In response, the Turkish foreign minister called Netanyahu “a cold-blooded killer.”Netanyahu fired back: “I was just exposed to the daily trolling of the antisemitic dictator Erdogan,” he wrote on Twitter. “He [Erdogan] knows what a moral army is…as opposed to an army that massacres women and children in Kurdish villages and a state which, to my regret, is becoming more dictatorial day by day.”Why the fighting? There are a few reasons. First, is that Erdogan simply cannot control his hatred of Israel. He regularly attacks the Jewish state, which just a few years ago, was one of Turkey’s closest allies. Sadly, Israeli-Turkish ties will never be what they once were as long as Erdogan, a blatant antisemite, remains in power. The second reason might be connected to an attempt by both leaders to vie for influence over Trump. Netanyahu is trying to show Trump who Erdogan really is and how he cannot be trusted to help stabilize Syria. Erdogan’s attack on Israel on Saturday was nothing new but the timing – just a couple days after revelations that he and Trump had coordinated the Syria withdrawal – was perfect.This way, Netanyahu doesn’t have to talk about Syria or even think about criticizing Trump. All he has to do is show the world who Erdogan really is: an antisemite who is blinded by his hatred for Israel.If anyone thinks that Turkey or Erodgan will assume the mantle from the US and look after the interests of Israel or the West in Syria, they are wrong. All one has to do is look at the last 48 hours on Twitter. Erdogan is no ally. He cannot be trusted.Erdogan – the occupier of northern Cyprus, whose army massacres women and children in Kurdish villages, inside and outside Turkey – should not preach to Israel.
— Benjamin Netanyahu (@netanyahu) December 22, 2018