The Jerusalem Post

Turkey bashes UN, EU and Armenia in latest statements

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

Turkey’s war against the internatio­nal community, its neighbors, Europe – and basically every country it deals with – heated up on Monday as the country’s leadership bashed the EU and UN after facing sanctions and criticism. Ankara has made almost all criticism at home illegal, prosecutin­g people for critiquing the country’s COVID- 19 response, jailing journalist­s and charging comedians. This has led the regime to believe its own increasing­ly militarist statements about its abilities.

A UN human rights report has accused Turkish- backed extremists of rape and looting in areas Turkey illegally occupies in Syria. In response, Ankara says the “UN failed once again.” Turkey accused the UN of not doing enough to stop COVID- 19. However, it was clear the critique was related to getting revenge on the UN for daring to critique Ankara.

Then Turkey bashed the European Union. The EU has been trying to stand up to Turkish aggression in the Eastern Mediterran­ean. The union has sanctioned a Turkish firm because Turkey has flooded Libya with weapons, violating an arms embargo. “It has no value in our sight to add our maritime company to the sanctions list in the context of Libya as a result of the EU Foreign Affairs Council’s meeting,” Turkey’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

As if picking a fight with the

EU and UN wasn’t enough, Turkey is now trying to stoke a crisis with Armenia. Ankara pursues what is called a “crisis- of- the- month” strategy by the AK Party to distract from economic failures at home. Last month, it was sending naval ships to the Eastern Mediterran­ean to threaten Greece. In the past several months, it bombed Iraq and threatened Kurds in Syria. In March, it caused a crisis in Idlib, then a border crisis with Greece and then sent mercenarie­s to Libya in April and May, when it caused another crisis.

Now Turkey’s defense ministry on Monday warned Armenia against playing with fire after an Azerbaijan­i

soldier was killed in a clash. Turkey’s media, which is all pro- government, calls Azerbaijan soldiers “martyrs.” Turkey slammed “Armenia, which unlawfully occupied Upper Karabakh, [ has] now violated the cease- fire in Tovuz region and killed a heroic Azerbaijan­i soldier,” the ministry said on Twitter. Anadolu media in Turkey said that Ankara “also wished Allah’s mercy upon the martyred soldier and conveyed condolence­s to the brotherly country of Azerbaijan.”

Turkey may be preparing a new crisis in the Caucasus. It has hinted in recent months that it could either target countries in that region or Israel. Turkey’s president has

vowed to “liberate” al- Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem and has opposed the US peace deals with the UAE. However, Turkey’s regime has also taken an active role opposing US presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden, so it needs Trump’s administra­tion and knows the White House is close to Israel.

Turkey’s calculatio­ns are that it can bash France, Egypt, the UAE, Bahrain, Israel, the US and other counties, as well as the UN and EU, while bombing Syria and Iraq and sending mercenarie­s and arms to Libya – and that it will continue to achieve its goals because other countries don’t want conflict.

 ?? ( Murad Sezer/ Reuters) ?? PEOPLE WEARING protective face masks rest on Monday near the Eminonu pier, amid the spread of the coronaviru­s disease, in Istanbul.
( Murad Sezer/ Reuters) PEOPLE WEARING protective face masks rest on Monday near the Eminonu pier, amid the spread of the coronaviru­s disease, in Istanbul.

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