ISTANBUL: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday called for pressure on the United States to stop the Zionist entity’s offensive in Gaza, but said there would be no agreement unless Washington accepted the enclave as Palestinian land. Erdogan returned from a summit on Saturday of Arab and Muslim leaders in the Saudi capital Riyadh, which condemned Zionist forces’ "barbaric actions” in Gaza without approving concrete punitive measures.
He is due to visit Germany on Friday and plans to travel to Egypt and host Iran’s president in the coming weeks. "We should hold talks with Egypt and the Gulf countries, and pressure the United States,” Erdogan told Turkish reporters on board his return flight from Riyadh. "The US should increase its pressure on (the Zionist entity). The West should increase pressure on (the Zionist entity)... It’s vital for us to secure a ceasefire,” he said.
Erdogan, who was on a trip to a northeastern Turkish village when US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was in Ankara on Nov 5, did not rule out a meeting with President Joe Biden. "The most important country that needs to be involved is the United States, which has influence on (the Zionist entity),” Erdogan said. But he said he would not call Biden. Blinken "has just been here (in Turkey). I guess Biden will host us from now on.
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It would not be suitable for me to call Biden,” he said.
Erdogan said the US must accept Gaza as Palestinian land. "We cannot agree with Biden if he approaches (the conflict) by seeing Gaza as the land of occupying settlers or (the Zionist entity), rather than the land of the Palestinian people,” he said. Turkey has been an increasingly vocal critic of the Zionist entity’s offensive in Gaza.
In another speech in Istanbul on Sunday, Erdogan vented fury at Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in comments broadcast live on Turkish television. "Hey Netanyahu, these are your good days, more different days are awaiting you... Netanyahu you should know that you’re leaving,” Erdogan said, after previously labelling the Zionist leader "no longer someone we can talk to”.
Erdogan will meet German Chancellor Olaf Scholz next week. Turkey is technically a candidate for eventual EU membership and, even if this seems a distant prospect, Erdogan’s portrayal of Hamas militants as "liberators” — which differs sharply from the bloc’s — has caused unease. It also stands in stark contrast to the position taken by Berlin, the EU’s most populous member.
In its annual report on candidate countries’ progress published this week, the EU said Turkey’s "rhetoric in support of terrorist group Hamas following its attacks against (the Zionist entity)... is in complete disagreement with the EU approach.” "The European Union thinks exactly the same as (the Zionist entity) regarding Hamas,” Erdogan said on the plane. "I see Hamas as a political party that won the elections in Palestine. I don’t look at it the same way they do,” he added. Erdogan repeated his call for an international conference to resolve the conflict. "Nothing can serve peace more than a meeting of all regional actors including warring sides,” he said.