Pompeo gets kebab-skewered after posting geography-challenged map of DIVIDED Turkey
Mike Pompeo has found himself barraged by enraged Turkish netizens after the US Secretary of State shared a gif which, for reasons that may forever remain a mystery, appears to include an erroneously bisected map of Turkey.
Like many internet outrages, this gaffe began with the most innocent of intentions: The State Department chief wanted to tweet out a thank you to all the countries that have followed Washington’s lead by recognizing self-declared interim president Juan Guaido as Venezuela's legitimate leader. But this did not go as planned, as the map that the State Department media intern apparently selected divides NATO-ally Turkey into two separate territories.
We applaud Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Czech Rep., Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden & UK for supporting Venezuelan people by recognizing @jguaido today as Interim President. pic.twitter.com/g0oYLY7Qq0
— Secretary Pompeo (@SecPompeo) February 4, 2019
The faux pas did not sit well with Turkish Twitter, which mercilessly grilled Pompeo for his lousy geography skills.
“There is a flaw in the map of the Republic of Turkey – do not make such mistakes!” one of the more reserved responses read.
Oradaki Türkiye Cumhuriyeti haritasında bir eksiklik var böyle hatalar yapmayın! pic.twitter.com/HVNOrAYOER
— Adem Bayır (@bayr_adem) February 6, 2019
One particularly outraged Turkish netizen reiterated his country’s unwavering support for Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, while making a not-so-politically-correct suggestion where Pompeo should shove his inaccurate map.
Türkiye'yi bölünmüş olarak gösterdiğiniz bu haritayı alın kıçınıza sokun.İçimizde, Maduro'ya karşı ABD'yi destekleyen kahpeler Türkiye için de aynı beklentideler. Bilerek ve isteyerek ABD'ye destek veriyorlar.Ne pahasına olursa olsun, bu millet size o fırsatı asla vermeyecek. pic.twitter.com/d7yTUtP1cn
— M. Ş. Akçay ® (@MSAkcay_) February 5, 2019
“Do you need a basic geography education mr pompeo? I believe you ve made a ridiculous mistake on Turkish Republic map. Poor US people. With such politicians they have no future!” wrote another incensed Twitter user.
Do you need a basic geography education mr pompeo? I believe you ve made a ridiculous mistake on Turkish Republic map. 🇹🇷 Poor US people. With such politicians they have no future!
— ozZz* 👊🏼 (@ozzmuammer) February 6, 2019
Despite being a US military ally, Turkey has resisted calls by Washington to back Guaido, the little-known opposition figure who declared himself Venezuela’s acting president in late January. This is just the latest point of contention between the two allies, with Ankara striving to lead an independent regional policy at times clashing with US vision, as well as recently building up closer ties with Russia.
Geography has never been America’s strong suit. Fox News once famously confused Iraq with Egypt, and at least one study has shown that there’s a direct correlation between Americans not knowing where a country is, and wanting the US military to intervene in said country.
@Max_Fisher Fox News confuses Egypt with Iraq (on purpose?): pic.twitter.com/WQeIjmMizN
— Benjamin Ramm (@BenjaminRamm) July 25, 2014
Another study found that those Americans who can find North Korea on the map are “more likely to prefer diplomacy” (but only 36 percent could).
Also on rt.com Americans who don’t know where Ukraine is are more likely to support military intervention – pollLike this story? Share it with a friend!