Friday, November 15, 2019

Trump Says that He is a Big Fan of President Erdogan while Turkey Persecutes Christians


Trump Says that He is a Big Fan of President Erdogan while Turkey Persecutes Christians

By Julio Severo
The November 13, 2019 meeting between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House provoked concern about the passivity of the U.S. government regarding Turkey persecuting Christians.
While some hoped Trump would say hard truths to Erdogan, instead he highly praised the Turkish strongman.
“I’m a big fan of the president; I have to tell you that,” Trump said of Erdogan while speaking at a press conference at the White House.
During the press conference, one reporter asked Erdogan about the plight of Christians who have suffered during the Turkish invasion in Syria.
“The ones remaining on the Syrian side of the territory will see their worship practices restored and revived in a special manner, they’re receiving health care; they’re receiving humanitarian aid in every aspect possible,” Erdogan responded.
Yet, a Christian pastor in the Syrian city of Kobane told a different story.
“Under the pretext of fighting against the Kurds, a lot of churches have been targeted and destroyed, and many Christians were forcibly displaced from their hometowns,” Pastor Omar Firaz told CBN News.
“We’ve had an economic relationship, a military relationship, a genuine friendship with Turkey. but we do not know who Turkey is anymore,” said Senator James Lankford (R-OK).
Perhaps Lankford does not know, but Christians, especially Armenian Christians, know very well who Turkey is.
One of the largest modern genocides of Christians was committed by Turkey. About 100 years ago in Turkey, an estimated 1.5 million Armenian Christians in 66 towns and 2,500 villages were massacred; 2,350 churches and monasteries were looted, and 1,500 schools and colleges were destroyed. Nevertheless, to appease Turkey’s wrath, Trump has avoided to say that the Armenian Genocide was a genocide. America does not recognize the Armenian Genocide because Turkish Muslims hate to hear about their crimes against Christians.
If Russian President Vladimir Putin had said “I’m a big fan of president Erdogan,” U.S. Bible teachers would immediately deliver apocalyptic sermons about Russia and Turkey in a Gog and Magog alliance against Israel.
The U.S. has every reason and power to condemn Turkey for centuries of persecution against Christians and no reason to worry: Turkey has no nuclear weapons against the U.S. But Turkey has 50 American nuclear weapons against Russia.
In the Cold War, the U.S. installed 50 nuclear bombs in Turkey to fight the Soviet Union, making both nations hijacked by strange interests. Because of this hijacking, the U.S. spent the last 70 years “hindered” from condemning Turkey about its genocide against Armenian Christians.
The Soviet Union does not exist anymore, but American nuclear bombs continue in Turkey threatening Russia.
When Russia tries better relations with Turkey, its objective is to neutralize the nuclear threat.
So Turkey, which is historically a genocidal threat to Christians, is not threatened by the U.S. and its massive nuclear power. On the contrary, the U.S. uses Turkey to threaten Russia.
Bible teachers should have some apocalyptic messages about the U.S. nuclearly empowering Islamic Turkey against Christians, and Russia is today the largest Orthodox Christian nation in the world. Armenian Christians who suffered genocide from Turkey were also Orthodox Christians.
It makes no sense for the U.S., the largest Protestant nation in the world, to use an Islamic nation with a history of Christian genocide to threaten an Orthodox Christian nation.
Why doesn’t the U.S. nuclearly threaten Islamic Turkey and Saudi Arabia, which are threats to Christians?
With information from CBN and Slate.
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