Turkish President Erdogan Urges Trump To Let Him Mediate Iran Crisis
Trump reportedly signaled interest in the proposal…
BY TYLER DURDEN
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is pushing the idea of hosting a direct teleconference between US President Donald Trump and Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian in a last-ditch bid to cool rising tensions, and avoid US military action.
Regional sources have newly revealed that in a phone call with Trump on Monday, Erdogan urged Washington to pursue diplomacy over escalation and offered Turkey’s services as an intermediary, a Turkish official said.
via RUTERS
Trump reportedly signaled interest in the proposal, though Tehran has yet to respond. According to the same official, the Iranian president has not issued any public reaction.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is actually currently in Istanbul amid a diplomatic scramble to avert war. One big problem is that Tehran is willing to talk about its nuclear program, but the reported Washington push for it to limit or abolish its ballistic missile arsenal is seen as nothing less than suicide.
The Iranians see this request as simply a non-starter, given the same limitations would not be imposed on Israel, and the Israelis have already mounted a surprise attack on the Islamic Republic last June.
Turkey is against any US-led strikes or a war, but is still pressuring Tehran to make meaningful internal reforms:
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Turkey’s foreign minister, Hakan Fidan, said: “It is wrong to attack Iran. It is wrong to start the war again. Iran is ready to negotiate in the nuclear file.”
He admitted Iran faced challenges at the bargaining table, saying: “It might seem humiliating for them. It will be very difficult to explain not only to themselves but to the leadership. So if we can make things better tolerated I think it will help.”
Fidan argued Iran also had to present a new face to the Middle East, saying he had been “very frank” with the Iranians that they “need to create trust in the region [and] they need to pay attention how they are perceived by the regional countries”.
Turkey has some other pressing interests, given the fact that it shares a far eastern border with Iran, and Iranian migrants and tourists have long played a role in its economy.
Ragıp Soylu of Middle East Eye has put it this way: “Lack of EU initiative to stop this escalation is worrisome. If Iran explodes, 90 million people wouldn’t stay only in the region and Turkey; they will definitely migrate to Europe.”
He added, criticizing absent EU leadership: “But Von der Leyen is more interested in yoga camps in India.”
If Turkey isn’t happy about how things unfold regarding the US, Iran, and Israel – it could once again weaponize a potential new migrant crisis and hold it over Europe’s head, as Erdogan did in 2015.
Header featured image (edited) credit: Org.post content. Emphasis added by (TLB) editors
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