Cause, on 07 October 2019 - 07:08 PM, said:
Azath Vitr (D, on 07 October 2019 - 06:15 PM, said:
Trump tweeted this today: 'As I have stated strongly before, and just to reiterate, if Turkey does anything that I, in my great and unmatched wisdom, consider to be off limits, I will totally destroy and obliterate the Economy of Turkey (I’ve done before!). They must, with Europe and others, watch over...'
This was incredible. He reminds me of a basketball star being interviewed. The ones that speak about themselves in third person (he does this too sometimes) and praise themselves as the best thing to happen to the game.
Also when has he done it before? Lastly, he doesnt care about the ISIS prisoners. So what would be off limits? Didnt Trump say he thinks the US should do more waterboarding?
The off-limits bit is related to the Kurds, long standing American allies in northern Syria and northern Iraq both. They're an ethnic group that claims part of Turkey, Syria and Iraq as their own and is seeking independence/autonomy from all three. In both Syria and Iraq, this (combined with the fact that they're fierce fighters) made them logical allies for the US, but that alliance put the US at odds with the Turkish government, who are not keen on the Kurds - and that's a bit of an understatement.
The Turks couldn't care less for Syria/ ISIS as a whole, they just don't want the Kurds to establish themselves with any degree of autonomy in Syria, fearing it would be used as a platform to pursue Kurdish independence in Turkey from. Hence the Turkish offer to take over the 30 kilometer deep safe zone between Turkey and Syria, where they would "continue the fight against terrorists." Spoiler: the Turkish government refers to the militant Turkish-Kurd freedom movement PKK as terrorists. Trump probably figured he'd bring troops home, make Erdogan happy by handing over the safe zone to a NATO partner, and get rid of the prisoners in one go - as for the Kurds, Trump probably thought they were a type of cookie.
Re: boycot: iirc, there has been a boycot of Turkey under Trump before, I think related to the previous visit of Erdogan to the US, when Turkish bodyguards of Erdogan molested activists demonstrating against him outside the embassy grounds, but it might also be related to the repeated attempts to extract Gülen from the US towards Turkey, including an attempted kidnapping, following the putsch against Erdogan. Essentially, the US has boycotted Turkey (partially) before, and it had effect. But Turkey has a pretty unstable economy and Erdogan could just threaten to release the ISIS captives, or threaten to look to Russia, instead.
This post has been edited by Tapper: 08 October 2019 - 01:12 PM
Everyone is entitled to his own wrong opinion. - Lizrad