Erdogan’s competition with Ahmedinejad spells disaster for Arabs

The same disease that inflicted the Arab world before each major war against Israel is now spreading. The Arab world now believes that, with the alliance between Turkey and Egypt, each with mighty armies, and with the support of Syria, Hamas and Hezbollah, and with the weakness and war weariness of the West, and the fact that NATO has depleted their missiles and other munitions in Libya, that they can defeat Israel. If they try, they won’t know what hit them. Ted Belman

Stop Erdogan now

By Dan Margolit, Israel Hayom

The uncontrollable appetite with which Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pounced on Israel and refused to let go is enough to make an observer’s jaw drop. Is he a cynical warmonger with a premeditated plan to work tirelessly until flames engulf the eastern Mediterranean? Or perhaps he is a man who has lost his good sense and been overcome by an evil impulse, an unquiet mind that eggs him on to scorch, burn and destroy everything in his path?

Both types are known to history and both have required international intervention to stop them in the past – intervention that usually came too late. For a moment it seemed as if Erdogan had adopted a humanitarian policy in the face of Bashar Assad’s slaughter of his people in Syria. But Erdogan’s criticism faded quickly. Instead, he found a convenient enemy and released a pent-up flood of anti-Semitic feelings. Its easier and more popular to incite against Jews than to deal with a fellow ruler who is murdering Arab brethren.

If that is not the case, then there is no explanation for Erdogan’s conduct. Erdogan agreed to take part in the investigation by the U.N. panel headed by former New Zealand Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer but then refused to sign off on its conclusions because it recognized the blockade of Gaza as legitimate. Since then his pronouncements have fueled conflict and conflagration on a daily basis. Suddenly, 16 months after the fact, he dusted off the bizarre claim that the clash on board the Mavi Marmara was a cause for war. When he arrived in Egypt, Erdogan repeated that his greatest wish is to visit Gaza – for no good reason, just to fan the flames. If he doesn’t actually go through with his visit, it is because Hussein Tantawi, who is temporarily ruling Egypt, is preventing it.

Something rotten is happening in the Middle East. Irresponsible leaders, who can’t control their tongues and may be irrational in their appetite for power, stand at the helm of the two countries competing for hegemony in the Arab-Muslim world. The competition between Erdogan and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad spells disaster for the Arab world and Western democracy. It is especially bad because an anxious and terrified world in the grip of an entrenched financial crisis does not dare stop the insane man on the roof holding a weapon. So they fiddle while a whole region threatens to burn.

Whoever does not stop them now will pay a much heavier price down the line.

September 13, 2011 | 4 Comments »

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  1. “It’s easier and more popular to incite against Jews than to deal with a fellow ruler who is murdering Arab brethren.”

    If he went after Assad, his political opponents would probably accuse him of having designs on Syrian territory.

    Which he probably has.

    But then, most Turkish politicoes would have such designs.

    Still, it’s easier to rattle sabers at the Jews when you’re playing to the galleries; always gets a rousing cheer.

  2. “Historically, what is the relationship like between Turks and Iranians(Persians)?”

    Here’s your answer:

    “…two countries competing for hegemony in the Arab-Muslim world…”

    Nothing really new here.

    Rivals.

    Two large, Muslim, yet non-Arab, countries, in a Muslim sea, with dominating designs on the largely-Arab region.

    “Mine is bigger than yours; after all, I bash Jews louder than you do.”

  3. Historically, what is the relationship like between Turks and Iranians(Persians)? Contentious? Cordial?

    Ay Ay Ay…the effect of Islam on the male ego. I respect patriarchal Judaism, but the way Jewish men treat women versus how muslim men treat women…