#EndorseThis: Trump Asks Turkish Journalist ‘Friend Or Foe?’

#EndorseThis: Trump Asks Turkish Journalist ‘Friend Or Foe?’

If you’re keeping score, don’t forget to include a comment from this past weekend in your tally of racially-tinged and xenophobic comments that Donald Trump has made in his campaign for president. We here at The National Memo have lost count.

At a rally in Denver, Trump was briefly distracted while listing Middle Eastern countries by a man in the crowd who reminded him to mention Turkey.  After learning that the speaker was Turkish, Trump tactfully replied, “I think he’s friend. Are you friend or foe? I think he’s friend.”

This just three days after a triple suicide bombing took the lives of 45 people and wounded hundreds at Turkey’s Istanbul Ataturk Airport.

It is unclear how Trump made the snap judgment that the man –Turkish journalist and columnist Yusuf Serce — was a friend, other than the tried-and-true method of looking into his eyes and mystically determining that he was a good person.

In fact, given the Trump campaign’s historically fraught relations with the press, it might have been more prudent to treat him with more caution, in case he wrote an article about Trump that, like anything from the Washington Post staff, was perceived by the candidate as “dishonest” and “phony.”

After the event, Serce tweeted that he “just wanted to let him say what he wants to say,” and seemed to have had a generally positive experience. Which is nice.

Trump went on to mention that he has investments in Turkey and that he believes the country “should be fighting ISIS.” (Turkey has somewhat ambivalently contributed to international efforts to combat the terrorist group.) As Time‘s Tessa Berenson has noted, this is not the first time that Trump has asked members of the audience whether they were friends or foes. Someone should tell him that the fourth estate is supposed to be combative.

 

Photo: YouTube/CNN

Start your day with National Memo Newsletter

Know first.

The opinions that matter. Delivered to your inbox every morning

Putin

President Vladimir Putin, left, and former President Donald Trump

"Russian propaganda has made its way into the United States, unfortunately, and it's infected a good chunk of my party's base." That acknowledgement from Texas Rep. Michael McCaul, Republican chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, was echoed a few days later by Ohio Rep. Michael Turner, the chairman of the Intelligence Committee. "To the extent that this propaganda takes hold, it makes it more difficult for us to really see this as an authoritarian versus democracy battle."

Keep reading...Show less
Michael Cohen
Michael Cohen

Donald Trump's first criminal trial may contain a few surprises, according to the former president's ex-lawyer, and star witness, Michael Cohen.

Keep reading...Show less
{{ post.roar_specific_data.api_data.analytics }}