Turkish PM says negotiating with Assad like shaking hands with Hitler
Davutoglu said voices in the West which say there is a need to negotiate with Assad “make us question our human values
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Tuesday negotiating with President Bashar al-Assad would be like shaking hands with Adolf Hitler, highlighting Turkey’s differences with Washington over dealing with the Syrian leader.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Sunday the U.S. would have to negotiate with Assad, though the State Department later said he was not specifically referring to the Syrian leader and that Washington would never bargain with him.
Speaking at an AK Party meeting in Ankara, Davutoglu said voices in the West which say there is a need to negotiate with Assad “make us question our human values”.
“Despite all these massacres, despite the use of chemical weapons that crossed the red line, if you still shake the hand of Assad, that handshake will be remembered throughout history,” he said in a speech broadcast live.
“There’s no difference between shaking hands with Assad, or with Hitler, Saddam, Karadzic, Milosevic.”
The United States has been a backer of Syria’s opposition but its focus has shifted to fighting Islamic State militants since they seized swathes of Syria and Iraq, seeing them as a greater threat to global security.
Turkey has been a reluctant partner in the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State, refusing to step up its military cooperation without a comprehensive plan for Syria which includes removing Assad.
-
Turkish teacher says unveiled girls deserve to be raped
A school teacher in Turkey is under investigation amid claims she told female students they “deserve rape” for not wearing an Islamic headscarf Variety -
Turkey says spy who helped British teens is Syrian national
Cavusoglu had said the day earlier that the person arrested was not from the EU or the United States Middle East -
Ignoring Turkey’s pleas on Syria, four years on
To answer this question, we have to understand that Assad is now essentially only a figurehead for the Baathist mentality festering in Damascus Middle East -
Violence, economy top Turkey’s women issues
The survey was carried out by the A&G research firm and was conducted among 2,083 women PERSPECTIVE -
Turkish Central Bank’s credibility must be increased: finance minister
Mehmet Simsek says that first quarter indicators of Turkey’s economy are ‘not very good’ Banking & Finance -
Zuckerberg notes Turkish ‘Ataturk law’ as Facebook updates rules
Zuckerberg referred to laws protecting Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey Digital