Tag: Bashar al-Assad

President of Syria
  • The Obamas Watch But Don’t See the Tragic Fate of Middle East Women: A Four-Picture Allegory

    The Obamas Watch But Don’t See the Tragic Fate of Middle East Women: A Four-Picture Allegory

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    By Barry Rubin
    Turkey used to be a secular state striving for modernization and a place in the Western world. That dream is turning into a nightmare. The AKP regime, despite its pretense of being a center-right, family values, good government party, is moving Turkey toward Islamism. Washington and the West in general doesn’t seem to notice though horrified Turkish secularists and liberals are yelling for help.
    Look at the photos below of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and his wife arriving in Washington to meet the Obamas. It’s not so much that his wife, Ermine, is wearing a hijab (in Turkey called a turban) but look at her  slumped over and self-effacing like a slave. I’m of no importance, is what her posture seems to say. Compare her abject stance to the three others in the picture standing tall and proud. In the first photo her sleeves are so long to conceal her hands that she can’t even control them. Her head is slumped in a pose conveying  submissiveness and shame at being a woman. And then in the fourth photo, she slinks off, like a servant who has been dismissed.
    The sequence seems to symbollize the fate stalking Turkish woman, subverting the equality envisioned under the Ataturk republic to a status of servility and second-class citizenship. This holds true in much of the Muslim-majority countries and it is getting worse–Egypt and Iraq come to mind–not better.
    Yet the Obamas don’t even notice what’s going on before their eyes. To them, Turkey is the very model of a moderate Muslim democracy, a good model to be encouraged rather than a NATO ally slipping steadily into the Iranian-Syrian alliance.
    Take a look at those photos below and shiver.
    But for sheer insanity there’s this New York Times article.   It celebrates the growing Turkish-Syrian alignment, claiming that this means Syria is becoming more moderate! The author actually states:
    “For some [in Syria], the new closeness with secular, moderate Turkey represents a move away from Syria’s controversial alliance with Iran. For others, it suggests an embrace of Turkey’s more open, cosmopolitan society. And for many — including Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad — it conjures different dreams of a revitalized regional economy, less vulnerable to Western sanctions or pressure.”
    Let me explain something. When a former ally joins your enemies you don’t cheer about how your enemy is becoming your friend. Why should Turkey-Syria friendship mean Syria-Iran coolness, especially when Turkey and Iran are acting like great buddies? This article is just a pitiful parroting of Syrian disinformation. Shameful.

    It isn’t that Syria is aping a moderate pro-West Turkey but Turkey imitating an Islamist Iran. Want to see where Turkey is headed? Look at the photos below:

    Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His latest books are The Israel-Arab Reader (seventh edition), The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley), and The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan). \

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    NEW! By Barry Rubin

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    About Me

    Barry Rubin
    Israel
    Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. See the GLORIA/MERIA site at www.gloria-center.org.
  • Turkish Chief Rabbi Haliva Met with al-Assad

    Turkish Chief Rabbi Haliva Met with al-Assad

    asadTurkish Rabbi Yitzchak Haliva reportedly met with Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad, Kav HaChadash reports.

    It appears Turkey’s prime minister invited religious leaders from Turkey to join him and al-Assad in Saudi Arabia to mark the end of Ramadan.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan explained he wanted local religious leaders to get to know the Syrian leader. Rabbi Haliva met with Assad together with Erdogan. Assad reportedly told the rav there is Jewish community in Syria, resulting in the rabbi replying that he is aware because his community sends them matzos for Pessach. In addition, he plays a vital role in providing “religious services” like schita and bris milah.

    The rabbi reportedly called on the Syrian leader to do everything possible towards advancing peace with Israel to bring an end to the orphans on both sides. The Turkish leader added that he is doing his utmost towards achieving this goal.

    (Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

    Source: theyeshivaworld.com, September 24, 2009

    Turkey’s Chief Rabbi Meets Assad for Dinner

    by Nissan Ratzlav-Katz

    (IsraelNN.com) Turkey’s Chief Rabbi (or Hahambasi) Yitzchak Haleva met with Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad at a Ramadan break-fast dinner earlier this month. Rabbi Haleva had what he felt was a heart-to-heart exchange with the dictator.

    The meeting, which included leading Christian and Muslim clerics as well, was called by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Also in attendance at the upscale Istanbul hotel were diplomatic representatives from several nations, including Israel.

    When Rabbi Haleva was introduced to Assad, the Syrian leader noted that his country also had a Jewish community. Haleva replied that the Turkish Jewish community provides for the Syrian one certain religious needs, such as kosher food and a mohel, as needed. In an exclusive interview with the Matzav HaRuach weekly Torah publication, Rabbi Haleva said that he informed Assad that his community has been sending wine for Shabbat and matzah for Passover to Damascus Jewish community for many years.

    Assad, the rabbi said, replied that he was aware of the connection between the Turkish Rabbinate and the Jews of Damascus. He further promised that the relationship would continue.

    Rabbi Haleva said that in his brief conversation with Assad, he expressed the hope of the Jewish people in Israel and in the Diaspora for true peace in the Middle East. The rabbi informed Assad that the Jewish people pray for peace during the Rosh HaShanah holiday at this time of year.

    “Enough wars, enough mourning, enough destruction and loss,” Rabbi Haleva said, to which Assad expressed full agreement, according to the rabbi.

    “I felt that he felt my words were from the heart, and I sensed that they entered his heart,” Rabbi Haleva told Matzav HaRuach. “And my prayer is that this year, whose arrival we just celebrated, will be a year of peace between Israel and Syria.”

    According to the Yediot Aharonot news website, Rabbi Haleva described Assad as “nice”. His meeting with Assad was part of his duties as a religious official of Turkey who was invited by his prime minister, he said. “It’s not a political matter, nor did it offend my Zionist principles,” the rabbi was quoted as saying. “I told him we wanted peace and asked him to make peace with Israel.”

    Source: www.israelnationalnews.com, Tishrei 10, 5770 / September 28, ’09