The other day I received a call from Aşkın Tuna. “Fatih this is an unbelievable record. This is the first time I am calling you about a broken record. Alperen registered 2.30 meters in the men’s high jump. This is a score on a global level.” I checked the newspapers the next day.
While you are reading these lines we will be flying to Beijing. Then we will move on to Shanghai.
Four-year-old Elif and two-year-old Hira were killed by their father Ali Yardım on Jan. 2 in Istanbul’s Maltepe district.
We learned about U.S. President Donald Trump’s Jerusalem decision, which set the world on fire, while we were flying with Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım from China’s far western Xinjiang’s capital Urumqi toward the Caspian Sea, after his visit to South Korea.
I have asked this question to experienced diplomats I know from different perspectives.
After attending the “Victory Day” reception at the presidency on Aug. 30, I drew the following conclusions:
The U.S. claims that it will retrieve 1,000 trucks of weaponry after giving them to the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), once the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) ends. Is it possible to believe this?
What is the pain of being without a home and without a country? How painful is it to be away from home?
U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to directly give heavy weapons to the People’s Protection Units (YPG) was not a snap decision. There are deep alliances and rooted interests behind it. It looks quite unlikely that this decision will change if Turkey simply warns against it