Biden blasting Erdoğan in unaired clip sweeps through Turkish social media
 
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, in a
clip taken from what appears to be an episode of FX’s The Weekly, spoke of his
vision for U.S. relations with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan,
saying he would embolden Turkish opposition to defeat Turkey's strongman in
elections if he became president.
Biden also called Erdoğan
an "autocrat,"adding,"He’s the president of Turkey and a lot
more."
Biden said his comfort level about the U.S. still
having nuclear weapons in Turkey given Erdoğan's
behaviour "is diminished a great deal."
The Weekly is a documentary series covering the
developmen iconic headlines by the New York Times. In the January 19 episode
titled The Endorsement, the NYT editorial board interviewed all Democratic
candidates, making public for the first time the process behind the endorsement
the newspaper makes at every U.S. election.
The story first appeared on Arabic media on
Thursday, and was picked up by Kurdish media on Saturday. The video clip
appeared on Saturday, posted on Twitter by Kurdish journalist Arif Zêrevan.
The clip appears to be an outtake from The Weekly,
as Biden does not speak of Turkey in the episode that aired on FX and is
currently available for streaming on Hulu.
Biden repeatedly says he is "very concerned"
about developments in Turkey, calling for "a very different approach” to
Erdoğan
by "engaging" with the elements of the Turkish opposition leadership
as he did during his vice presidency.
"We can support those elements in the Turkish
leadership that still exist and get more from them, embolden them to be able to
take on and defeat Erdoğan,” Biden said, “not by a coup,” but via the electoral
process.
Erdoğan “got blown out in
Istanbul,”
the Democratic nominee said, referring to the defeat of the ruling Justice and
Development Party (AKP) in the local elections last year. The AKP lost most of
Turkey’s big cities in the March elections, including Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir,
Adana, Antalya, Diyarbakır and Eskişehir.
Biden, during Barack Obama’s second term as
president in particular, engaged closely with the Turkish opposition, including
meeting with critical journalists and activists during visits to Istanbul.
Current U.S. President Donald Trump and his
administration “yielded to” Erdoğan
in Syria, Biden said. “The last thing I would have done is to yield to him with
regards to the Kurds.”
After AKP’s electoral defeat, the Turkish military
started an incursion into Syria dubbed “Operation Peace Spring,” dealing a blow
to the Syrian Kurds. Preceded by operations Euphrates Shield in 2016 and Olive
Branch to seize Afrin in 2018, the incursion coincided with a nationwide
crackdown against the Kurdish political movement. Pro-Kurdish party leaders
Selahattin Demirtaş and thousands of
members of the pro-Kurdish Democratic Peoples’ Party (HDP) have been jailed since
2016. 
"At the end of the day, Turkey doesn't want to
rely on Russia. They’ve had a bite out of that apple a long time ago. But
they’ve got to understand, that we are not going to continue to play with them
the way we have," Biden said.
Biden concluded by saying that the United States needs
to work harder with allies “to isolate (Erdoğan's)
actions” in the region,
particularly in Eastern Mediterreanean, including oil exploration and other
issues.
Trump’s former National Security Adviser John Bolton
wrote about the close friendship between the two presidents in his recent
tell-all book, and about U.S. Special Envoy to Syria James Jeffrey, who Bolton
calls “a pro-Erdoğan and anti-Kurdish
senior figure”,
helping to negotiate for Turkey’s
operation in Syria, which started after Trump announced the withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Kurdish-held areas.
The full transcript of the interview on New York
Times' January 19th, 2020 edition and the part regarding to Turkey follows:
The United States has about 50 nuclear weapons based
in Turkey. This began to stir public debate after Turkey’s offensive into Syria
in October.
The answer is my comfort level is diminished a great
deal. I’ve spent a lot of time with Erdogan.
More than anybody in our administration did because
Erdogan concluded that he’d only talk to me because he thought I wasn’t
anti-Islam. Remember when I made that speech to NATO saying, when he got
elected, “You had to reach out. This is an opportunity to bring another Muslim
country.” And you knew why they were acting the way they did in other countries
in Europe, to not reach out at all for the first election. We have had 
Yeah. I’ve spent a lot of time with him. He is an
autocrat. He’s the president of Turkey and a lot more. What I think we should
be doing is taking a very different approach to him now, making it clear that
we support opposition leadership. Making it clear that we are in a position
where we have a way which was working for a while to integrate the Kurdish
population who wanted to participate in the process in their parliament, etc.
Because we have to speak out about what we in fact think is wrong. He has to pay
a price. He has to pay a price for whether or not we’re going to continue to
sell certain weapons to him. In fact, if he has the air defense system that
they’re flying F-15s through to see how they can try to figure out how to do
it. 
So I’m very concerned about it. I’m very concerned
about it. But I’m still of the view that if we were to engage more directly
like I was doing with them, that we can support those elements of the Turkish
leadership that still exist and get more from them and embolden them to be able
to take on and defeat Erdogan. Not by a coup, not by a coup, but by the
electoral process. He got blown out. He got blown out in Istanbul, he got blown
out in his party. So what do we do now? We just sit there, and yielded. And the
last thing I would’ve done is yielded to him with regard to the Kurds. The
absolute last thing. 
I had a couple of those meetings with him about the
Kurds, and they did not clamp down at the time. We have to make it clear that
if they’re looking to, because, at the end of the day, Turkey doesn’t want to
have to rely on Russia. They’ve had a bite out of that apple a long time ago.
But they got to understand that we’re not going to continue to play with them
the way we have. So I am very concerned. I am very concerned. I’m very
concerned about our airfields and access to them as well. And I think it takes
an awful lot of work for us to be able to get together with our allies in the
region and deal with how we isolate his actions in the region, particularly in
the Eastern Mediterranean in relating to oil and a whole range of other things
which take too long to go into. But the answer is yes, I’m worried.
          
     
                               
 
 


