Archive for the ‘Erdogan’ Category

World War 3: Turkey President Erdogan calls for army of …

Less than a month ago the Turkish states mouthpiece the daily Yeni afak ran an article for Erdogan titled A call for urgent action and on the newspapers website headlined What if an army of Islam formed against Israel?

It called for the 57 member states of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to form a joint army to simultaneously attack Israel from all sides.

The article said: If the member states of the OIC unite militarily, they will form the worlds largest and most comprehensive army.

The number of active soldiers would be at least 5,206,100, while the defence budget would reach approximately $175billion (124billion).

This was accompanied by an interactive map providing formation of military forces for a joint Muslim attack on Israel.

The article provided additional details of the plan, saying: It is expected that 250,000 soldiers will participate in the first of a possible operation.

Land, air and naval bases of member states located in the most critical regions will be used.

Joint bases will be constructed in a short period of time It is possible for 500 tanks and armoured vehicles, 100 planes and 500 attack helicopters and 50 ships to mobilise quickly.

Erdogan did not deny his support for the report and has on several occasions said he would like to resurrect the Ottoman Empire.

The tyrant has established military bases in Qatar and Somalia and recently reached an agreement with Sudan to acquire a Sudanese island in the Red Sea to be used as a military base.

He has also repeatedly threatened to invade Greek islands in the Mediterranean and has recently invaded Syria under the pretext of fighting Kurdish terrorism.

Erdogan has also locked up journalists and activists who have spoken out against his regime.

But the European Union is urging members to approve a further 3.7billion (3.28billion) to help Turkey deal with Syrian refugees who arrived in their country.

Brussels will now push to get Turkey the extra 2.7 billion (2.4billion) from national governments, some of whom may be unwilling to pump new cash into the country.

Europe's relations with Erdogan has been fraught in recent years but the EU depends on Turkey to keep a tight lid on immigration from the Middle East, where the war in Syria has killed hundreds of thousands and pushed millions from homes.

However, a draft document seen by Politico notes that if countries do not contribute and order the money be taken from the EU budget only, standard EU rules would apply and the member states would be excluded from the governance of the facility (for refugees in Turkey).

Top EU officials will meet Erdogan on March 26 in the Bulgarian city of Varna despite misgivings among many on the European side.

The bloc's top migration official Dimitris Avramopoulos will announce on Wednesday that the European Commission proposes the extra funding on projects benefiting Syrian refugees in Turkey.

Turkey has accepted 3.5 million refugees from Syria, and the EU is already spending a first 3billion (2.1billion) instalment to help them.

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Erdogan says Turkey will overcome coronavirus in two-three weeks; school closures extended – Reuters

ANKARA/ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey will overcome the coronavirus outbreak in two to three weeks through good measures, with as little damage as possible, President Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday, as Ankara extended the closure of all schools until April 30.

FILE PHOTO: Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan talks during a news conference following a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) meeting in Ankara, Turkey, March 18, 2020. Presidential Press Office/Handout via REUTERS

Turkeys death toll from the coronavirus jumped by 15 to 59 on Wednesday, and the number of confirmed cases increased by 561 to 2,433. Around 33,000 tests have been conducted in Turkey in the two weeks since the beginning of the outbreak.

In a televised address to the nation, Erdogan said Turkey was prepared for every scenario on the outbreak and urged Turks to show patience, understanding and support.

By breaking the speed of the virus spread in two to three weeks, we will get through this period as soon as possible with as little damage as possible, Erdogan said.

Bright days await us, so long as we adhere by the warnings, remain cautious and careful, he added. Every citizens life is equally valuable for us. That is why we say Stay Home Turkey.

Turkey has taken a series of measures to contain the virus, including limiting the use of public spaces, imposing a partial curfew on the elderly, as well as closing schools, cafes and bars, banning mass prayers, and suspending sports matches and flights.

Earlier on Wednesday, Education Minister Ziya Selcuk said the closure of all schools would be extended until April 30, and said home schooling would continue during this period.

We will enrich efforts and make sure to meet all needs, Selcuk told reporters in Ankara. We can make up for the lost education, but we cant make up for a disease. What is key is our students health.

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca, speaking alongside Selcuk, said the move was not a break but rather a preventive measure to protect families.

On Monday, Koca said Turkey had imported medicine from China that he said was believed to help with the treatment of coronavirus patients, saying the medication was already being administered to patients in intensive care.

As of today, 136 patients in intensive care have received the medicine, Koca said Wednesday. He said experts and officials would examine the medicines impact in coming days.

