In this mailing:
- Uzay Bulut: Why Turkey Wants
to Invade the Greek Islands
- Inna Rogatchi: Europe's Telling
Silence on Polish Anti-Semitism
by Uzay Bulut • February 28, 2018
at 5:00 am
- Turkish
propagandists also have been twisting facts to try to portray
Greece as the aggressor.
- Although Turkey
knows that the islands are legally and historically Greek,
Turkish authorities want to occupy and Turkify them,
presumably to further the campaign of annihilating the Greeks,
as they did in Anatolia from 1914 to 1923 and after.
- Any attack against
Greece should be treated as an attack against the West.
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has said that Turkey "gave
away" Greek islands that "used to be ours" and are
"within shouting distance". "There are still our
mosques, our shrines there," he said, referring to the Ottoman
occupation of the islands. (Photo by Carsten Koall/Getty Images)
There is one issue on which Turkey's ruling Justice
and Development Party (AKP) and its main opposition, the Republican
People's Party (CHP), are in complete agreement: The conviction
that the Greek islands are occupied Turkish territory and must be
reconquered. So strong is this determination that the leaders of
both parties have openly threatened to invade the Aegean.
The only conflict on this issue between the two
parties is in competing to prove which is more powerful and
patriotic, and which possesses the courage to carry out the threat
against Greece. While the CHP is accusing President Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan's AKP party of enabling Greece to occupy Turkish lands, the
AKP is attacking the CHP, Turkey's founding party, for allowing
Greece to take the islands through the 1924 Treaty of Lausanne, the
1932 Turkish-Italian Agreements, and the 1947 Paris Treaty, which
recognized the islands of the Aegean as Greek territory.
by Inna Rogatchi • February 28,
2018 at 4:00 am
- Given Western
Europe's open aversion to the rise of right-wing parties in
Eastern Europe, the EU's silence in the face of Poland's
behavior politically makes no sense.
- Ever since Poland's
far-right Law and Justice Party (PiS) took control of both the
presidency and the parliament in November 2015, and quickly
changed the rules for public media, the secret service,
education, and the military, the European Parliament has been
claiming that Warsaw is putting the "rule of law and
democracy" at risk.
- When it comes to the
issue of Polish anti-Semitism, Europe is suddenly at a loss
for words. This suggests that it is not merely ineptitude at
work.
In the
face of Poland's implementation of the controversial Holocaust
bill, the crashing silence from the rest of Europe is shocking. To
his credit, European Council President Donald Tusk, a former prime
minister of Poland, made two public statements against the bill.
(Image source: European Parliament/Flickr)
Implementation of the controversial Holocaust bill,
passed by the Polish Senate on February 1, was "frozen"
temporarily, due to the toxic rift it caused in Warsaw-Jerusalem
relations. The bill, proposed by the ruling Law and Justice Party
(PiS), makes illegal any suggestion that Poland was complicit in
the Holocaust, particularly the Nazi death camps, which were
German, but located on Polish soil.
Criticism of the bill in Israel and among diaspora
Jews has been loud and forceful across the political spectrum.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the bill an
attempt to "rewrite history," and a Polish diplomatic
delegation is arriving in Israel on February 28 to discuss the
diplomatic crisis.
Although Jewish outrage over such a law -- which
would fine and even jail anyone who dared to implicate Poland in
the Nazi genocide -- is probably no surprise, the crashing silence
from the rest of Europe is shocking.
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