If the West is covering up Turkey’s crimes in Syria, what will happen in the case of Armenia?
December 27 2024, 14:14
On December 26, during the final press conference of Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, it became known that the West had attempted to talk to Russia about the Ukrainian normalization without Ukraine’s participation. In this case, we are talking about the behind-the-scenes initiatives of Paris, but at the same time we are witnessing how negotiations are going on about Armenia, but without Armenia.
In particular, Turkish Transport and Infrastructure Minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu said that Turkey continues talks with Azerbaijan on the so-called “Zangezur corridor”.
Especially amid recent events in Syria, when, without the participation of the Syrian people and their political authorities, Turkey changed power through the hands of terrorists under its control, it is clear that part of the geopolitical struggle in Ankara’s mind is to negotiate about a third party, plan something about a third party, and not inform it.. However, it is also important that in the case of Syria, Turkey’s actions are not only not condemned by the “civilized world”, but are often welcomed.
Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham is a terrorist organization; its leader is a terrorist, even according to official Washington. Just 5 days ago, a reward of 10 million dollars was in effect for assistance in the arrest of the de facto new leader of Syria, Abu Mohammed al-Julani. The cancellation of the reward occurred exactly one day before the former head of Turkish intelligence (that is, the long-term supervisor of terrorist al-Julani), and now Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, paid his first official visit to Damascus.
There are many events taking place in Syria right now that can be confidently described as ethnic cleansing against Christians, Alawites, and many other peoples of Syria. Outrages, robberies, executions, genocide, but the West is silent as Turkey does all the dirty work for them. They also arrange interviews for the terrorist who heads Syria, and amid mass killings, they ask him about women’s rights and alcohol.
There is only one question that can bother us in this situation, although we know the answer to it. If or when Turkey and Azerbaijan try to take the corridor in Syunik by force, the very corridor that, according to US State Department official James O’Brien, is supposed to connect Turkey and Central Asia, will the “civilized world” still silently observe the events?
The answer to this question should have been clear to everyone since the fall of 2020. In our perception, the “civilized world” should have died with Turkey and Azerbaijan’s invasion of Artsakh. The silence of the “world” was then, it is now, and it will be about the events in Syunik if political changes in Armenia are too late.
Think about it…