Friday, November 07, 2025

Erdogan Condemns Netanyahu While Waging His Own War On The Kurds – OpEd



November 7, 2025 

By Fair Observer
By Robin Fakhari


Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has recently denounced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the “continued attacks on Palestinian civilians” and warnedof a “humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza.” By presenting himself as a human rights defender, Erdogan seeks to position Turkey as a moral voice in the region. Yet for many Kurds, such remarks ring hollow — an example of the Kurdish saying, “the raven calls the other raven black,” the Kurdish equivalent of “the pot calling the kettle black.”





Erdogan’s hypocrisy

Since 2016, the Turkish government — now a self-styled champion of Palestinians — has carried out repeated military operations in the Kurdish-administered region of northern Syria, known in Kurdish as Rojava. Operations such as Olive Branch (2018) and Peace Spring(2019), among others, drew allegations from Amnesty Internationalof “serious human rights violations,” including arbitrary detention, torture and enforced disappearances.

Erdogan’s rhetoric on Gaza often resembles political opportunism more than moral conviction. In 2017, he warned that Kurds in Iraq “must give up on independence or go hungry.” While just a year earlier, he had called for Palestinian statehood at the United Nations. Now, in 2025, he accuses Netanyahu of using famine as a “weapon” in Gaza — the very threat he once directed at Kurds pursuing the same right: self-determination.

The contradictions extend further. After Netanyahu’s recent strike on a hospital in Gaza, Erdogan condemned Israel for “relentlessly destroying humanity.” Yet Amnesty International documented in 2019 the civilian costs of Turkey-backed operations in Syria, describing “an utterly callous disregard for civilian lives,” including unlawful strikes on residential areas. The Human Rights Watch also noted in 2022 that Turkish strikes on civilian infrastructure “exacerbate the humanitarian crisis” and “endanger basic rights.”

These abuses are well-documented. The Human Rights Watch’s 2024 findings detailed abductions, arbitrary arrests, sexual violence and torture committed by factions of the Turkey-backed Syrian National Army. The report also notes “Human Rights Watch … found that Turkish Armed Forces and intelligence agencies were involved in carrying out and overseeing abuses.”

In addition, a preliminary 2025 report by the European Association of Lawyers for Democracy and World Human Rights accused Turkey of “committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in Rojava.”

To condemn the Israeli government, Erdogan warns that “those who shed innocent blood will drown in it,” yet his own government stands accused of shedding that same blood. In this regard, the deeper question is why Kurdish and Palestinian struggles receive such unequal treatment. The answer lies less in humanitarian principles than in political calculations.

Erdogan’s political maneuvering

Regarding Erdogan’s recent political statements, some explanationspoint to his long-standing hostility toward Israel, his ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and neo-Ottoman ambitions. This point recalls earlier warnings.

In 2015, the Institute for Strategic, Political, Security and Economic Consultancy in Berlin reported that Turkey “support[s] other countries’ designated terrorist groups [such as] Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, ETIM/TIP, Al Nusra, and other Al Qaeda affiliates.”
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In 2025, Israel’s Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center described Turkey as “a center for planning, funding, and directing terrorist attacks,” noting Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) ideological ties to Hamas.

In addition, the Counter Extremism Project observed that Turkey “maintains open relations with internationally sanctioned extremist groups and harbors internationally sanctioned and wanted extremists affiliated with the Taliban, the Muslim Brotherhood, and Hamas.”

At home, Erdogan faces mounting disillusionment. A 2025 Turkish Minutes poll showed that 67% of people in Turkey want the “Erdogan era to end.” A 2024 Pew Research Center survey found that 55% of Turkish adults hold an “unfavorable opinion” of him.

A similar distrust is also mirrored in Israel, where The Times of Israelreported that 70% of Israelis “do not trust” Netanyahu’s government. In such a condition that civilians are paying the price, Erdogan’s moral posturing toward Israel appears less like a principled stand than a striking case of the pot calling the kettle black.


The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy.

About the author: Robin Fakhari is an independent writer, researcher and artist. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English Literature and a master’s degree in American Studies, and is currently specializing in Kurdish Studies. His research interests include political studies, cultural studies, discourse analysis, power relations, sovereignty and identity, sociology of art, literary studies and critical theory. A trained classical pianist, he has over a decade of experience as a music instructor and has contributed to art scholarship as Editor-in-Chief of Contemporary Arts magazine, published by the University of Kurdistan, and as editor of The History of Contemporary Kurdish Art and Chiya Aesthetics. His master’s thesis, “The Birth of Music from the Soul of Tragedy: An Afro-American Study,” examines the emergence of jazz music through the frameworks of jazz diplomacy, power relations and Foucaultian theory.

Source: This article was published by Fair Observer

Fair Observer

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