In this mailing:
- Soeren Kern: Germany: Meet Jens
Spahn, Merkel's Possible Successor
- Uzay Bulut: Turkey Threatens to
Invade Greece
by Soeren Kern • February 19, 2018
at 5:00 am
- "What is clear at
any rate: the financing [of imams] by foreign actors must
stop." — Jens Spahn, Deutsche Welle.
- "The message that
'If you reach a Greek island, you will be in Germany in six
days,' not only encourages refugees from Syria, but also many
people in Bangladesh and India. No country in the world, and no
European Union, can withstand that if we give up control of our
external borders." — Jens Spahn, Die Zeit.
- "To anyone who
makes their way to Germany, it must made be clear that their
life here will be very different from that at home. They should
think carefully about whether they really want to live in this
western culture." — Die Welt.
Pictured:
German Chancellor Angela Merkel (right) and Jens Spahn (left), a top
contender for succeeding Merkel as leader of the CDU party. (Photo by
Volker Hartmann/Getty Images)
Chancellor Angela Merkel has sparked a mutiny from
within her own party over a controversial coalition deal that allows
her to remain in office for a fourth term. The deal, in which Merkel
agreed to relinquish control over the most influential government
ministries, has led a growing number of voices from within her
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) to say — publicly — that it is time
to begin looking for her successor.
In a prime-time interview with ZDF television on
February 11, Merkel, already in power for 12 years, rejected the
criticism and insisted that she will serve another full four-year
term. "I ran for a four-year term," she said. "I
promised those four years and I'm someone who keeps promises. I
totally stand behind that decision."
by Uzay Bulut • February 19, 2018
at 4:00 am
- Turkey's ruling party,
and even much of the opposition, seem intent on, if not obsessed
with, invading and conquering these Greek islands, on the
grounds that they are actually Turkish territory.
- "The things we
have done so far [pale in comparison to the] even greater
attempts and attacks [we are planning for] the coming days, inshallah
[Allah willing]." – Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan,
February 12, 2018.
- The head of the
state-funded Directorate of Religious Affairs, the Diyanet,
has openly described Turkey's recent military invasion of Afrin
as "jihad." This designation makes sense when one
considers that Muslim Turks owe their demographic majority in Asia
Minor to centuries of Turkish persecution and discrimination
against the Christian, Yazidi and Jewish inhabitants of the
area.
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan recently said: "We warn those who
have crossed the line in the Aegean and Cyprus... Their courage
persists only until they see our army, our ships and our
planes." (Photo by Elif Sogut/Getty Images)
In an incident that took place less than two weeks
after the Greek Defense Ministry announced that Turkey had violated
Greek airspace 138 times in a single day, a Turkish coast guard
patrol boat on February 13 rammed a Greek coast guard vessel off the
shore of Imia, one of many Greek islands over which Turkey claims
sovereignty.
Most of the areas within modern Greece's current
borders were under the occupation of the Ottoman Empire from the
mid-15th century until the Greek War of Independence in 1821 and the
establishment of the modern Greek state in 1832. The islands,
however, like the rest of Greece, are legally and historically Greek,
as their names indicate.
Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP),
however, and even much of the opposition seem intent on, if not
obsessed with, invading and conquering these Greek islands, on the
grounds that they are actually Turkish territory.
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