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15 November 2012 By Tariq Alhomayed In his recent television interview, the tyrant of
Damascus Bashar al-Assad launched an attack on Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, saying that he
considers himself to be a new Ottoman Sultan and a
Caliph, and claiming that he alone supports the Syrian
opposition, not the Turkish people! Of course, this attack was expected, but it was
delayed. It seems that al-Assad could not bite his
fingernails any longer, so he came out himself to
attack Erdogan saying: "He personally thinks that he
is the new sultan of the Ottoman and he can control
the region as it was during the Ottoman Empire under a
new umbrella. In his heart he thinks he is a caliph".
Al-Assad then proceeded to make a joke about Turkey's
foreign policy and its international relations, saying
that the policy has shifted "from zero problems to
zero friends"! When I say that al-Assad's attack is not
surprising, this is for one simple reason. He was
preceded by Hassan Nasrallah, who earlier attacked
Turkey by saying that its people (the Turks) were more
Arab than some Arabs! So al-Assad's attack on Turkey
was expected, but it was delayed. What we must remember now with al-Assad attacking
Turkey today, and specifically Erdogan, is that al-Assad
once wanted to court Turkey and manipulate its prime
minister to strike a blow to Saudi Arabia and
Mubarak's Egypt, in order to scam the French and the
Americans at the time, and to manipulate the Turks and
the Israelis with regards to the "negotiations" issue.
When Erdogan was famously offended by the Israeli
Prime Minister at the Davos conference, al-Assad
himself even said that good relations with Turkey
would be in everyone's interest. This was the extent of al-Assad's ploys against the
Turks, whereby he opened all doors to Turkey's "new
Ottoman Sultan", signed unprecedented agreements with
the Erdogan government, and abolished the need for
visas to travel between Syria and Turkey. Of course,
al-Assad wasn't the only one trying to take advantage
of Turkey, there was also Iran and Hezbollah, who
dealt with the Turks as if they were neo-Arabs, not
neo-Turks, in the hope of pitting the major Sunni
states in the region – Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Turkey
– against each other, in order to enhance the
influence of Iran and its agents in the region. All of this was done despite the rational criticism
that a marriage between Turkey and the al-Assad regime
was unsustainable, and that Turkey's "zero problems"
theory – which al-Assad is mocking now – was
unenforceable, not only in our region but in politics
as a whole, for the friend of everyone is also the
enemy of everyone. Therefore, and because his lies
could only be spun so far, here is al-Assad, like the
Iranians and Nasrallah, complaining today about the
Turks, while attempting to take advantage of them once
again by saying that Erdogan is the one who supports
the Syrian opposition, not the Turkish people. This is
the same trick used by the Syrian regime in Iraq in
the days when it would cooperate with the Americans in
the morning, and then set terrorists upon them at
night. Today the tyrant of Damascus' tricks have ended,
even with the Turks, and more importantly with the
Syrians themselves, who are no longer deceived by the
slogans of opposition and resistance, or that al-Assad
is the last bastion of secularism in the region. This is the most important thing, namely that al-Assad's
lies are over, just as his criminal regime will soon
end.
Tariq Alhomayed is the Editor-in-Chief of Asharq
Al-Awsat, the youngest person to be appointed that
position. He holds a BA degree in Media studies from
King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah, and has also
completed his Introductory courses towards a Master's
degree from George Washington University in Washington
D.C. He is based in London. |