Koca also said 26 patients had recovered as of Tuesday, the first figures for recovery announced in Turkey, including two senior citizens.

Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu and Ezgi Erkoyun; Editing by Alex Richardson, William Maclean and Leslie Adler

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Erdogan says Turkey will overcome coronavirus in two-three weeks; school closures extended - Reuters

Trump Must Stop Russia And Turkey From Fighting Over Syria – The National Interest

Zbigniew Brzezinski habitually lamented the failureof American Policymakers to study maps of the world, to appreciate the historic impact of wars, economics, history, religion, language, culture, and climate. For Brzezinski, strategytheart and science of employing Washingtons political, economic, psychological, and military powerwas not real without a map.

Turkish PresidentRecep Tayyip Erdoganagrees.When Erdogan views the map of the Middle East,Erdogan sees Syriaand most of Iraq as historic Turkish territory taken from the Turks when the Ottoman Empire collapsed at the end of WWI. It is no accident that Turkswear T-shirtswith Erdogans picture and the slogan The Sultan of the World.

However, Erdogans recent determination to rescue the criminal remnants of the Islamic State or Daesh (ISIS), from destruction at the hands of Russian and Syrian Forces in Idlib, Syria brought him into direct confrontation with another man who appreciates the importance of maps: Vladimir Putin. The Russian border lies barely 500 miles from Syria and Russian Forces remain engaged in suppressingSunni Islamist insurgents in the Caucasus.

Acutely sensitive to the potential threat that President Erdogans mix of Ottoman Nationalism and Sunni Islamism presents, Vladimir Putin has also committed Russia todefend Christiansacross the Middle East and he maintains good relations with Israel. Thanks to President Putin, Sunni and Iranian-backed Shiite Islamist forces have been unable to establish bases in Syria from which they can attack Israel.

For the moment,Erdogans hastily agreed ceasefire with Putingives Ankara continued military control of Syrias Northernmost border, but the ceasefire does not equate to conflict termination. Erdogans regional aspirations mean unrelenting conflict with Russia.

Anearly benefactor of ISIS, President Erdogan has already re-purposed many of the Sunni Islamist terrorists Turkish forces rescued from Idlib for Turkish-led operations in Libya.Erdogan remains committedto his goal ofreplacingGeneral Sisis government with an Islamist State controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood.

To Erdogans chagrin, theRussians are fighting in Libyaalongside General Haftars army. Together with Haftar, the Russians are all that currently prevents Erdogan from creating a Sunni Islamist State that borders Israel on the West.

Meanwhile, on Planet Washington, President Trumps Secretary of State plotted with his trusted agent andincurable Never Trumper,Ambassador Jeffrey, the U.S.Special Representative for Syria Engagement,to cultivate war between Russia and Turkey. Guided by an ostensibly incurable hatred of Russia, Trumps Department of Statepromised Erdogan ammunition and intelligence in the hope that Erdogan would commit the Turkish Armed Forces todrive Russia out of Syria.But why would a U.S. Secretary of State deliberately run the risk of turning a localized conflict into a regional war, a war that would certainly engulf most of the States in the Eastern Mediterranean? To date, President Trump has scrupulously avoided unnecessary conflict in the Middle East, Northeast Asia and the Caribbean Basin.

Like Erdogan, Pompeo knows Russias position in Syria is weak. Russia has no substantial ground force in Syria and Erdogan can easily block any Russian attempt to reinforce its small contingent in Syria through the Dardanelles. Putins military adventure in Syria is alsounpopular with the Russianpeople and a needless drain on Russias dwindling treasury.

Erdogans economic position is hardly robust, but Turkey enjoys enormous foreign direct investment (perhaps as much as $50 billion over the last five years) fromthe Peninsular Arab Statesthat enables Erdogan to champion the Sunni Islamist cause. If Pompeo can exploit the bipartisan Russian paranoia that threatened the Trump Presidency, perhaps Pompeo can exploit the bipartisan hostility to Russia, back Turkey in its war and, eventually, launch his own run for the White House?

Perhaps these are the reasons why the Secretary of State pushed Erdogan to call Putins bluff. Time will reveal the truth, but today,it would be the gargantuan joke of the 21stCentury if President Trump were to allow Secretary of State Pompeo to align American military power with Erdogans Sunni-led Islamist cause; the same cause that attacked New York City and killed thousands of Americans.

Erdogan is obsessed with power and drivento overturn the regional order in favor of SunniIslamism, an ideology totalitarian in action, and cloaked in religion. President Trump should instruct his Secretary of State to tell President Erdogan that if he confronts Russia and Syria on the battlefield, Erdogan does so without any American or Western assistance. As Israeli officers with many years experience in the region advise, When your enemies are killing each other, dont interrupt.

