Anonymous wrote:Erdogan going to come out smelling like roses. NATO member yet muslim, pretty much the only country not bombed by Iran. All those other countries with US bases that were bombed are probably going to be looked down upon in the end by muslims. Especially since they're all cucks to Huckabee now.
US may have possibly been able to invoke Article 5 of NATO but Israel too weak that they couldn't fight Iran one-on-one until the point Iran attacked the US.
Now, several NATO countries have openly come out against the war.
And finally, the jews want to attack Turkiye next? Will they never learn?
Erdogan and von der Leyen urge diplomacy as Iran crisis deepens
https://www.turkiyetoday.com/nation/erdogan-and-von-der-leyen-urge-diplomacy-as-iran-crisis-deepens-3215408
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen held a phone call to discuss the escalating conflict in the region following attacks on Iran, with both leaders stressing that diplomacy remains the only viable path to resolution.
Erdogan used the call to reiterate Türkiye's readiness to serve as a mediator, urging all parties to return to the negotiating table. Von der Leyen, in a post on social media following the conversation, said she welcomed "Türkiye's readiness to mediate and support a resolution through peaceful means."
Turkey as Israel’s “next Iran”? A strategic rivalry reconsidered
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20260222-turkey-as-israels-next-iran-a-strategic-rivalry-reconsidered/
When former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said that Turkey, with the support of Qatar, was replacing Iran as Israel’s major strategic threat, his words were not just another warning about another enemy. Instead, his remarks reflected a broader anxiety: Israel could be entering a period of renewed conflict with a powerful and prosperous adversary—a situation that also carries historical significance.
For decades, Israel’s security concerns have been dictated by Iran and its Shi’a axis, including Iran’s plans for a nuclear program, Hezbollah’s missiles, and the undeclared wars in Syria and Lebanon. But Bennett’s words speak of a new axis: Turkey, a member of NATO with a thriving economy and global ambitions, is building a Sunni axis that might be even more powerful than Iran’s Shi’a axis. “Erdoğan is a sophisticated actor who understands how to turn ideology into leverage,” says Meliha Altunışık, a Turkish expert on international politics. “Unlike Iran, Turkey combines pragmatism with ideology, making it both credible and unpredictable.”
“Türkiye is the new Iran” - former Israeli PM’s claim: election rhetoric or real policy shift?