Right after Turkish President Erdogan accused Israel of “atrocities” against Palestine and Lebanon, and threatened to attack the Jewish state, the Turkish foreign minister started to show his nervousness as he watched the U.S. and Israel decimate Iran. Turkey knows that it is little to no better than Iran, but exceptional at hiding that fact, but it’s only a matter of time before Turkey is fully exposed for what it is. Recep Tayyip Erdogan aims to establish a revived Ottoman Empire (global caliphate) with himself as leader.
Hakan Fidan is attempting to stir further propaganda against Israel, despite the jihadist aggression against Israel from the day of its founding. That’s the reason why he also “warned that Israeli military activity could next extend to Syria”: because he knows what is inevitably coming. It is Syrian jihadists who are taking aim at Israel first.
Less than a week ago, a new jihad group, The Islamic Resistance in Syria, began taking aim at U.S. forces and sites in Israel. The group also threatened that the attacks were “the beginning of a series of military operations that will continue at an escalating pace, with the aim of liberating the land and deterring the aggressor.”
Syria is crawling with jihadists, beginning with its President Ahmed al-Sharaa, who was an al-Qaeda leader and also worked with the Islamic State. And now ISIS is feared to be militarily “on the upswing” in Syria, with the closure of the infamous Al-Hol camp. Also, Turkey-backed jihadis (“Amshat” mercenaries) in Syria say they’re ready to die fighting Christians in the way of Islam. They’ll do the same to other minorities and Jews.
It is Muslims who cannot live without hostility once they adhere to the supremacist and expansionary Sharia. Any other mainstream religion becomes more peaceful once its believers adhere to their written doctrine.
“‘Israel cannot live without hostility’: Turkey warns Israel may target it next,” by Tobias Siegal, Jerusalem Post, April 13, 2026:
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said Monday that Israel was seeking a new enemy and could soon set its sights on Turkey, remarks that came just a day after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sharply escalated rhetoric by threatening possible military action against the Jewish state.
“After Iran, Israel cannot live without hostility,” Fidan said during an extensive interview with the Turkish state-run news agency Anadolu. The Turkish minister accused Jerusalem of fostering “a new rhetoric” to justify its aggression in the region and declare Turkey an enemy.
The official further argued that this trend extended “not only to Netanyahu’s administration” but also “to certain figures within the Israeli opposition,” though he did not specify whom he was referring to….
Fidan warned that Israeli military activity could next extend to Syria, where the IDF operated last year, in what it said were efforts to protect the Druze minority in the south. He cautioned that such actions could create broader “risks” across the region. “Because of the ongoing war in Iran, [Israel] is not doing certain things right now,” he said. “Later, when the time comes, it may want to act.”
Fidan’s comments follow remarks made on Sunday by Erdogan, suggesting that Ankara could soon choose to engage militarily with Israel….
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