Erdoğan slams Iran for supporting Maliki government
 
 
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20 May 2013 Monday
 
 
 
 
 
 

Erdoğan slams Iran for supporting Maliki government

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. (Photo: AA)
6 August 2012 /TODAY'S ZAMAN
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has criticized Iran's support of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government, contrary to the aspirations of a large coalition comprising Kurdish, Turkmen and other Shiite groups in Iraq to unseat Maliki.

In his televised remarks to Turkey's A Haber news channel on Sunday, Erdoğan claimed that Maliki would not behave “as comfortably as he did before” because of such initiatives from the opposition, while maintaining that Maliki enjoys a good level of support from Iranin clinging to power.

“It is not possible to accept Iran's stance. We conveyed this to them at the highest level of talks. We said to them, ‘Look, this has been a source of disturbance in the region',” Erdoğan stated.

In June, an initiative by Iraqi politicians to unseat Maliki on the basis of his failure to abide by the clear principles of the Iraqi constitution that envisaged a balance of power between the different sects and ethnicities in Iraq was unsuccessful due to a failure to collect enough votes. The campaign was also supported by Massoud Barzani, the leader of Iraq's autonomous region, and influential Shiite clerics Muqtada al-Sadr and Ammar al-Hakim. Barzani has had long running disputes with the central Iraqi government on territory and the sharing of oil revenues.

Erdoğan further claimed that not defending the same positions with its southeastern neighbor was only playing into the hand of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in the region. “Even though we should be the countries that share the same values, for us to be in such rigor only makes the terrorist organization more powerful. This leads us to approach each other with suspicion,” Erdoğan stated.

Erdoğan also criticized the Maliki-led government on its discriminatory stance against Turkish officials after new tensions flared between Iraq and Turkey over Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu's recent surprise visit to the oil-rich Iraqi city of Kirkuk, which is claimed by both the central Iraqi government and the country's autonomous Kurdistan region.

“Do Iranian politicians coming to Iraq give you [the Iraqi government] the address of their destinations? They don't. You have your local government there and you have a minister [Davutoğlu] who has a red passport. While he is visiting there, he could go to Kirkuk, which is 40 km away. We have our kin there,” Erdoğan commented.

Davutoğlu had travelled to Kirkuk last week after visiting the regional president in Arbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan. The visit was the first Turkish foreign ministerial visit to Kirkuk since 1937, and Davutoğlu had made supportive speeches on maintaining peace in the city last week.

But Iraq's foreign ministry accused Turkey of violating its constitution with the visit, saying that Davutoğlu had neither asked for nor obtained permission to enter Kirkuk. Following the incident, a junior minister at Iraq's foreign ministry had handed Turkey's chargé d'affaires a strongly-worded statement. In turn, Turkey's foreign ministry immediately summoned Iraq's Ambassador in Ankara to protest against Baghdad's stance after Davutoğlu's visit. In talks with the Iraqi envoy, foreign ministry officials explained that Turkey is taking every step openly and has no hidden agenda.

Erdoğan accused the Iraqi central government authorities of being “clumsy” in politics. “If you send [us] a note, Turkey will also return a note to your ambassador. While trying to develop positive relations with me on the one hand, [they] send a note to my ambassador, making for clumsy politics,” the prime minister remarked.

Meanwhile, the Barzani-led Iraqi Kurdistan government has supported Turkey over the tit-for-that exchange of notes between the two countries. In a statement released on Monday, Barzani's office claimed that the Turkish foreign minister had obtained a visa from the Turkish Embassy in Iraq before the visit, acquiring a legal right to enter the disputed city.

The statement further read that the aim of the Kirkuk visit was to show that Turkey is on equally good terms with all circles in Iraq, rather than being a negative attempt against Iraq's sovereignty.

Obama respectful to Turkey, Erdoğan claims

The prime minister has also dismissed opposition criticism of a White House photo showing President Barack Obama holding a baseball bat during a telephone conversation with the leader.

Turkish opposition this week picked the photo apart, claiming the picture was disrespectful. Erdoğan told that Obama is “a friend who never falls short of respect or politeness.”

‘Assad coming closer to end by the day'

Erdoğan also claimed that “I believe that the end of [Syrian President Bashar al-] Assad is coming closer by the day,” pointing to the recent claims in the country that the regime forces embattlement in the trade center of Aleppo. He explained an important part of the city is currently under the control of opposition forces, signaling “the end” for the Assad regime.

“What Aleppo means for Syria is the same as what İstanbul means for Turkey,” Erdoğan stated.

 
COMMENTS
He lashes out at Maliki for supporting Iran, while he pits the whole middle east against one another and tries to act as the kingpin between Islam and the west. AKP realize that entry into the EU looks slim, so they will try to recreate some neo-ottoman empire with them in the center in the middle e...
kurdo
Turkey and Iran play sophisticated chess game, but the footsoldiers and the casualties - are Arabs.
Israeli
As neutral, is it possible for foreign misniter to visit a country without visiting the central government! Can you visit Texas without going to Washington! Naive question needs a naive answer
Mohmet
Turkey iran Iraq Syria all to be fighting with each other, that is good news for world. Perhaps Saudi Arabia and egypt and pakistan can also join in. Nice plan by America. Make muslim countries fight with each other and leave rest of world in peace.
Ramesh
Who takes Mr Erdogan-s threats seriously anymore?
Araratian
Erdogan Governemt gave asylum and protection to Tarek Hashemi a criminal responsible of several terroristic attacks in Iraq. Hashemi has even been sentenced in absentia as a bloody assassin. Erdogan transformed Turkey in a platform of Sunni terrorists and a refuge state for salafists , Jihadists, Wa...
The others are always wrong!
Anger do not pay.. Torki has no right to interfear in Iraq and Syrian and soon Labanon .If Torki do noy stop now all three will have a decisive say about how Torki should conduct itself.You can not TELL Iran ,you may beg them on you knee but do not tell Anladenma??
Esfandyar
Maliki gets his orders from Tehran. This is all about the Shia dominance trying to grip Iraq. It's failing.
Metin
no friends left for turkey. not Europe, not Iran, not Syria, not Israel, not Armenia, not Russia. her last friend is holding a bat while talking to her. i remember the days when turkey was a bridge between Iran and US, Israel and Syria, Armenia and Azerbaijan. what is left of it's hot minded leaders...
musa
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