Col (ret) Douglas Macgregor, US Army, is a decorated combat veteran, a PhD and the author of five books. His latest isMargin of Victory(Naval Institute Press, 2016). This article first appeared last month.

Image: Reuters.

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Trump Must Stop Russia And Turkey From Fighting Over Syria - The National Interest

Erdogan’s Denial of Coronavirus Crisis Risks the Lives of 80 Million Turks – Asbarez Armenian News

Columnist Harut Sassounian

BY HARUT SASSOUNIAN

The world as we knew it changed dramatically in the last few weeks due to the unexpected spread of the deadly coronavirus. Hundreds of millions of people around the world are isolated in their homes, scared of coming in contact with anyone who might be carrying the virus.

Several autocratic heads of states were slow to react to the virus denying that it was a serious problem in their countries. Eventually, as more and more people were infected with the virus, these leaders finally saw the light and started to take urgent measures to protect their people.

One such irresponsible leader is the President of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Michael Rubin, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, wrote a lengthy article in the March 16, 2020 issue of The National Interest, titled: Gambling with 80 Million Lives: Why Erdogan Lied about Coronavirus.

Rubin referred to Ergin Kocyildirim, a Turkish pediatric cardiothoracic surgeon at the University of Pittsburghs School of Medicine, who described in an essay both the Turkish governments claim to have established an effective testing kit and the fraudulence of its claims.

Even though the Turkish Health Minister initially denied that there were any coronavirus cases in Turkey, after widespread claims of the spread of the virus, Turkish authorities arrested the whistle-blowers. Another 64 Turks were jailed after being accused of disseminating false and provocative information. Furthermore, members of the state-controlled Turkish press panel insisted that Turkish genes rendered most Turkic people immune, Rubin reported.

Rubin attributed Erdogans lies about the absence of the coronavirus in Turkey to his dangerous combination of arrogance and ignorance. A larger motivation may be fear. While Turkeys demography is shifting in Erdogans favor as conservative families from Turkeys Anatolian heartland grow relative to the Europeanized Turks from central Istanbul and the Mediterranean coast, the economy is faltering. In 2010, Erdogan promised that by Turkeys 2023 centennial, Turkey would be one of the worlds top ten economies. Even before coronavirus, Turkey would be lucky to remain in the top 20 as corruption, nepotism, political interference in business, and broad mismanagement have combined to send confidence in Turkeys economy into the gutter.

Another reason Rubin gives for Erdogans cover-up of the spread of the coronavirus in Turkey is his fear of the collapse of the tourism industry. In 2018, the Turkish tourism industry accounted for nearly $30 billion dollars. Just a year ago, Erdogan promised that Turkey would host 50 million tourists, raising that figure by at least 20 percent. Add into the mix Turkeys investment of approximately $12 billion in a new Istanbul airport, expected to be the worlds largest, and one in which Erdogan and his family are reportedly heavily invested. It seems Erdogan sought to downplay reports of coronavirus in order to encourage tourist dollars to continue to flow. In doing so, he sought not only to play Russians, Europeans, and Americans for fools, but also endangered their lives. Unfortunately for Turkey, it will be Turks who will most pay the price as Turkey threatens to become the virus next big cluster. One Turkish doctor estimates that as many as 60 percent of Turks may now be infected and that Erdogan is retarding testing in order to prevent the scale of the catastrophe from becoming known. Deaths were inevitable, but Erdogans dishonesty will likely cause many thousand additional deaths in his country added to the dozens Turkey reportedly has already experienced but will not officially report.

To make matters worse, as in several other countries, the Turkish public has invented fake cures for the coronavirus. Nazlan Ertan wrote in the Al-Monitor website that Turks are now resorting to cannabis and sheep soup to fight the vicious virus.

Abdurrahman Dilipak, a prominent Islamist columnist for the daily Yeni Akit newspaper, suggested that cannabis can create a major barrier to the global spread of the virus. Dilipak, who has 700,000 Twitter followers about six times more than his newspapers circulation, also urged his Turkish readers to avoid receiving any vaccines from overseas because they would likely contain sterilization agents, linking such vaccines to an Aryan plot.

After a Turkish professor suggested the kelle pacha (sheep soup) cure, many Turks flocked to local restaurants preferring the soup to social distancing. The outbreak of coronavirus led to high demand for kelle pacha, Hurriyet reported on March 16. After the news articles, the kelle pacha orders both at the restaurant and as take-away have increased, said a waiter at Ismet Usta, a popular restaurant in downtown Izmir.

