Now he, too, is perhaps a talented but not a very ethical and sportsmanlike type. Yet another immature, unripe watermelon, I would say. You cannot pin him down; he first says one thing and then switches to another, changing and evading and distorting all the time while also pleading that he has been misquoted. And unfortunately, he happens to be not in tennis but politics. Whatever is it that he stirs up is paid for in human lives.
Can this whole process result in a complete parting of ways? And what is it likely to cost to the region, to the Kurds, and to Turkey? On what new basis can the search for a peaceful solution be re-activated? This is going to be truly a very complicated process.
And only when this death-lust has drunk enough blood to its satisfaction, and slowly pulls back to digest all the innocent lives that it has usurped, that in the midst of all the ruins once more it becomes time to talk and to take steps toward a solution.
We are used to politicians speaking without expertise, authority or knowledge to some extent - so much so that we usually understand such a tactical discourse from the word "politics."