Thursday, February 25, 2010

Huge Turkish Banner Depicts Peres Bowing to Erdogan With The Caption: “Erdogan, a leader whom the world bows down to"


B"H

Israel has no right to "turn a blind eye" to this incident when it is insulting not only Peres, not only Israel, but all of the Jewish nation.

It is an incredible diplomatic provocation that cannot and should not be ignored.

Erdogan is clearly displaying a tendency toward totalitarianism. First, he has arrested top military commanders in what he says is a "coup attempt" against him. Now, a huge banner depicting him as a larger-than life character (a la Sadam Hussein) has been unfurled.

What's next? I hate to entertain that thought.

Hopefully it doesn't involve the destruction of the Jewish community in Turkey.

Taking into account Erdrogan's latest moves, I am praying there is an Esther in his court because there most certainly is a Haman.

M
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Peres depicted bowing to Erdogan
Israel shrugs off massive banner unfurled near Istanbul.
BY HERB KEINON
http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=169410


Israel is turning a blind eye to a huge poster showing President Shimon Peres seemingly bowing to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that was unfurled from a crane in an Istanbul suburb on Sunday.

Neither the President’s Residence nor the Foreign Minister would comment on the poster, which superimposed an image of a bowing Peres in front of Erdogan, over the caption “Erdogan, a leader whom the world bows down to.”

While at first glance this seemed to be Turkish retribution for the public hazing of Turkey’s ambassador to Israel in January, when Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon sat him on a lower chair and reprimanded him over an anti-Semitic television show broadcast in Turkey, the Turkish press reported that Erdogan’s office had the poster taken down before Erdogan appeared at the site to inaugurate a new road network.

It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the poster, with some diplomatic officials in Jerusalem saying it obviously came from the top, while others said it was quite possible that this was an independent act of protest that was not choreographed by the government.

One diplomatic official in Jerusalem termed the incident “scandalous,” saying that it demonstrated a great deal of disrespect both for Peres and for Israel.

Relations between Erdogan and Peres reached a nadir in January 2009, after Operation Cast Lead, when the two had an angry exchange at the World Economic Forum in Davos, with Erdogan at one point storming off the stage after telling Peres, “When it comes to killing, you know well how to kill.”

In an interview with the Spanish newspaper El Pais that was published Monday, Erdogan said that the Davos incident – which made him a hero in much of the Arab world – ushered in a newTurkish approach to foreign policy.

“That opened a new approach to foreign relations,” he said. “We have a philosophy of strength. It is a foreign policy with a backbone.”

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