Vladimir Putin snubbed by Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Vladimir Putin snubbed by Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey ignored Vladimir Putin Wednesday during a conference in Iran, leaving him fidgeting in front of the cameras.

For the first time since he authorized the assault of Ukraine back in February, the Russian president was having face-to-face conversations with his closest ally in Tehran on Tuesday.

He was forced to wait for a nerve-wracking 48 seconds in front of the world’s media, though, since Erdogan was late for a picture opportunity that involved shaking hands.

Putin’s critics said he was left ‘humiliated and insulted’ by what they saw as a bare-faced snub, while others said it showed how far his standing had fallen since the war.

It comes after Putin himself had left Erdogan waiting for almost two minutes in front of TV cameras ahead of a meeting in 2020. Vladimir Putin was due to meet with Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Tehran yesterday, and arrived promptly for a hand-shaking photo-op in front of the world's media

The foreign minister of Ukraine’s Anton Gerashchenko said: “Erdogan made Putin wait throughout the meeting in Tehran.”

The Führer’s visage displays the whole range of his ashamed and offended feelings. With such a face, the bunker is undoubtedly the finest location to remain.

Senior journalist Joyce Karam for The National in the UAE continued, saying: “Those 50 seconds that Erdogan made Putin wait, looking stressed in front of cameras, show much about how much has changed since Ukraine.”

In order to examine the security situation in Syria, Putin and Erdogan met in Tehran on the margins of a trilateral conference with Iranian authorities.

As Erdogan works to mediate a solution that would see Putin release millions of tons of grain held up in Ukraine’s ports to prevent a worldwide food catastrophe, the war was at the top of the agenda for the Turkey-Russia talks.

In addition to being the first face-to-face meeting between Putin and Erdogan since the invasion, this was also the first time a NATO country’s leader had a meeting with Russia.

Turkey has attempted to take a cautious middle ground on Ukraine despite having a number of significant agreements with Russia, including ones involving arms and nuclear power.

However, tensions arose recently as Erdogan abandoned his objections to Finland and Sweden joining NATO, opening the way for their membership.

Putin has publicly stated that he has no objections to any nation joining, but the Kremlin is rumored to be incensed.

Putin said that “progress” had been achieved in the talks for transferring grain from Ukraine after the meeting.

But he said that the likelihood of such a deal being approved depended on how far the West was prepared to budge on sanctions.

“We will make it easier for Ukrainian grain to be exported, but we are working under the assumption that all air delivery restrictions for Russian grain exports would be abolished,” he added.

Putin, who came at the meetings appearing to stumble and with his arm hanging limp, has not received much positive news as a result of the summit.

It’s not the first time he’s acted unwell; many have seen him awkwardly fidget with his feet or obsessively chew his lip during meetings.

Many people believe that Putin, 69, has Parkinson’s disease or a cancerous condition.

His health has been the subject of rumors since the Covid epidemic two years ago, but they have exploded since the war in Ukraine.

Putin, Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi, and Erdogan were in Tehran to agree a new framework for Syria - but the summit was overshadowed by UkraineSince being isolated by the West as a result of the invasion of Ukraine, Russia has been compelled to deepen ties with fellow pariah-state Iran.

Despite the fact that they have previously worked together on a few topics, most notably Syria, their partnership has thus far been one of convenience rather than friendship.

But that has significantly altered in the wake of the Ukraine crisis, with reports that Russia is already purchasing Iranian combat drones for the conflict.

In a meeting with Putin on Tuesday, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei also expressed his unwavering support for the conflict in Ukraine, reaffirming Moscow’s position that the invasion was essential to prevent a NATO strike.

The West hates a “independent and powerful” Russia, according to Khamenei, and would have “waged a war” to reclaim the Crimean peninsula that Putin took in 2014.

Khamenei said to Putin, “If the route had been open to NATO, it will not recognize any limit and boundaries.”

Iran and Russia, however, warned Turkey off a proposal to re-invade northern Syria in an effort to build a buffer zone along its border, an indication of the difficult relations between the three countries.

Ankara supports the proposal because it wants to push Kurdish militants, whom it regards as terrorists, out of northern Syria, where they have taken over vast swaths of the country after helping US-led coalition troops drive out ISIS.

In addition, Turkey plans to utilize the area to shelter the millions of refugees who have left the area since civil conflict broke out in 2011.

Iran, which supports proxy organizations in Syria and has clandestine military facilities there, as well as Russia, which has played a major role in supporting dictator Bashar al-regime, Assad’s are vehemently opposed.

In the end, it appeared like Iran and Russia had prevailed since the trio released a united statement pledging to resolve the conflict “through political and diplomatic methods.”

After the invasion of Ukraine, many people will question the sincerity of the allies’ commitment to upholding “the sovereignty, independence, unity, and territorial integrity” of Syria.