All of these remedies from gorging your throat with vinegar to whatever soup, has no use, Mehmet Ceylan, the president of the nongovernmental Infectious Diseases Association, said in an NTV news program on March 16. These are unscientific and should not be spread [through the media or word of mouth].

Fortunately, in recent days, there has been a turnaround in the approach of Turkish officials to the virus. They are now urging the population to stay indoors in self isolation to avoid more infections. I hope that these measures are not too late and millions of Turks are not already at risk. The announced numbers of 1236 infections and 30 deaths due to the coronavirus do not reflect the real figures.

At this critical time, we wish everyone good health, regardless of nationality, religion or skin color. We hope that this malicious disease has inadvertently helped to bring people and nations closer to fight together the common invisible enemy.

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Erdogan's Denial of Coronavirus Crisis Risks the Lives of 80 Million Turks - Asbarez Armenian News

Sisi and Erdogan Are Partners With the Coronavirus Pandemic – Council on Foreign Relations

The Centers for Disease Control and Preventions manual for global and national health emergencies makes one thing clear: A critical component of fighting a pandemic such as COVID-19 is clear, consistent, science-based information that is communicated through a trusted and respected source. When people are worried about their health, they want information from the person in a white lab coat.

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Given the gravity of current circumstances there is no risk of sounding melodramatic, so I would add a second requirement for effectively combating the coronavirushumanity.You know basic humanity when you see it: Its the sense of community and social trust engendered by natural empathy.

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Middle East and North Africa

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There is a short supply around the world of both competent expertise and genuine sense of the common good. The United States is certainly not exempt from the shortage. But the problem is acute across the Middle East, North Africa, and Turkey. The entire region is experiencing a wave of coronavirus cases, but the official numbers from government health ministries do not offer a clear picture of the problem, either because they do not know or because they are lying about the extent of infections. Among the hardest-hit countries is Qatar, with one of the worlds worst outbreaks per capita. At least the Qataris have money to throw at the problem. Not so Egypt or Algeria or Tunisia. There is precious little data on testing, but one can safely assume that whatever has been done pales in comparison to what is necessary.

Much of this stems from incompetence, complacency, and lack of basic decency among the regions leaders, which has led to a deadly breakdown of social trust. I am not suggesting that Iraqis, Egyptians, Palestinians, Turks, Saudis, and others lack the capacity to empathize with their fellow citizens. Rather, the disdain their leaders have for the societies they oversee has robbed them of social cohesion, necessarily rendering it harder to survive and recover at a time of crisis.This is a recipe for the kind of disaster in the Middle East that boggles the mind.

Before moving on, let me stipulate for any critics in the Middle East my belief that U.S. President Donald Trumps administrations response to the coronavirus pandemic has been nothing less than appalling and profoundly irresponsible.Both Trump and Vice President Mike Pence have proved themselves to be the least credible voices on the crisis, both failing to reassure anyone that the U.S. government under their leadership could manage the situation and, in the process, putting people in harms way. History will render judgment on their contribution to the collapse of trust in the United States institutions of government, the press, and science, and its impact on the many Americans who might have remained healthy but were instead infected and died.

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That stipulated, lets turn back to the Middle East. Who among the current crop of leaders of major Middle Eastern countries can people turn to for clear, dispassionate, fact-based information? Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan? Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman?These are strongmen who command significant amounts of resources, but they are hardly the strong leaders that people need now. There is no evidence that they are more prepared to offer their citizens any more than the obfuscation and misdirection that the White House has for Americans, though with likely direr consequences. Perhaps Middle Eastern leaders will rise to the occasion. One can only hope, but the track record suggests disaster compounded by arrogance, incompetence, and brutality.

Egypt is the most worrisome in the coronavirus crisis.The country is huge, its population having recently surpassed 100 million, with nearly one-quarter of those people in greater Cairo. How do Egyptians practice social distancing in such a megalopolis, especially in its poorer districts?Egypts public health infrastructure is fragile at best, and the private sector is not well-positioned to fill in the gaps by issuing guidelines or helping to organize testing, as it has done in the United States. On top of these challenges is the very fact that the Egyptian leaderships first inclination is to lie. They are most certainly lying about the rate of coronavirus infectionas of Monday, Sisis government would have people believe that Egypt has 166 cases of COVID-19 and four deaths. Modelers at the University of Toronto indicate that it could be closer to 20,000, and Sisi and his advisers no doubt understand that figure to be far more plausible.

