BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com
People who travel overseas with any regularity know how difficult it is to keep up with news from the states. CNN International runs Anderson Cooper and other domestic programs, but the news inserts are for, as the name suggests, an international audience – not for traveling Americans.
One of the issues about getting domestic news outside the U.S. is the issue of internet connectivity. I am on the shores of Lake Malawi in Monkey Bay about which Wikipedia says glowingly, “there is a supermarket and a market in Monkey Bay.” There is a new ATM nearby but the internet connection is approximately dial-up speed.
Some stories came through anyway.
The increasingly dangerous civil war in Syria moved into a new phase over the weekend when two car bombs killed 46 people in Turkey in a town along the Syrian border.
Turkey, according to the Wall Street Journal, blamed Syria for the blasts and announced the arrest of nine people with “ties to the Syrian intelligence services.”
Small towns in Turkey along the border have become a major destination for Syrians trying to escape the war. More than 70,000 people are reported to have been killed so far.
WSJ reporters Joe Parkinson and Alya Albayrak wrote that: Turkish officials queued up to pledge that Ankara would respond, but there was little sign that Turkey was a planning military retaliation on the scale of Israel’s strikes against Syrian targets earlier this month.
That’s the good news – such as it is. The bad news in their piece was this: As the town buried their dead, anger against Syrian refugees who had moved to the town in thousands was palpable, with some residents vowing to eject Syrians from the town.
Therein lies the problem. The Turkish residents blame the refugees for causing their town to become a target for Syrian-connected terrorists, then they might take it upon themselves to fix it: Throw the Syrians out or, worse yet, allow vigilantes to take over and become lynch mobs in an effort to frighten refugees to leave.
Turkish officials recognized this prospect and sent “Additional security forces from different parts of Turkey to keep the peace as groups of young men roamed the town’s main thoroughfare looking for Syrians that hadn’t fled the town.”
Every political leader on the planet is looking for events that might cause the Syrian civil war to spread.
The WSJ piece points out that: Turkey, which shares a 565-mile border with Syria, has been a crucial supporter of the Syrian rebel cause and Ankara has allowed its territory to be used as a logistics base and staging center for Syrian insurgents.
If the Turks did not appear to be protecting the Syrian refugees, then Iran might have used that as an excuse to help its ally Syria by sending forces to the Syrian side of the border to protect them.
Turkey might then have to send military forces to its side of the border to ensure the Iranians didn’t venture across.
Other countries might begin to choose sides and sooner or later someone would shoot someone else.
Two words: Archduke Ferdinand.
Editor’s Note: Rich Galen is former communications director for House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senator Dan Quayle. In 2003-2004, he did a six-month tour of duty in Iraq at the request of the White House engaging in public affairs with the Department of Defense. He also served as executive director of GOPAC and served in the private sector with Electronic Data Systems. Rich is a frequent lecturer and appears often as a political expert on ABC, CNN, Fox and other news outlets.