Surrounded by his bodyguard, Erdogan leaves his visit with Grand Sheikh Al Ahzar Ahmed el Tayyib in Cairo yesterday.
Do not trust this man. He is NOT a good guy by a long shot. He may have had us fooled for awhile with his rhetoric against Israel but one can only watch so long before realizing he participates in an elaborately scripted play with the Zionist entity. He is building up Turkey's already huge military to move in on Syria given the right false flag and now he is in Libya on a business trip, picking at the corpse like the rest of the scavengers.
Do not trust this man. He is NOT a good guy by a long shot. He may have had us fooled for awhile with his rhetoric against Israel but one can only watch so long before realizing he participates in an elaborately scripted play with the Zionist entity. He is building up Turkey's already huge military to move in on Syria given the right false flag and now he is in Libya on a business trip, picking at the corpse like the rest of the scavengers.
Sep 14, 2011
When the young Recep Tayyip Erdogan sold snacks on the streets
of Kasimpasa, a tough neighbourhood in Istanbul, as a child to support his
lower middle-class family no one would have guessed that this boy would grow up
to become one of the most powerful prime ministers in Turkey's history and one
of the most influential leaders in the Middle East.
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Mr. Erdogan, who is 57 today, fought his way to the top against
many odds, spending time in prison and in the political wilderness, and
surviving what prosecutors in trials said were plots by the military. However,
he has always bounced back, thanks to an extraordinary mixture of political
talent, self-confidence, Muslim piety and realism.
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When the Turkish prime minister arrived in Egypt late on Monday,
the first stop of a tour through three countries of the Arab Spring, he was
greeted by an enthusiastic crowd, shouting slogans that called Mr. Erdogan the
"saviour of Islam".
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At home, Mr. Erdogan's religiosity has not been universally
welcomed. Secularists in the military, the judiciary and the opposition have
accused him of having a secret agenda aimed at turning the western-style
republic into a Muslim theocracy.
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It is a charge that Mr. Erdogan has been fighting against for
most of his political career, which took off when he became the mayor of
Istanbul in 1994. Four years later, he lost his post as mayor and was sent to
prison for a speech that was seen by the judiciary as an incitement to
religious hatred.
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But Mr. Erdogan has always balanced his religious roots with a
healthy dose of hard-nosed realism.
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When he set up his Justice and Development Party, or AKP, in
2001, he turned always from Turkey's more radical religious circles in favour
of a centrist approach that echoed Christian Democratic parties in Europe.
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That strategic move enabled the AKP to attract moderate voters
in droves, resulting in the party's first election victory in 2002. It has won
two other general elections since then.
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In his foreign policy, Mr. Erdogan has steered Turkey towards
its long-time goal of becoming a member of the European Union, but his
enthusiasm cooled markedly as he was confronted with an increasing
unwillingness by EU countries to take Turkey in.
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Meanwhile, Turkey boosted its role in the Middle East. Mr.
Erdogan's personal popularity in the region soared when, in late 2008, he
strongly condemned Israel for its military intervention in Gaza.
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Today, Mr. Erdogan regards Turkey, a western-style democracy
with a Muslim population and a booming economy, as a natural regional leader.
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Caught off guard by the Arab Spring, his government has changed
course in recent months, from cooperation with repressive regimes such as the
one in Syria to support for popular uprisings in the region.
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"We will become much more active in regional and global
affairs," Mr. Erdogan told supporters after the latest election victory of
the AKP, which raked in almost 50 per cent of the vote on June 12.
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Mr. Erdogan's decision to visit Egypt, Tunisia and Libya was
designed to cement Turkey's political role and to boost Turkish economic
interests in the region at the same time. Almost 300 Turkish businessmen
accompanied him on the visit to Cairo.
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ED: More vultures on the Libyan corpse?
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Erdogan is bad news.
ReplyDelete- Aangirfan
Absolutely I agree. I trust the man as far as I can spit into a windstorm.
ReplyDelete