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Turkey's
Islamic Supremacist Foreign Policy
by Uzay Bulut
• April 29, 2016 at 5:00 am
The crumbling buildings of the Varosha district of
Famagusta, Cyprus, photographed in 2009. The area lies within
Turkish-controlled northern Cyprus. The inhabitants fled during the 1974
Turkish invasion and the district has been abandoned since then. (Source:
Wikimedia Commons)
Between March 29 and April 2, 2016, Turkey's president, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, paid a visit to Washington D.C. to participate in the 4th Nuclear
Security Summit hosted by U.S. President Barack Obama.
In an interview with CNN broadcast March 31, Erdogan said, "We will
not allow an act such as giving northern Syria to a terrorist organization...
We will never forgive such a wrong. We are determined about that."
Asked which terror organization he was referring to, Erdogan said:
"The YPG [Kurdish People's Protection Units], the PYD [Democratic Union
Party] ... and if Daesh [ISIS] has an intention of that sort then it would
also never be allowed."
Erdogan was thereby once again attempting to equate Islamic State
(ISIS), which has tortured, raped, sold or slaughtered so many innocent
people in Syria and Iraq, with the Kurdish PYD, and its YPG militia, whose
members have been fighting with their lives to defeat genocidal jihadist
groups such as al-Nusra and ISIS.
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