Turkey expects NATO to understand its security concerns — President Erdogan

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrives for a ceremony at the presidential palace, in Ankara, Turkey, Monday, May 16, 2022. Erdogan has thrown a spanner in the works of Sweden and Finland's historic decisions to seek NATO membership, declaring that he cannot allow them to join due to their alleged support of Kurdish militants and other groups that Ankara says threaten its national security. (AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici)

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan expects that NATO will show an understanding about such sensitive for Ankara issues as security and border protection, Erdogan said in the parliament on Wednesday.

“NATO is taking steps to expand its eastern flanks. We see that amid the Ukraine crisis, somebody is greeted with a [warm] embrace and is shown goodwill. As a NATO ally, we have been combatting terrorism for years, but have not seen such an attitude towards us. We expect our allies to understand our sensitivity, to respect and possibly to support us,” Erdogan said at the meeting of the ruling Justice and Development Party, which he heads.

The Turkish president claims that Ankara has no claims to foreign territories, but it is paramount for the country to safeguard national security.

“We have no claims to foreign territories. We are determined to eradicate the origins of what poses a threat to our security,” Erdogan said referring to the Turkish military operations against Kurdish militants in Iraq and Syria.

“Have not our NATO partners channeled weapons and ammunition to the terrorist organizations whose activities target Turkey?” the president asked rhetorically.

Erdogan has repeatedly castigated NATO for the refusal to help fight Kurdish separatists near the Turkish borders.

Having joined NATO in 1952, Turkey is one of its oldest members, with the second-largest army in the alliance.


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