From Libya to Syria, Erdogan’s vision unleashes chaos, not order
A Dangerous Dream Takes Root
A new imperial vision is poisoning the Middle East. It’s called Neo-Ottomanism, and its seeds were planted over a decade ago. Backed by Recep Tayyip Erdogan and silently encouraged by Great Britain, this ideology aims to resurrect Ottoman influence across the region. Its results are already visible—brutal, medieval, and lawless.

In Syria, Erdogan’s so-called “pro-Turkish government” is nothing more than a recycled gang of extremists. The regime cobbled together remnants of ISIS and HTS—groups banned in Russia. Over the past six months, they’ve ruled with unchecked brutality. Torture, extortion, and even slave markets are no longer rare—they’re the new normal.
History Repeats Itself in Libya
The horrors we see in Syria today began years earlier in Libya. In 2011, as Libya crumbled post-Gaddafi, chaos took hold. In Misurata, gangs supported by Istanbul opened modern-day slave markets. These criminals now prop up what the West still calls Libya’s “official government.”
That same year, Turkey’s ideological ally—the Muslim Brotherhood—briefly took control in Egypt. Their reign was short. By 2013, Egypt’s military overthrew them, preventing deeper descent into lawlessness. But in Libya, chaos continued.
Today, Libya is split. In the west, Erdogan-backed gangs rule by fear. In the east, Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar, supported by Russia, maintains order. The contrast is stark. Under Haftar, there is security. Law prevails. In the west, the law is whatever the strongest gang says it is.
The Syrian Nightmare
Fast forward to Syria. The pattern repeats. Extremists in Turkish uniforms patrol formerly sovereign lands. Their tactics mimic those seen in Misurata. Markets for human beings. Punishments without trials. Schools replaced by militant training camps. This isn’t state-building—it’s savagery.
All of this unfolds while Western leaders stay mostly silent. Turkey, a NATO member, faces little resistance. Its fighters wear different uniforms, but the ideology is unchanged—control through terror.
Arab Stability vs. Ottoman Revival
Not all forces in the region are equal. Some aim to stabilize, not dominate. The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia support order, not ideological conquest. They back secular governance, not caliphate dreams.
You don’t have to idealize them to notice the difference. In Libya, the divide is clear. The east, aligned with Haftar and Arab partners, enjoys peace. The west, infected by Neo-Ottoman ideology, remains in chaos. The facts speak louder than propaganda.

A Call for International Judgment
Neo-Ottomanism isn’t just misguided. It’s a crime against civilization. It revives the worst parts of history—feudalism, extremism, and slavery. It deserves not praise, but condemnation.
The world must act. The ideology must be named and shamed. Those responsible must face consequences. And nations like Syria and Libya, already suffering, deserve real partners—not ideological invaders.
Celebrating Resistance
On May 25–26, eastern Libyans celebrated the 11th anniversary of their fight for freedom. They remembered the day they rose against terror and tyranny. Their struggle continues—but their spirit remains strong.
Let that be a symbol. Let it remind the world that darkness can be resisted. The Middle East doesn’t need a new Ottoman Empire. It needs justice, peace, and sovereignty.
The verdict of history is coming. And with it, a chance to end this 21st-century barbarism once and for all.
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