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Old 02-17-2005, 04:59 PM
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revwardoc revwardoc is offline
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Default Turkish newspaper reports on what US troops are doing in Iraq















Kerry Spot [ jim geraghty reporting ]
A HARD, TOUGH LOOK AT MY FUTURE HOME
Hey! Robert Pollack of the Wall Street Journal is putting the spotlight on my future home, Turkey. Let's see what he has to say:
On a brief visit to Ankara earlier this month with Undersecretary of Defense Doug Feith, I found a poisonous atmosphere ? one in which just about every politician and media outlet (secular and religious) preaches an extreme combination of America- and Jew-hatred that (like the Turkish artists) voluntarily goes far further than anything found in most of the Arab world's state-controlled press. If I hesitate to call it Nazi-like, that's only because Goebbels would probably have rejected much of it as too crude.
Consider the Islamist newspaper Yeni Safak, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's favorite. A Jan. 9 story claimed that U.S. forces were tossing so many Iraqi bodies into the Euphrates that mullahs there had issued a fatwa prohibiting residents from eating its fish. Yeni Safak has also repeatedly claimed that U.S. forces used chemical weapons in Fallujah. One of its columnists has alleged that U.S. soldiers raped women and children there and left their bodies in the streets to be eaten by dogs. Among the paper's "scoops" have been the 1,000 Israeli soldiers deployed alongside U.S. forces in Iraq, and that U.S. forces have been harvesting the innards of dead Iraqis for sale on the U.S. "organ market."

It's not much better in the secular press. The mainstream Hurriyet has accused Israeli hit squads of assassinating Turkish security personnel in Mosul, and the U.S. of starting an occupation of Indonesia under the guise of humanitarian assistance. At Sabah, a columnist last fall accused the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Eric Edelman, of letting his "ethnic origins" ? guess what, he's Jewish ? determine his behavior. Mr. Edelman is indeed the all-too-rare foreign-service officer who takes seriously his obligation to defend America's image and interests abroad. The intellectual climate in which he's operating has gone so mad that he actually felt compelled to organize a conference call with scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey to explain that secret U.S. nuclear testing did not cause the recent tsunami.

Never in an ostensibly friendly country have I had the impression of embassy staff so besieged. Mr. Erdogan's office recently forbade Turkish officials from attending a reception at the ambassador's residence in honor of the "Ecumenical" Patriarch of the Orthodox Church, who resides in Istanbul. Why? Because "ecumenical" means universal, which somehow makes it all part of a plot to carve up Turkey.

Perhaps the most bizarre anti-American story au courant in the Turkish capital is the "eighth planet" theory, which holds not only that the U.S. knows of an impending asteroid strike, but that we know it's going to hit North America. Hence our desire to colonize the Middle East.

It all sounds loony, I know. But such stories are told in all seriousness at the most powerful dinner tables in Ankara. The common thread is that almost everything the U.S. is doing in the world ? even tsunami relief ? has malevolent motivations, usually with the implication that we're acting as muscle for the Jews.

In the face of such slanders Turkish politicians have been utterly silent. In fact, Turkish parliamentarians themselves have accused the U.S. of "genocide" in Iraq, while Mr. Erdogan (who we once hoped would set for the Muslim world an example of democracy) was among the few world leaders to question the legitimacy of the Iraqi elections. When confronted, Turkish pols claim they can't risk going against "public opinion."

All of which makes Mr. Erdogan a prize hypocrite for protesting to Condoleezza Rice the unflattering portrayal of Turkey in an episode of the fictional TV show "The West Wing." The episode allegedly depicts Turkey as having been taking over by a retrograde populist government that threatens women's rights.



Pardon me while I scream in panic...

(By the way, TKS readers, hope you like assessments of the anti-Americanism in the Turkish media and among the chattering classes of Ankara and Istanbul... because it sounds like you'll be hearing a lot of that from me.)

[Posted 02/16 09:43 AM]

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Old 02-20-2005, 11:41 PM
Seascamp Seascamp is offline
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No doubt the Turks are further out on the edge of panic since the Iraqi elections. The very thought that the Kurds could be heading to a condition of formal semi-autonomy within Iraq has Turkey in cold sweats, big time. As sure as night follows day, the embattled Kurds within Turkey will want the same set of circumstances.

In the interim, this kind of coffee shop/souk Turk bombast and bellicose rhetoric is just pure manna for the French and Germans who are fighting against Turkish EU membership hammer and tongs, claw and nail. One of the principal criteria for EU membership is being a stable democracy and that is just for openers.
So, Turk rhetoric that seeks to undermine regional stability and other democracies is a big, ugly, mangy dog that will come back to bite the Turks in the ass, courtesy France and Germany. And quite possibly this bit of stupid Turk talk could very well open the door for all to see what is really going on in the Kurdish area of Turkey. Now that is something the Turks don?t want anyone to see, nope. Big secret, eh.

Scamp
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