomon Zalman, the leading rabbi of the generation known as the Vilna Gaon.

This meeting doesnt make sense historically or logically since Islam and Catholicism have been at war for a millennium, Rabbi Winston told Breaking Israel News. It especially doesnt make sense since they fought over Jerusalem throughout the Middle Ages during the Crusades.

But since we are in the age of Geula (Redemption), they are coming together, precisely as described by the Vilna Gaon.

Rabbi Winston explained that the coming of Moshiach primarily consists of two stages. The return to Israel takes place during the first stage with Moshiach ben Yosef (Messiah from the house of Joseph) and the second stage by Moshiach ben David (Messiah from the house of David).

Moshaich ben Yosef and Moshiach ben Dovid are described as the shor (bull) and the chamor (donkey) for Moshiach on the side of kedusha (holiness), he noted. Their counterparts are Esau and Ishmael who are the shor and chamor from the side of tumah (impurity).

Just as the two Messiahs will appear in the end-of-days, Esau, which is represented by the Catholic Church and Ishmael, which is represented by Islam will appear together in the End-of-Days.

Despite their conflict with each other over the timespan of approximately 1,500 years, Ishmael and Esau actually forged an alliance almost 4,000 years ago when the latter married the daughter of the former.

So Esau went unto Ishmael, and took unto the wives that he had Mahalath the daughter of Ishmael Avrahams son, the sister of Nebaioth, to be his wife. Genesis 28:9

Rabbi Winston explained that this unlikely union consisting of two opposing forces will be facilitated by the erev rav (mixed multitude), largely consisting of liberal, left-wing Jews.

The function of the erev rav is to bring together Esav and Ishmael, he added. Today, they are the people who object to Israels connection to Jerusalem. The liberal left should object to Islamic values but they are connecting with Islam and bringing together East and West.

The Vilna Gaon said that in the end-of-days, there will be a large number of Jews who will take up the cause of Esau and Ishmael at the gates of Jerusalem.

Pope Francis may actually view an Islamic global agenda as being worthy of support. The pope on Monday presented Erdogan with an angel of peace on a bronze medallion, that is seen embracing the northern and southern hemispheres while overcoming a dragon.

This is the angel of peace who strangles the demon of war, the pope told Erdogan as he gave him the medallion. (It is) a symbol of a world based on peace and justice.

Pope Francis presented Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas with a similar medallion at the Vatican in May 2015. At the time, the pope said that the angel of peace was destroying the bad spirit of war and praised Abbas for being an angel of peace.

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Erdogan: Turkeys Syria op will move to Idlib after mission …

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has promised to take Ankaras Syria operation to Idlib after completing the current mission in Afrin, where they are targeting Kurdish militants.

"We want our Syrian brothers and sisters to return to their land, and now we want to do the same in Idlib what we have done in Afrin, Erdogan said.

Its not the first time the Turkish leader has stated that the campaign against Kurdish militia in Syria could actually spread beyond Afrin.

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Our heroic soldiersare making history today in Afrin. And they will make history tomorrow wherever there are terrorists along our borders, the Turkish President said late last month.

On January 20, the Turkish General Staff officially declared the start of the military campaign in Syria's northwestern Afrin region, calling it Operation Olive Branch. Ankara launched airstrikes against Kurdish positions, with Turkish troops advancing into the Kurd-held territories. The Turkish armed forces are supported by the Free Syrian Army (FSA) an Ankara-backed paramilitary opposition group which consists mainly of Syrian Arab and Syrian Turkmen groups, which hold the territories in Afrin.

The Turkish General Staff said last week that as many as 899 fighters of the Syrian Kurdish militias which they said included the Peoples Protection Units (YPG), Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants and Islamic State (IS, former ISIS) terrorists were neutralized since the launch of Operation Olive Branch.

Formed as an armed wing of the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party, the YPG rapidly expanded during the Syrian civil war. The group also fought against IS and received backing from the US-led coalition, which supplied them with weapons.

Such US support has greatly contributed to ongoing hostilities in the Afrin region, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Thursday.

The US backing of their clients in violation of Washingtons statements in support of the Syrian Arab Republics territorial integrity have led to the escalation in the Afrin region, where there are no government troops at all at the moment, the Ministry said.

In a telephone conversation earlier on Thursday, Erdogan spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin regarding the situation in Syria. They agreed to hold another three-way summit on Syria with Russia, Turkey and Iran; a source in Erdogans administration said. The event is expected to take place in Istanbul.

Erdogan and Putin have also discussed the need to expedite the establishment of observation posts in the de-escalation zone of Idlib governorate, Turkish media report.

In early October, Turkish military forces were deployed to Idlib province to monitor one of four de-escalations zones located there. The proposal to establish the zones, championed by Russia, was finalized in September at a round of Syrian peace talks in Astana.

The first three-way summit between the leaders of Russia, Turkey and Iran, which was aimed at ending the bloodshed in Syria, took place in the southern Russian resort of Sochi in November.

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Protesters clash with police in Rome as Pope meets Erdogan …

Dozens of demonstrators clashed with police near the Vatican during the Turkish presidents visit to Rome, as protesters denounced Recep Tayyip Erdogans presence amid Ankaras anti-Kurdish military campaign in Syria.

Despite Pope Francis 24-hour ban on city center demonstrations, around 200 Kurd supporters turned up near Castel SantAngelo on the banks of the River Tiber to stage a sit-in protest. The demonstration turned violent after protesters tried to march closer to Vatican, where Erdogan and Francis were meeting. Some pushed through police cordons to have their voices heard in the Vatican, resulting in two arrests.

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A pro-Kurdish activist group met resistance from police officers as they attempted to break through the security line. Police officers dressed in riot gear and wielding batons pushed back the protesters who shouted Shame, shame.

At least one demonstrator was injured in the scuffles, with pictures from the scene showing a man with a bloody forehead injury lying on the ground.

A demonstration was earlier authorised several blocks away from the Vatican, and some 3,500 police officers were dispatched to Rome in preparation for president Erdogans official visit Monday.

Pope Francis put the city on lockdown to facilitate the safe travel of Erdogans motorcade. The protests took place despite Italian authorities banning protests for one day in green zones, spanning the Vatican, Erdogans hotel and Italian palaces.

READ MORE: Pope Francis jokingly calls gossiping nuns terrorists

Erdogan was returning the gesture by Pope Francis who visited Turkey in 2014. The trip marks the first visit by a Turkish president to the Vatican in 59 years.

The pair met privately for around 50 minutes and discussed the situation in the Middle East, with particular reference to the status of Jerusalem, highlighting the need to promote peace and stability in the region, as well as the condition of Catholics in Turkey and Ankaras reception of refugees, according to a statement from the Vatican.

The meeting concluded with Francis presenting Erdogan with a bronze medallion which featured an "angel of peace who strangles the demon of war as a symbol of a world based on peace and justice."

Erdogans trip to Italy comes as the Turkish army is engaged in a military campaign in Kurdish-held Afrin in northern Syria which sparked a wave of protests abroad. Dubbed Operation Olive Branch, its targeting Kurdish groups such as the PKK and the Kurdish Peoples Protection Units (YPG) which Ankara considers to be terrorist groups.

Ankara says it wants to prevent Kurdish militias from infiltrating Turkey and aims to create a 30-kilometer secure zone within Syrian territory. While Turkey claims hundreds of terrorists have been killed, the Kurds have accused Turkish troops of targeting civilians. Some 15,000 people have been displaced since the start of the offensive, according to UN figures.

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