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The Egyptian leadership has nevertheless stuck with the message of an ostensibly small number of infections, downplaying the extent of the crisis for fear of harming the tourism industry. After years of decline following the uprising that overthrew then President Hosni Mubarak, the 2015 bombing of a Russian airliner over the Sinai Peninsula, and the disappearance of an EgyptAir flight over the Mediterranean in 2016, last year was a banner year for visitors to Egypt.The authorities in Cairo want to maintain the momentum and keep the dollars flowing, sojust like the U.S. presidentthey have been emphasizing that COVID-19 is just like a cold that most people get over relatively quickly. Of course, this conveniently overlooks the fact that the crew and foreign passengers on a now-infamous Nile riverboat, the MSASara,have all been quarantined and that infections in a number of countries, including the United States, Canada, Greece, and France,can be traced back to tourist travel in Egypt.

Even the Egyptians could not willfully ignore reality forever, so they instituted some half-measures, including permitting the suspension of Friday prayer at mosques, curtailing organized tours in Luxor, cutting back on cultural events, and closing universities. In an implicit recognition that the country is sitting on top of a COVID-19 bomb, Sisi has directed $6 billiona significant sum for Egyptto respond to the outbreak.They are so far behind, however, that even if the authorities ramp up testing, any hope of containment is long gone. When the wave of infections hits Egypt, as it inevitably will, Sisi is unlikely to be the kind of figure that can calm an anxious nation and stem the resulting instability that will threaten the region and Europe. He is no longer the savior of July 3, 2013, who rescued the country from the abyss, who elicits the loyalty of the citizenry. Instead, he is already widely seen by many of his own people as brutal, unwise, and dishonest.

Although Egypt is most worrisome, Turkey is only better off because it has a functioning health care system and good public health infrastructure.This is a credit to the ruling Justice and Development Party. But Erdogans government has been lying to the Turks and has only recently taken half-measures to prevent the spread of the disease. Why, one might ask, given the situation in the EU, did the government go forward with mass gatherings such as Friday prayers last week? The message from imams was reportedly focused on the importance of social distancing, but the damage was done. Turkeys infection rate will undoubtedly spike; nevertheless, in the absence of widespread testing, Turkish business leaders are still encouraging people to visit malls and shop.Through the early phases of the pandemic, Erdogan, who has otherwise involved himself in every facet of public life both large and small, remained silent. This is a man more worried about taking the blame for the illnesses and deaths to come than the health and safety of his people.When the need for drastic public health measures becomes impossible to ignore, there is no telling how the public will react.

If the scene in Cairo a few weeks ago, in which hundreds tried to storm the Central Public Health Laboratories to obtain a coronavirus test, is any indication of what might come, countries in the region are in serious trouble. Marked by political and social systems that are rigged so that all the benefits flow to the wealthy and connectednot unlike the United States, but more pronounced and brutaltesting, health care, and basic needs will be distributed unevenly, and will further erode trust and radicalize societies in a variety of ways. Does anyone believe that Saudi elites will wait in line for coronavirus tests? No. The wealthy will hoard what they can before fleeing, leaving the rest to fend for themselves and face the tear gas and water cannons of the riot police. What about the armies of Bangladeshi, Indian, Pakistani, and Filipino guest workers throughout the Persian Gulf? They will be a black hole of coronavirus infections. They have little, if any, protections in the societies that cannot run without them, but they have power in numbers. The many dimensions of this virus and how it can upend already fragile societies are truly frightening.

Sisi and Erdogan are not unique, just illustrative of the added layer of complications that people in the Middle East face as they confront the coronavirus pandemic.The utter disdain the leaders harbor for their people and the related brutality with which many Middle Easterners have been treated has underminedindividually and collectivelythe basic humanity, in the form of basic community, necessary for people to cope and survive. What kind of governments beat people who are desperate for a test that will be the difference between the ability to feed their families and not? What kind of system destroys much of its scientific community on the basis of guilt by association, conspiracy theories, and the political needs of a dear leader? Who would dare speak out publicly and offer another way in a place where a capricious ruler has deemed only his ideas about society are good? There are no societal backstops in these places, leaving people on their own to grapple with fear, stress, resignation, illness, and possible death.

If we have learned anything from this global health crisis, it is that there are no borders, no nationalisms, no differences to the way coronavirus ravages the human respiratory system.There are only differences in the quality of leadership, and the resulting senses of humanity in the nations they oversee.The Middle Eastlike the United Statesis failing on both fronts.

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Sisi and Erdogan Are Partners With the Coronavirus Pandemic - Council on Foreign Relations